Mindset and Marketing for Coaches and Creators 📝 Offer Creation 🗣️ Messaging 🚀 Marketing 🧠Mindset and Productivity
The Art of Doing Too MuchAt any given time we have two paths of focus. The immediate And they’re in constant competition. Doing what needs to get done today All while making sure that you’re building for what’s to come. For most coaches, the immediate almost always takes the front seat over the long term. The immediate usually looks like bringing new sales in the door. The long term usually looks like more sustainable systems and content channels that take a little longer to establish. Not to mention any products, programs, or downloads that you want to offer in the near future. The short-term “fix” vs the long-term “build”. What if I told you that this habit is costing you? While it’s essential to focus on both paths in the business, the fact that they are so different lends itself to the cost of task switching. Where everything eventually feels like too much. Now, doing too much isn’t necessarily a bad thing. If you’ve read my previous stuff, you’re probably thinking this is directly against what I’ve said in the past. And it is. Kind of… It’s not that you’re doing too much necessarily. It’s that you’re not bringing activities to completion. Leaving projects suspended in limbo. Some getting done. While others just lose steam. Focusing on the immediate…
At the cost of the long term…
These long-term activities typically produce more long-term nurture but require more time and energy to do. In many ways, they also take time away from the more immediate income-generating activities. Do you see how these are in constant competition? They don’t have to be though. The good news… There’s a practice that makes both paths more fruitful AND predictable. Closing loops. Bringing things to completion. Completing cycles of action. Almost everybody underestimates how much energy open loops occupy. Until they’re closed. Typically expressed in surprise… I had no idea that was taking up so much of my mental and emotional energy It’s not that you’re not organized. Or even that you don’t have the structure or systems set up. In this article, I’ll break down what keeping loops open is costing you, how to start completing cycles of action, and ways to prioritize a closed-loop mindset so you can free up more energy, get clarity on what’s most important, and finally complete cycles of inaction to powerfully move forward. Why you end up with too many cycles of incomplete actionNo one sets out to leave things undone. Part of the equation is that we get distracted.​ Some of that is internal. And some external. Instead of sticking to what we say we’re going to do, we see 7000 other things that could solve our problem. We give into…
It’s when you can get these tendencies in check that you start to stay in your lane, trust your intuition, and march to the beat of your own drum. It all comes down to a shift in focus. What to focus on insteadThe two paths that I mentioned at the beginning of this article that are always in competition need to come into right relationship. When new clients start with me we always focus on both paths.
The reason I started doing this was because I struggled with this myself. Getting so entrenched in the day-to-day of acquiring new clients that zooming out to shift my focus to working on the business or even being ultra consistent with videos for YouTube or creating these articles slowed down business coming in the door. I would notice this every time I went to focus on long-term projects or working on the business instead of just IN the business. And without fail, every time I stopped doing shit that doesn’t scale things would slow down and I’d have to shift my focus back to the more manual short-term activities that brought money in the door. A good friend and coach of mine used to say… Don’t stop the presses. He was talking about the activities that produce income. Every time I would shift my attention from one offer to another or from short-term focus to long-term focus (without having the proper systems set up first) things would slow down significantly. Part of keeping the scales in balance is knowing what to do. And the other is being prepared enough that this doesn’t happen. It’s as simple as having a few set up as well as a small set of strategies to get back into balance when things get out of whack. Through this process, you’ll start to see what’s really going on with the projects you currently have and you’ll also start to see that there’s only one thing that poses a threat to your productivity. Your competing interests. The solution isn’t to do less. It’s to finish more. Closing loops and completing cycles of action. This is the art of doing too much. How to Successfully Bring Projects to Completion“Most people overestimate what they can do in one year and underestimate what they can do in ten years.” -Bill Gates This is true because we almost always underestimate how many steps are involved with a project. This is also the reason why so many New Year’s resolutions get tossed in the trash come March (or sooner). Partly because of poor planning (which we’ll address a bit below) and partly because one or more of The Big 4 Fears of creating change sets in. Depending on the size of these projects and how many people you have on your team, that is going to dictate how effective you can be in these different areas. Having fewer things that you bring to completion will get you so much farther than bouncing from one thing to the next and dragging everything out. There are two things here.
Let’s look at the principles first. 8 Laws of Doing Too Much
These 8 Laws will filter out most of the noise of the external world. Now, the actual process of closing loops almost always starts with one very underrated activity. The brain dump If you regularly deploy this practice you know the potency it carries. If not, it’s a critical first step. I use this as a curative practice, helping to put overwhelm in its place when the build feels like too much. I also use this as a planning tool when I have a lot of thoughts but am unclear about what to do first. It’s as simple as grabbing a blank piece of printer paper and just listing out everything you’re thinking. With one small modification. Create two columns. On the left… What I could do. And on the right… What I will do. This gives you the landscape to get out all the ideas of what’s possible while creating a path to execute on the most important first. Sometimes it’s a logical process, getting everything out on paper and thinking through what the next best step is. And other times it’s an intuitive process, getting everything on the page and seeing what stands out. Then take action from there. In this particular instance, this exercise is specifically focused on closing loops. So when you have a clear picture of the projects and associated actions, you’ll want to ask yourself this one question. What’s needed to bring this project to completion? Then answer it. Knowing what needs to be done to complete the cycle of action is what closing loops is all about. It’s less about finishing everything in its entirety and more about seeing the full path ahead. This takes the hypervigilance out of the pursuit. When you know what’s required to close loops, even if you can’t execute on it right away, you’re mind can now relax because it’s clear what needs to happen. Getting it all out and resting on the fact that it’s necessary to operate on both paths, the immediate and the long term will give you a container to operate in. As you start closing loops and bring more projects to completion you’ll likely get addicted to the process. For me and many of my clients, this one activity has been a total game changer for our productivity and peace of mind. This is The Art of Doing Too Much. Until next time, ​ ​ ​ ​ |
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Mindset and Marketing for Coaches and Creators 📝 Offer Creation 🗣️ Messaging 🚀 Marketing 🧠Mindset and Productivity
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