Procrastination Doesn’t Lead to Success

Be Proactive

There are lots of dreamers in the world and dreams are a good thing, but if all you do is dream, you’ll never realize your goals.

Success doesn’t happen unless we take action.

Becoming a success and achieving your dreams requires hard work - and action. Don’t let fear keep you from starting. You must take the responsibility to ensure your dreams come to pass.

Thomas Edison is remembered as a great inventor, but before he succeeded, he invented a lot of things that failed. Abraham Lincoln is remembered as a great President, but before he became President, he failed in business multiple times. Babe Ruth was a great baseball player, but even he struck out many times at the plate.

Likewise, we must be willing to step up to the plate, take our swing, hope for the home run, but also be happy with a base hit.

Babe Ruth got some free walks because he was such a fearsome batter, but we’re not in his league. Most of us don’t get things dropped in our laps, we have to work for them.

Don’t Procrastinate!

How many people do you know who’s frequent answer is “I’ll do it later”, when all you ever see them actually do is sit around on the couch, or take long naps, or maybe, if they’re the active type - go off and play a round of golf.

But taking any action to realize their goals?

Oh, no, “I’ll do it manana”.

“Don’t be one of those couch potatoes.

Your dreams are important to you, but the only way to realize them and accomplish success in life that you both want and deserve is to get up off the couch and take some action.

What could you do today to increase the chances that you’ll realize your dreams?

The FREE MaxPro Report & CD can be your roadmap to financial security.

Don’t wait for life to hand you success on a silver platter; it’s not likely to happen!

There are 24 hours in a single day, of which the average person spends eight hours at work and eight hours sleeping…

That makes 40 hours per week of free time that you can do with as you wish during the workweek plus an additional 32 hours of awake time on the weekend.

The average person actually spends twice as much time away from work than at it. So what can you do with all of the spare time you acquired from reading the few sentences above? Over 72 hours a week in all!

First, you should realize that most successful people do not work only forty hours a week. So you may start by applying at least 10 of those 72 hours towards furthering of your career.

If you have your own business, it will be easy to spend an extra eight hours of work productively. If you work for someone else you can take home extra work and show the boss you put in the extra effort that other employees don’t.

Better still, you may want to use this extra time to start a business of your own…something that fits in with your hobbies and can be fun as well as profitable, like baseball cards, or model planes.

You could start your own cleaning business, or maybe a consulting practice to sell your knowledge to large businesses or local businesses.

The possibilities are almost endless; and if you spend enough of your extra time doing them, you may well find you create another career for yourself. This is how many successful companies originated.

At least one hour a day should be spent in furthering your knowledge of your business or industry through reading, courses, and seminars. This takes another seven hours from your free time but still leaves you with just over fifty-seven free hours.

An absolute minimum of ten to fifteen minutes should be spent on planning for the next business day. Reviewing your plans for the day should be the first thing you do in the morning and the last thing you do when you leave work at the end of the day.

You still have over 55 hours of free time to spend as you please, but rather than continue eating into your free time, let’s take a look at how you can better use your working time.

Work Time

Many people complain of a lack of time to do all the required daily business tasks. The best way to resolve this is to plan your days in advance, in blocks of time, hour-by-hour, minute-by-minute.

By writing down how you plan to spend your time, you will instantly become far more productive. More productivity means more money and more success.

You must use your time wisely. Time is the only thing you have to sell to your company or business. How much of the time that you spend at work is really spent working? The truth of the matter is very little of it is spent working efficiently.

Instead you are probably spending the day as most people with poor time management skills do: putting out fires that other people started, shuffling papers around, and writing memos.

Here is a simple eye-opener that will let you see just how much work you are really accomplishing. Show up at work tomorrow with a stopwatch and write down how you spend all of your time in five-minute intervals. Keep the sheet and stopwatch in front of you at all times.

As you start each new task, write down on the paper what that task is and start the stop watch. As you change tasks — phone calls, interruptions from co-workers, etc.– write down what the new activity is and how long you spend on it.

At the end of the work day, grab a pen and piece of paper and write the following headings on it.

1) Meaningful work

2) Wasted time for the day (this includes interruptions, unimportant phone calls, etc.)

3) Problems that need solutions.

4) Low priority/low return work.

List underneath each of your headings the tasks you have dealt with that day. Then add up the total time spent in each category.

Now you will have a shocking picture of just how few of the hours you spend at work are spent on high-priority, money-making, business growing, or goal-oriented tasks that help your business.

Instead, what you will probably find is that looking for information, interruptions, and wasted time are the winners in the battle for your precious time.

Develop a Time-Efficient Work Environment

This means to have all your tools and resources in working order and at your disposal. More of your time is lost through disorganized paper management and searching for misplaced documents and reports than through any other cause.

Make a habit of keeping all your work areas and desks free of all paper except what is needed for the task at hand. When have completed a piece of work, remove it from your workspace as soon as possible, mail it, file it, trash it, or do whatever action is applicable, but do not leave anything on your desk or it will take up time when you are looking for it the next day.

Start Each Day With a Clear Detailed Plan

If you truly want to get the most out of every day, it is essential that you begin each with a clear plan. I usually plan the next day’s events at the very end of the business day. Take a day planner and write down all those tasks you want to complete the next day.

Write each task down on paper or in excel and number them in the order of importance. Start with the most important task and stick with it until you have finished it or reached the point that you wished to reach for that day. It gives me great pleasure and satisfaction to line out each task as it is accomplished. 

After an overall list of tasks for the day, I plan the day’s specific activities in 15-30 minute intervals using a daily planner. Plan all of your meetings and phone calls. Proper daily planning has allowed me to write 20 books on marketing strategies and also manage a golf marketing company and a golf management firm.

Always set a time limit on meetings, especially with people who are don’t pay for your time. Stick as closely as possible to your time-lines.

If you schedule 60 minutes to talk to a marketing representative, then let them know that is all the time you can spend with them. They will make their points faster, thus allowing you to save time.

As you come close to the end of your allotted time for a given task, give a two minute warning to yourself via a stopwatch or by using outlooks calendar function. Try to bring your business to a close quickly and efficiently.

Always Write Things Down

Keep a pen and paper by your phone. I can hardly believe the number of companies I call only to be asked to hold while the employee finds a pen and paper.

A pen and paper are the world’s most indispensable business tools, and you should NEVER be without them. I keep my appointment calendar somewhere near my desk at all times so if I am speaking to someone I can grab it and take notes as we talk. I note why they called and how I am supposed to follow up.

In that way, I have a record of the time, date, and purpose of their call so I can refer back to it if necessary at a future date if I need it. I also always write a person’s phone number under their name. In that way, I never have to search further than my appointment book for names and addresses.

Don’t Waste Your Time

Treat each minute as the extremely important and cherished resource it is. Every single person in this world starts out each day with the same amount of time in which to accomplish tasks and objectives. The only part that differs from person to person is how that time is used.

Successful people try to squeeze every second of opportunity from the day, while those at the lower levels simply waste it away.

If you want to make $100,000 dollars a year, you must make $40 dollars an hour. That is exactly .66 cents per minute! If you spend 20 minutes on the phone talking to your buddy down the street about Monday night’s football game, you have just wasted $13.20 of your very increasingly valuable time.

If you are taking hour long lunch breaks instead of 30 minutes ones, you just lost $19.80 of your important time. Once lost, time will never be regained.

The next time you find yourself involved in a time-wasting situation, ask yourself this question. Do you think I would pay my friend down the street $13.20 in cold hard cash out of my wallet, right now, to listen to me talk about last night’s game?

The answer, of course, is no. Yet, that is exactly what you are doing. Wasting $13.20 of your cash, which should be dedicated to reaching your goals and serving your clients or business.

If you are working on a project and are interrupted by a call that takes ten minutes, it often takes another ten minutes to get back to what you were doing. Instead of being interrupted twenty times a day, schedule 30 minutes a day for returning phone calls that are not important.

These are calls from college buddies, telemarketers, salesmen,or other people who are not actual customers. Your time at work is far too valuable to allow constant interruptions throughout the day. By setting a specific time, it also eliminates annoying games of phone tag and keeps you focused.

If you wanted to earn $60,000 a year you would need to make $5,000 per month. This works out to be $1,153 per week, based on a 48-hour, six-day week, which we will say is typical for most successful people.

This breaks down further to be $192 per day or $24 per hour. This information is something you now have to help you reach your goals. You know exactly what you must make each and every hour that you are working in order to reach your desired income level.

Now let’s see which of your daily tasks really produce that desired figure of $24 per hour?

  • Advertising your yourself or business to others.
  • Increasing your inventory of skills.
  • Researching new marketing ideas and using it for your business.
  • Marketing yourself to other businesses.

These are some of the tasks that really could produce $24 per hour. Good marketing will create new prospects and leads. Selling, whether it is a direct sale of one of your products or getting someone to give you an interview for a better job, always pays off.

Marketing can keep other businesses involved in the life of your company and brings new blood in the form of contacts and prospects. Increasing your skills makes you more valuable to yourself and others, and this will pay off quickly.

Then, of course, there are the tasks that do not produce $24 per hour.

  • Paying bills
  • Ordering inventory
  • Typing letters
  • Adding to a database

I am not suggesting that any of these things are not important to the overall success of your business. Rather, I’m suggesting that you can find someone else to do these kinds of tasks for just a few bucks an hour, allowing you to focus on the important high-return task.

The Word that Will Allow You to Successfully do Time Management

The simple act of saying, “NO,” will save you more time, energy, and effort than you can ever imagine. In an overexerted effort to try to please everyone, we often find ourselves taking on more and more responsibility, activities and stress.

At some point, you simply have to say, “NO, I am sorry but I can’t spend time doing that.” Try it; it’s not that hard, and the people asking get over your refusal very quickly. They are probably calling someone else right now to help them.

Set aside a certain amount of hours in your plan each week to donate your time to the charity you think is a good cause. Once that time is used up, it is gone, and there is no more.

Remember the words of Napoleon who said, “You can ask me for anything you like… except for my time.”

5 Steps For Effective Time Management

Many a time, so much time is spent at work that we barely have time for ourselves. Bringing work home, working late, or overworking ourselves to exhaustion eats up our personal time for reflection that is essential for our personal growth. Here are 5 steps to help you manage your time effectively so that you will have ample time to devote to your journey of personal growth.

1. Identify your time-bandits
Time-bandits are little activities that steal your productivity-time without you realizing it. Identify those little scoundrels - be it surfing the Internet, checking your email or checking Facebook. Track your activities thoroughly so that you are cognizant of what you're actually spending your time on.

2. Create goals
As much as we want to, we cannot change time. No matter what we do, there will still be only 24 hours a day. So instead of ruminating, set goals to start eliminating these time-wasters.. and establish plans and strategies to help yourself keep track of them! Whether it's a day-timer or a software program, physically manage your time and be aware of how you're going to spend your time. Use software programs to schedule events and tasks, and set alerts so that you are reminded of them in advance to help you manage your time.

3. Prioritize, prioritize, prioritize
Identify your most important tasks of the day and your performance benchmark. Keep your most important tasks to 2-3 and focus on accomplishing them by the end of the day. Alternatively, arrange your tasks in order from most to least important. That way, your day will be spent more productively, striking off urgent tasks on your list instead of allowing less important tasks to steal your time.

4. Learn Delegation
A one-man show is rarely ever needed. To optimize your productivity, some people need to carry some of your load.

5. Establish routines and create new habits
We’re all creatures of habit and thrive in routine. Establishing fixed routines and new positive habits with regards to how you manage your time helps you automate new practices and build stronger personal systems for yourself to adhere to. In fact, starting your day out with positive habits that contribute to your personal growth can help you start the day out more positively and with more energy to blast through the day!

Time management is essential for optimal function - whether at the office, at home or for your journey of personal growth.

Learn to Use Time Efficiently

A famous author quoted that time and tide waits for no one. Not everyone we see around us is talented with time organization abilities. Success and happiness are interrelated with time organization. The success of a person is judged by the time he spends on a particular work. These days, people are busy doing something more or less important at any given moment. There is constant work load and hence pressure.

Used apple laptops and other IT devices are the latest devices to keep record of time. These devices are the must haves for the modern life. In addition to all these, we should also place our priorities accordingly.

Planning of work should be the first step to our time organization procedure. If we plan our daily routine judiciously, we can gain maximum control over our valuable time. Henceforth, the most important work should come in the first place. A person’s physiological and personal wellness depends on the efforts to manage time well. One can also attain sound health and state of mind is he or she is personally satisfied. As prolonged work load leads to unnecessary tension, this can be reduced by employing another person to share the work. Lengthy or time consuming work can be given partial demonstration each day so that the complete work does not pressurize the victim. Time organization for uninteresting or difficult work, if not monitored at an early stage will not give successful results.

If the time spent each day is carefully keeping track of everything that we do, we can find out how and where the time passes. If we spent a little more time to do that work, what would actually happen? With experience we can do much better as this will speed up work and save time. Food and nutrition has to be properly balanced to help us concentrated better on our work and the way we utilize time. During leisure, we can spend our time with something that interests us. Some might go for a vacation, whereas others spend time with near and dear ones. Some people consider this a time waste but this actually helps in getting a fresher start.

Do Multiple Tasks Using Time Management

A lot of people in the country are forced to perform multi-task at the same time. There are many who are able to perform these multi-tasking activities quite easily, however there are also many that are unable to and easily get overwhelmed with the volume of tasks that they need to complete in a short time frame Should you be one of the many that encounter problems of time management, then it would be appropriate for you to start learning the ways and methods by which you can manage your time effectively. Note that time management is something that can be easily learned and mastered with the right types of tools so do not be discouraged if you can’t seem to get things done at the moment. Once you develop your time management skills, you will soon be breezing through your multiple tasks almost effortlessly.

Getting Started

The first thing that you need to learn about time management is setting priorities and goal management. Before you tackle the task for the day, you need to make a do-to list and rank these things according to your priorities. Making a to-do list is very important. Your list will serve as a guide for you when you start doing your work and will help you keep track of your progress. The list will also help you analyze and determine which of the tasks need to be accomplished first and this will assist you in prioritizing each individual task.

Setting You Priorities

Being able to set your priorities for each given day is very important. You need to know which things must be done first and which ones can be left towards the end of the day. To set your priorities, you need to develop criteria. When setting your criteria, you will need to consider the relevance of a specific task and the time relevance towards the other tasks. As an example, if you happen to be working multiple projects simultaneously, you will need to determine which tasks in each are critical and which ones are not. Furthermore, if you are performing a series of tasks, you need to determine which task should be done first before you can proceed with the others.

Scheduling

The ability to be able to schedule your tasks is very important when it comes to time management. You need to learn to divide your day so that you can accomplish more. Note that when it comes to time management, every minute counts. To accomplish more, you may give yourself an hourly deadline. For instance, you give yourself an hour to work on a certain task and then move on to another task at the end of the hour.