It’s about mastering yourself: making decisions, deciding what to work on, working with intention, improving every day, and more.
Best time to make improvements is early.
This gives you something to think about between work sessions and enables creativity, which comes from the subconscious.
And while you’re not working, others can give you feedback.
If you complete 90% of a deliverable, and say you’ll “do the last 10% later”, you have to ramp all the way up again just to finish the last 10%.
Break down tasks.
Work in smaller batches.
Here’s why: We gain motivation as we near our goals. We love seeing progress.
By working in small batches, we create momentum by accelerating our pace of rewards.
We can become inspired without outside stimulus.
Maybe that’s why we’re all addicted to Twitter 😂😂
Kindle data shows that readers are 25 percent more likely to finish books that are broken up into shorter chapters.
Two iterations at a 2 percent defect rate produce a quality level that is 25 times higher than one iteration at a 1 percent defect rate.
You have to build tension and release it.
Over and over again.
Trust your gut.
Instead of passively reading or watching, you want to produce something out of your learning and experiences.
Begin by sharing ideas.
You’ll build a network around yourself.
Then, you’ll be immune to competition.
Because you’re the center of you're network.
This'll enable a quantum leap in productivity.
Here’s the solution.
work.qz.com/1095665/email-…
Give your attention to fear, and the fear will grow.
Give your attention to love, and love will grow.
Change your attention, change your world.
When you are tired, do only routine tasks.
Keep difficult tasks for when you feel more energetic.
Do fewer, bigger things.
Instead of looking at tasks, look at problems.
The ability to unlock a new state of mind is a powerful competitive edge. We can become different selves across time.
Information reduces uncertainty.
We can create economic value by reducing uncertainty.
Simple rules allow us to quickly process the small, perishable, economic decisions that arrive continuously and randomly.
And constraints create work.
Round and round they go.
But constraints provide boundaries.
They help us focus our energy and creativity.
The best place to look for breakthrough capabilities is right behind your biggest constraint.
Look for ways to re-use previous work on combine projects.
Two birds. One stone.
Take on projects to learn new things, not vice versa.
They move quickly and touch lightly.
Paradoxically, this is the opposite of focus.
The 3 Bs of Creativity:
Bed (nap and dream)
Bath (relax and let the subconscious mind work its magic)
Bus (travel, move, and escape routine) MY NEW MANTRA
Thanks for the tip, @IAmAdamRobinson
And the essence of productivity is producing things.
To integrate the insights into the way we think, we need to move from consuming to creating.
That's why flow states are the holy grail of productivity.
Three requirements for flow:
1. clear goals
2. immediate feedback
3. challenging, but manageable activity
perell.com/blog/flow
By taking notes, we can transport through time, and into new states of mind.
"To return to a book is to return not just to the text but also to a past self. We are embedded in our libraries. To reread is to remember who we once were, which can be equal parts scary and intoxicating.”
My computer remembers everything for me! So cool.
Best decision I made in 2017.
And this is just a fraction of what I learned from him.
The brain is good at recognition.
But it’s not designed to recall things.
We can ascend to new heights when we don’t have to worry about lower-order thinking.
See you in 2018!