It is very hard to tell whether this week was a success or a bust. I feel like I learn some things but was it worth a week Worth of effort? Some thoughts and observations:
I need a scorecard to give each day a grade to look back and see if it was a success period
I need a very specific goal to accomplish each day, So that I will know if it's achievable or not. All too often and not lose focus (today example) I start off with a concept or vague notion of what I want to do for example find relevant news items and end up spending hours heading down rabbit trails. This is very common whether I am writing an article for starting on my daily tasks. I must have a specific target and goal.
That being said, the freedom journal that Reggie gave me is a good concept but does not meet my needs. I need to have he top three targets for the day and then a grade at the bottom of the page showing whether they were achieved or not.
I always need to review the target and make sure they are fitting into the business goals. For example does riding about Aetna's exit from the healthcare market move me closer to having a product to sell in October? It does give me content to promote which is critical for the B3 class. So measuring it against that criteria it is a reasonable target/goal.
Two days last week I felt like I had accomplished nothing, But Force myself at the end of the day to finish a task. One day was the riding of the retirement funds necessary for healthcare along with two simple graphics. Made me feel good to go ahead and publish that even if it wasn't perfect. Upon review and reflection it was actually okay. New line
Yesterday I forced myself to finish a simple graphicOn the number of Health insurance companies projected for Obama care in the future. Again not very good but it did give me a sense of accomplishment. I think this relates back to the tasksAnd targets that I need to establish each day.
Action item: develop binder page for Sam's customized freedom Journal, With targets at the top room for notes grade at the bottom.
Action item: never forget that the crunching of numbers and the math examples are the core of my ACC products.
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