Getting It All Done Is Not The Point
Tasks, to dos, and emails. Projects, meetings, and calls. Documents, errands, chores! So much to do. I’m so far behind. How to get it all …
Tasks, to dos, and emails. Projects, meetings, and calls. Documents, errands, chores! So much to do. I’m so far behind. How to get it all …
We could take shortcuts. We could try to entice, lull, force, trick, or beg our clients and colleagues into doing what we want them to do. …
Growing up, our adults taught us to get our stuff done. “It’s important,” they all said. We learned how to sleep through the night, eat …
We can best describe what we do by imagining how clients or bosses would say that they benefit from our work. Try completing this template …
We can see failure in two ways: as something we work (damn) hard to avoid or as no big deal. When it’s the former, we …
In daily life, we assume as certain many things which, on closer scrutiny, are found to be so full of apparent contradictions that only a …
Welcome to another Monday morning: email overflowing, task lists jam-packed, and calendars stuffed with meetings. Ugh. Feeling the pressure, our response to another manic Monday is often to get …
1. If we believe something can go wrong, our belief adds to that possibility happening. It’s as if we go looking for trouble and find …
We’ve heard that good networking is a two-way street: we are supposed to give and get, not only one or the other. Makes sense; sounds fair. …
Many of us fear networking. We often think people will feel put upon or even angry if we ask them for help. And that may …