It is crucial to plan and work to keep things realistic. You may decide that you would like to get your next book started and done in the next three days while also building your course, which will accompany the text. During that time, you also have two coaching sessions, three workshops, and a household to clean and run. Precisely what do you think your chances of doing it all are?
I’m not saying you shouldn’t plan. I am saying set reasonable goals. If your goals are reasonable, you stand a much better chance of getting what you want completed done. And in doing so, you may even come out a little bit ahead. Isn’t that better than looking at a bunch of half-done work three days from now and wondering what the heck happened?
If you cannot manage good time management, should you work on mind management first?
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Author: Mike Balof
A retired Air Force Master Sergeant, Mike used to lay in bed at night and worry about what would happen if his plant closed or found himself without a job. One day his plant closed. Rather than panic and hysteria (OK, maybe a little) Mike found himself carried away on the adventure of his life. Mike started with the best job he ever had working at Home Depot. He spent 8 years working with job seekers at a local workforce center, helping them to find employment. He then started his own company developing courses, writing books and urging others to follow their own paths into the future.
Mike holds a Master of Arts in Adult Education and Training and a Bachelor of Business Management, earned through the University of Phoenix and an AAS degree in Electronics Systems Technology from the Community College of the Air Force. Mike is a member of the Delta Mu Delta Business Honor Society.
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