I was talking to someone recently about blogging and how there just didn’t seem to be a way to make consistent progress or posting to their blog. They talked about their schedule and how other things were often more important… Continue Reading →
I first got the idea of clearly defining success from Tony Robbins. It changes so much. The best part about defining your own success is that since it is YOUR definition you can define it anyway you like. If you… Continue Reading →
Like many people I’ve never made it all the way through David Allen’s popular book Getting Things Done. One of the most valuable take-aways I did get from Allen’s system was getting really clear on what the “next step” is… Continue Reading →
More from Everything That Remains on p. 65 I’ve always claimed that my priorities are grandly important activities like spending time with family or exercising or carving out enough time alone to write. But they’re not. Until I actually put… Continue Reading →
I’m reading more from Die Empty. This is all kind of common sense type stuff, but it’s good to be reminded of these things in such succinct ways. From page 58: The key takeaway is this: To avoid aimlessness, you… Continue Reading →
I saw a post recently on the Portland startup switchboard looking for time management recommendations. At first I thought it was an easy questiont to answer, however the more I thought about it I realized it wasn’t. Here’s the essence… Continue Reading →
Perhaps being productive is not purely about action. Maybe it’s more about overall forward progress. Being productive and accomplishment are important values to me. This article was a good reminder that productivity itself is not an end. It’s titled Against… Continue Reading →
Lots of people talk about this TED talk, but I wonder how many have really watched the whole thing and absorbed the message. I’ve tried to watch it a few times, but usually while trying to do something else…. Continue Reading →
I’m borrowing the term You-Gun from Paul Spindel. In one of his fantastic project management courses at Portland State University several years ago he talked about the you-gun. He encouraged us to “put away the you-gun” in difficult conversations. It’s… Continue Reading →
This is the dilemma of today’s office presence. I’ve walked through or heard of more than one fancy new office space that’s empty because half of the people work are working from home on a given day. I love working… Continue Reading →
I collected these links at one time and found them useful for creating screencasts on Fedora. These days I prefer to use Screenflow on Mac OS X which I’ve also found to be an excellent video editor for simple projects…. Continue Reading →
I watched this last night while doing the dishes. Only a few dishes got done as my wife and I stopped to listen. It’s a great presentation that made me want to live a better life. I was disturbed by… Continue Reading →
I liked the post A Better Way to Introduce Your Friends at Parties over at Storyline and this quote, Let’s stop introducing the people we love based solely on what they do, who they cash their checks from, or what’s… Continue Reading →
November is National Novel Writing Month. I love the idea of this project and some year I will dive in and take the challenge and do it. I first heard about National Writing Month at WordCamp PDX in 2012 in… Continue Reading →
More from Die Empty by Todd Henry (page 95), Waiting in some form is inevitable, but it can also become a habit, a form of abdication. An excuse. It’s easier to blame someone else for our failure to act than… Continue Reading →
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