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  • Energy Management

    Notes from The Productivity Show | Why Time Management Doesn’t Work & Why You Should Focus on Energy Instead (TPS142)

    The best time management system is worthless if you don’t have the energy to work on it. Energy has four components:

    1. Physical
    2. Emotional
    3. Mental
    4. Spiritual

    You need dedicated recovery time in each of these areas. 

    General notes:

    • Life is not a marathon, it is a series of sprints. 
    • You probably won’t see results from individual exercise sessions, especially when you first start. But it compounds over time. 

    Tips for increasing energy: 

    • Get enough sleep
    • Eat clean
    • Take strategic breaks. (Watching TV or listening to podcasts is not actually a mental break)
    • Establish rituals
    • Know your why. Understand your purpose. 
    • Give to others. 
  • What to Do When You Mess Up


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    1. Own up to it and take responsibility for it.
    2. Fix it immediately.
    3. Put a system in place to make sure it doesn’t happen again. Could be a checklist, could be checks by multiple coworkers before something goes out, etc. Whatever works best for you and your team.
    4. Remember that feeling bad about it helps keep it from happening again, but don’t dwell on the mistake for multiple days. Make the necessary changes and keep working.
    I once messed up a routine server update without doing a backup first. It froze in the middle the and an entire school district lost access to their email. My boss graciously took the angry phone calls and I stayed up all night learning how to rebuild the mail server from various online documentation. I finally got it back up and running with messages restored.
     
    The only thing that my boss said when he came in the next morning was, “Now you know why I stress the importance of backing up before every update, no matter how small. I trust you’ll never make a mistake like that again.”
    He was right. I’m now a fanatic about backing up. My failure got me to institute a process that I’ll rely on for the rest of my life.
  • Simple Microblog WordPress Theme


    When I learned about the Micro.blog project by Manton Reece, I decided that I wanted to host my own microblog, so I made a minimalist microblogging WordPress theme for that purpose.

    I put it out on Github for others to use: https://github.com/cagrimmett/simplemicroblog-wp

    Screenshot

    Particulars

    • It is fully responsive.
    • Header image is the gravatar pulled in from the administrator’s email address. To change the header image, change the administrator’s email address and/or change your main image at Gravatar.
    • There is an option in the post editor to suppress the title for posts on the homepage and single pages
    • There is no main menu at the top. If you want a menu to get to sub pages, create a menu, then add a custom menu widget to the sidebar widget area.
    • The footer widget area is enabled. You can add any widget you like to the footer.
    • Comments are turned off globally
    • This theme makes it easy to verify your website with Micro.blog. In the WordPress admin, go to Settings > Micro.blog Verification and put in your Micro.blog username.
    • Fontawesome is included via maxcdn because I like using icons.

    Credits

  • A Reminder to Meditate

    Reminder for myself: Meditation is good. Every time I do it I feel better afterward. Doing it continually leads to longer periods of contentment and focus. I tend to not want to meditate when I’m having a tough time because it is easier to complain and shut down than it is to clear my mind and deal with the problems at hand. But I must turn to meditation, especially when things are tough. It helps every time.

  • When Stopping Makes Sense (and when you need to get back to work)

    I’m all about committing and being relentless about pushing through tough situations no matter what comes up. Stopping because something is hard, you are tired, you don’t feel well, or it isn’t fun is unacceptable. Collect yourself and get back to work. 

    That said, there is one situation in which stopping makes sense: When you realize what you are doing doesn’t match your goal. 

    I had a conversation with Amanda yesterday about her daily project this month. (We each do daily projects each month.) We dug into why it wasn’t going so well and it turns out that the daily actions she decided to take weren’t having the outcome she expected. It wasn’t coming anywhere near fulfilling her overall goal of building her personal brand. 

    In situations like this, sticking with it just to check off that box or say you kept your commitment doesn’t make sense. In fact, it hurts because you are wasting valuable time. 

    When you run into a situation like this, pivot. Find something that better matches your goal (or problem you are trying to solve) and pivot immediately. Amanda came up with a new project that she is starting tomorrow. 

    Take a step back, clear your head, analyze the situation, and pick the best path forward. Don’t keep doing something that isn’t useful just because you don’t want to look like a quitter. 

    Be honest with yourself, though: Is your original plan really not advancing your goal, or is it just harder than you expected? If you are feeling some resistance, you might just need to push harder. 


  • Want to learn to program? Actually building things is the best way to learn. Here is a great list of projects that you can complete in popular languages: https://github.com/tuvttran/project-based-learning

  • The struggle of reading non-fiction is cutting through the filler quickly and determining what is unique and useful out of hundreds of pages. So many books are much longer than they need to be. 


  • The biggest advantage of a microblog: Lowering the posting barrier. I can post whatever I feel like instead of trying to make it “worthy.” I can get my ideas out with less anxiety. As I get into this mindset, I bet it will make putting stuff out elsewhere easier, too.

  • The Most Important Thing About Creative Work


    One of the things I’ve had to learn about transitioning into a more creative and visionary role with my new job is to change the way I think about when and where work gets done.

    The most important thing about creative work is that it gets completed by your deadline. Everything else is secondary.

    I’ve always worked remotely, but in my past two jobs, my remote work required me to be at my desk to handle incoming requests. Even going out to lunch was stressful because I didn’t want to have to take a Skype call from a client at the local sandwich place. When 5 years of working means 5 years of being at your desk from 9am to 5pm, this is a difficult mentality to break.

    I started out the day being unable to focus. By lunchtime I was getting worried and feeling bad about not getting enough done. Then after lunch I asked myself a question: “Do I need to be at my desk to get this planning done?”

    No. There was nothing keeping me at my desk but my own mind. So, I turned off my laptop, grabbed my notebook, pen, phone, headphones, sunglasses, and keys, then walked out the door.

    I’ve gotten more outlining done and more clarity about what I need to do for the next few weeks in the past hour and a half at a dirty picnic table in the park down the street from my apartment than I have in the last two days at my desk.

    Giving myself permission to step away from my desk over the past two months has been wonderful. My fears of missing something were unfounded. I’m able to take a phone calls with minimal distractions and I’m still able to answer questions on Slack from my coworkers. The biggest step I took in that direction was setting the expectation of not being constantly online, but checking in every few hours instead. I’m still reachable if something is urgent, otherwise I get up to speed and weigh in every few hours.

    Time

    Realizing that work doesn’t have to be done solely during the traditional 9-5 schedule has been crucial for me, too. This statement actually has two parts:

    1. Working outside of traditional hours is okay.
    2. Not working during traditional business hours is okay, too.

    Before this job, I understood #1, but I never gave myself permission to not work during business hours.

    The most important thing is that a task gets done by its deadline, not that it gets done between 9-5.

    If getting up early, working for an hour or two, then making breakfast and reading or walking for an hour allows you to stay focused for the rest of the day, do it.

    If going home at 4pm and doing those invoices after dinner will reduce your stress levels, do it.

    If staying offline for a few hours reduces distractions and allows you to get important work done, do it.

    If researching new tech platforms is easier with a cocktail after 10pm, pour a drink and do it after 10pm.

    If taking off Friday to spend the day with visiting friends and completing your tasks on Sunday after they leave works best for you this week, great!

    Do what you need to do in order to get your work done in the best way possible. Everything else is secondary.

    What assumptions are you making about how your work must be done? Question them. Try breaking those assumptions and see what happens. The downside might be smaller than you think. The upside is a better life.

  • Integrating Care into the Customer Experience


    I was at an Intelligentsia coffee shop in Venice, CA, a few weeks ago. I ordered an espresso. As my order came up, I watched the barista. He pulled the shot, and as I was ready to take and enjoy it with the side of sparkling water they include, he paused before he gave it to me. He took the towel tucked into his apron and carefully wiped off the few tiny splashes of espresso that ended up on the rim of the cup and around the saucer.

    He could have easily given it to me as-is and I would have been happy. But he took that extra step. And I noticed.

    This is one of the reasons Intelligentsia is so successful: They’ve integrated care into every part of their customer experience.  That isn’t necessarily the kind of thing that gets people in the door for the first time, but it is what keeps them coming back again and again.

  • How I Read and Take Notes

  • How I Read and Take Notes

    These are real books on my bookshelf, not a stock photo.

    I try to take time every day to read. Here is how I go about reading and taking notes on different mediums.

    Physical books

    • Underline and take bullet point notes as I go through
    • Revisit my underlines and bullet points a few days after finishing the book to write the takeaways in my own words. I sometimes publish these at http://www.cagrimmett.com/book-notes/

    eBooks

    • Highlight and take bullet point notes as I read.
    • Revisit my underlines and bullet points a few days after finishing the book to write the takeaways in my own words.
    • Export my highlights and include them with the book notes.

    Audiobooks

    • I listen on 1.25–1.5x speed. Most audiobooks are just too slow for me. I wish the Audible app had Overcast’s Smart Speed feature built in to reduce pauses.
    • Every 30 minutes or so I pause my listening and jot down a list of notes from the last listening session. I listen to audiobooks a lot while I’m driving, so on long trips I tend to pull over at rest areas for a few minutes to take notes. If I’m out on a walk, I just wait until I get back home.

    Online Articles

    • I consume and immediately move on from most articles I casually read.
    • If I found the article because I’m doing research, I usually take what I’ve learned and use it immediately. I then bookmark the article for later reference.
    • I rarely take notes on articles. Sometimes I’ll edit the bookmark description on Raindrop.io, but that is usually the extent of it.
    • The exception when I do take notes is when I learn something really useful from the article. Those notes tend to get appended to a long-running topical document with a link that I can refer to later. Examples: Marketing, project management, investing, health, etc. It is useful to keep long-running documents with things you’ve learned that you can turn to when you are having trouble.

  • You aren’t the first to romanticize failure. Keats was way ahead of you:

    Failure is, in a sense, the highway to success, inasmuch as every discovery of what is false leads us to seek earnestly after what is true, and every fresh experience points out some form of error which we shall afterward carefully avoid. – John Keats

  • The moment you consider a possibility, you are responsible for it. You can choose whether or not you do something about that possibility, but you must own that decision.


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    Working outside this morning and enjoying a bowl of Cult’s Blood Red Moon from this month’s Tin SocietyArchived Link box.
     


  • ,

    There is no right time to quit a job, have kids, or start something new. If you want something, you have to take the first step immediately and figure things out along the way. The right time will never come. Jump now.

  • Inge Druckrey: Teaching to See


    Awesome video on design thinking:

     

  • Takeaways from this week’s Breaking Smart newsletter, Betting the Spread on Inexorables:

    • Try multiple ultra short-term bets around a shared assumption. 
    • Don’t stick with something you don’t find valuable just so you “aren’t a quitter.”
    • Constantly question whether or not the next step is what will produce the best results. 
    • Bet the spread, then switch between parallel bets as data changes. Work isn’t the horse races. You can change bets whenever you want. 
    • There is a difference between unfocused dabbling and betting the spread around a central inexorable trend. That difference is that learning and outcomes around that single trend compound. Unfocused dabbling doesn’t. 
  • Derek Magill on Activation over Awareness


    Great stuff on marketing from my coworker Derek Magill:

    “Hold off on new marketing efforts and let’s fix your funnel first.” Oftentimes the most promising “marketing” strategy is not to focus on growing awareness and traffic, but in making the most of the existing awareness and traffic you already have.

    Read his full post here. Scroll down to May 5: Awareness vs Activation.

  • Ignore the Rules and Be True to Yourself


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    “Writers write every single day.” “If you aren’t writing code every day, you can’t call yourself a developer.” “The best in every field get up at 4am and start working by 6am after a workout and an hour of reading.”

    Rules are so fun to state. They make you look hardcore, driven, and disciplined. But if you are on the other side of that exchange and are the one hearing those rules, ignore them.

    Seriously, fuck those rules.

    Don’t get me wrong, I love hearing about people’s processes. I love reading books like Daily Rituals. But you won’t get anywhere by worrying about following someone else’s process. You have to figure out with works for you and be ruthless in following it.

    I personally see a lot of benefits of showing up and doing things daily. I don’t wait for inspiration to find me, I spend time consuming great stuff and thinking about it. I’ve recognized that I need space to think, walk, read, and listen. Inspiration always comes, and when it does, I’m ready.

    That said, I don’t stress out too much over it. While I do get stuff done every day, that isn’t necessarily when my best work hits me. Sometimes I’ll have weeks where I get tons of ideas and am excited to work on some cool stuff. For example, I had the idea to build this WordPress theme this week. This is the first full WordPress theme I’ve done all on my own. I couldn’t get it out of my head until I got the templates done and shipped it. My Jekyll blog template was the same way last year. So was the Sol LeWitt project, the Slack Toggl slash command, the Apple Photos analysis project, and the Cocktail library.

    Other times I’ll go a few weeks without being moved to do anything beyond the daily tasks I’ve set for myself. I’ve learned to be okay with that. Fuck what works for other people. These are my projects.

    What I can never forgive myself for, though, is not doing the work when I feel the call.

    Not following the traditional rules is totally fine. What is inexcusable is not staying true to your own terms and getting your work done.


  • Cool writing prompt from Cheryl Strayed on the Tim Ferriss Show: Pull out your keychain and write about the history of each key. https://overcast.fm/+BmGWAa3Lc


  • I just made a WordPress theme made to be used with Micro.blog. It is simple, minimalist, and includes a small tool to verify your site with Micro.blog. You can download or fork it here: https://github.com/cagrimmett/simplemicroblog-wp

  • Testing out this Twitter cross-posting bot from http://micro.blog/cagrimmett

  • Great Falls


    Yesterday Amanda and I visited Great Falls in Paterson, NJ.

  • Testing a new post from Micro.blog’s iOS app.