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Sustainability of Entrepreneurship

sustainable buildingSustainability is a common term, often referring to some energy-efficient lifestyle choice or other “green” concept.  The goal being to create lifestyles, energies, and other things that are, yes, sustainable over the long term.  Using renewable resources that won’t wound the world more than it helps.  Sustainability is really the ability of any concept to continue onward running on its own production and energy.  In physics, the ultimate in sustainability would be a “perpetual motion machine“.  Although these don’t exist and even violate laws of thermodynamics, they would be the ultimate example of sustainable ideas.  They utilize energy they create to fuel themselves with 100% efficiency.
In the movement to affect world change, to progress society forward, to enhance the lives of those around us, from the poorest poor to the richest rich, sustainability can be a very valuable trait to any good strategy.  If it is temporary, like a loaf of bread to a starving person, it is good, but if it gives someone a lifetime of bread through seeding and farming, it is great and sustainable.

The greatest sustainable concept: Entrepreneurship

One of the reasons I am passionate about entrepreneurship is its uncanny ability to strive for sustainability.  Read the rest of this entry »

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Minimize your Productive Resistance to Accomplish More

Productive Resistance?

lightbulb-resistanceIn any productivity system, you have a certain level of added friction and resistance that is introduced by the system itself, i.e. you have to carry a planner, spend time writing/typing, recording, marking complete, etc.  All of these tasks would not exist if it weren’t for the system.  Daily and weekly reviews, etc. also often add several hours to your week of unproductive (directly unproductive) minutiae.  So why, in our pursuit of efficiency and effectiveness would we add a book of practices that simply add resistance?  Well, obviously we think the added resistance will be accompanied by a higher level of productivity.  We are willing to welcome the increased resistance in an effort to achieve improved results.  Compare it to giving up gas mileage on a car for increased speed and power.  It may require a bit more fuel to push through the resistance of a more powerful engine, wider tires, etc. but the increase in performance is worth it to us so we buy the car.

So the question is now raised… and I will illustrate with the car comparison: Read the rest of this entry »

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Create your meMethod™ for Productivity

With countless blogs, books, and best-practices (pardon the alliteration), maximized productivity is a common pursuit, especially for the productiveambitious ones among us.  Many have even dedicated themselves full time to this unachievable endeavor, the perfect level of self-management and productivity.  But why?  What is the purpose to improved productivity.  The obvious, yet superficial, answer is to get more done, to create, to accomplish.  This is partially true, yet, lacks, and simply reveals the next question: why get more done, create, or accomplish?  Ultimately, it brings us to the pursuit of happiness, particularly lasting joy.  For whatever number of reasons, we are happy when we are productive, when we create, when we participate in the progression of ourselves and, as a secondary benefactor in many cases, society.  With an understanding of this core purpose, we can more fully explore methods of productivity with a higher context that promises the results we seek.  But why do we want to be happy?  All I know is I do, so that’s where we’ll leave the philosophy for this post.

With this obsession toward productivity, we find ourselves seeking methods and sharing methods for doing so.  Each person or guru introduces a set of principles to productivity with tools of the trade such as calendaring systems, to-do lists, technology, etc.  We read the book, try it out, do it for a week or so, maybe a month, then slowly drop parts of each method until we are left back where we were or close to it.  Don’t get me wrong, I like many of the systems available and commend their creators for contributing to the world of productivity improvement only have yet to find the system that truly works for me.  Maybe those of us falling into this trap are simply undisciplined and we need to quit blaming the system, or maybe not.  I don’t question a tendency toward laziness, especially if the system adds a list of new daily tasks simply to manage the system itself!  What I do question is whether that “laziness” is the problem!

Enter the meMethod…

What I have noticed is that with each failed attempt at systematically enhanced productivity improvement, we tend to retain a piece of that system, even if only a memory of something we liked.  If we attempt several and explore blogs, books, and gurus for more, we are left with a plethora of ideas that have left an imprint on our memory.  We create, even subconsciously and unintentionally, our own set of productivity best practices.  So why are we all not ultra-productive happy folk?  Well, just because a lot of ideas are chaotically floating around in our clouded memories does not mean a single one is even implemented or works complementary to the others.  We may not have ever connected the dots!  How do all these ideas relate?  How would they work together?  I mean, what are they?!?!

So the meMethod enters as the method that works for ME.  Each person may have their own meMethod, what works for you is yours.  So I add my own ingredients to the already overflowing productivity stew, in a kitchen with far too many chefs and the clamor over which recipe to choose.  Well, the recipe depends upon each person’s tastes and that, my friend, will never be agreed upon.  The pursuit for productivity is an individual one, each person to choose their path.  This does not mean we are on the journey alone, only that our specific path will be ours.  Many have trod the path before and even more are doing so today. Each has something unique to offer and each ought to be explored.  In the future, I will post various resources that I’ve found useful as well as a complete meMethod guide that will be available likely within 6 months or so.  I look forward to sharing more on this topic.

What are some resources you’ve found helpful regarding productivity?  Any favorite blogs, books, or tools?

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Re-design of Daily Life: an ESSENTIAL assessment

Every few months, I reach a boiling point in my personal productivity and life direction that calls for re-assessment. In essence, life “clutter” begins to cloud my brain and my objectives. What occurs is a decrease in productivity, organization, and operational clarity. Certain areas or projects may suffer in attempts to put out fires and continue forward. Apparently I am horrible at creating powerful habits and require a recharge, a time to step back and say “why do I do that? Why am I not doing this? What about that?” Well, friends, it has once again come to that point and I am beginning the routine re-organization. Each time it is re-addressed, I typically come to the table with a few new weapons, i.e. productivity methodologies acquired since the last assessment, and each time I get a little closer to finding the meMethod™ (what works for me). Some of the concepts and books I’ve been into include:

• Four Hour Work Week
• 7 Habits for Highly Effective People
• Getting Things Done
• Mission Control
• And of course, related blogs, mags, articles, etc.

So, I come to this point in hopes of maintaining a few more habits and concepts than last time, maybe placing this “boiling point” as my last. You may have experienced similar points in your own life. Why does it happen? Should it? Maybe it is good to just re-assess every few months? Maybe we ought to be in continual re-assessment, the idea of continual minor course corrections and maintenance versus substantial correction every quarter. Which is better? I have my opinions, which I will share here but let me know, what do you think?

Regular assessment ought to be part of one’s routine. I believe frequency will depend on the area of life we are exploring. Regular project productivity ought to be explored and assessed weekly while life mission and long-term alignment may receive a hard assessment quarterly, course corrections occurring with these assessments. There even ought to be a daily assessment (I’d say the end of the day) in order to align the following day. Each of the above programs may carry ideas regarding this assessment concept, calling it by different names. I have found value in each of these and have pulled from each in attempts to create the meMethod.

If you haven’t figured out, I am passionate about productivity and personal management. The meMethod is just that, the idea of an individualized concept built upon a flexible framework of productivity theories and strategies. Each person’s personality will synchronize differently with each strategy. Often, the best is to test. Try a few out and begin formulating your meMethod.

What are some other sources you’ve used and found effective for personal productivity, time-management, or however you define it?

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The “Selfless-ness” of Entrepreneurship

man in glassesI have posted from time to time of inventions or ideas that I find interesting, new innovations, technologies, and more.  I often make the comment that it is entrepreneur-ism at work, or that I hope they make a bunch of money, etc.  Many may consider me a “greedy capitalist” at times for my hope of f0r-profit enterprising versus strictly altruistic giving of one’s talents.  My reasons, once pondered and understood, are often much more ‘giving’ than many may give credit to.

The free market plays important roles ethically and morally as well as economically and for advancement or progression.  It can be a gauge of one’s effectiveness, of one’s desirability.  As a dipstick, profit can be most valuable, telling you what society wants or doesn’t want, what a market needs or doesn’t need, and even simply your own inability or ability as an entrepreneur.  This is not necessarily a bad thing, simply an indicator, even to let you know you still have something to learn.  These indicators are not only valid in seeing viable financial success but actual desired assistance.  The marketplace need is a cry for help, a wanting for something better.  It may not always be so dramatic such as finally gaining back the two feet of floor space by going for a flat panel TV over your ancient tube set, but the cry still exists.  Oftentimes people decide there must be a trade between satisfying the cry for help and making money when, in reality, they work best when together.  Many treat the desire to make money as a desire to exploit, abuse, and hurt those around them when they are polar opposites.  If I am not satisfying the need, no one will be willing to pay money for it in the free market.  If people are paying for it freely, they must want it and it satisfies the cry.  One can align areas of passion and satisfaction with financial success.

This leads us to the next powerful point.  Read the rest of this entry »

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