You cannot Do Everything First 885971102739

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Recently, I was finding Paul Hartunian, the master of free advertising, who successfully juggles several very different jobs. Robert commented:

People do not work just because a lot of things have been in front of them.

Where there clearly was therefore much information you had been on information overload I have attended a lot of classes. The great majority of people then froze; they wound up doing nothing.

All this data and all these experts were immediately, ready to help the seminar members do what they want to do, accomplish what they want to accomplish.

They may have been given a lot of good items to sell; they were given SO MANY choices plumbers in that 1 day that they froze.

Paul's point was that after we are faced with a lot of options, we may freeze up.

Attempting to determine which of 15 or 20 choices to pursue can be frustrating, particularly if all of them seem to be good choices.

My granddaddy used to state, "A puppy that chases two rabbits will not capture either one." He'd stop for a second, you can add, "And he will go hungry tonight." He was hoping to get me to appreciate how important it is to just pick one thing and do it.

Let's simply take an illustration that we often see here on the Internet. Exactly how many eBooks maybe you have bought in the last six months? Of this number, how most of them let you know how to do marketing or even to earn money online?

If a book is worthwhile, you'll be impressed; you'll say, "Yeah, I will do this." But, following a few days, you'll read another really good sales page, you'll believe that you really, really need the data in this new offering. Then you'll get yet another eBook, and you'll again be impressed: "Yeah, I can REALLY do THIS.'

This period is being repeated over and over every day all around the Internet.

This may have happened to you. I've used it. A lot of people have.

So there you sit with maybe dozens of books, all good, dozens as well as a huge selection of affiliate choices, some excellent, and page after page of website some ideas, all interesting.

In fact, you've got so many choices that you might not understand what to accomplish first.

My granddaddy went one of the largest plumbing stores in his town, and you can not do everything first", when he had criminal one of his men dithering over what to do next, he'd simply say, "Son.

And neither are you able to or I. Then it does not really matter which one you select first, if all your choices are good. Throw a dart if you have to, but move. Decide. Grab yourself into motion.

For many people, getting into motion means you'll be going into new territory, doing things you have never done before. Just what exactly? At least it's interesting and fascinating. But never scary.

If you think beginning your very first business is frightening, you need certainly to think again.

Wrestling a grizzly bear is terrifying. Dropping from a plane without a parachute is terrifying.

But starting a business? Nah... That is not scary; it is just unfamiliar.

And there we have the key reason when they experience an extended list of choices most people lock up. It is unfamiliar floor, so they think they do not know how to choose. (They do, but they THINK they do not.)

Here's a technique for using the fear out of decision-making. Take that long set of options. Say there are 15 items about it, and you have never done some of them before.

On the list once the items have been examined all by you, do this: Decide if all the items are REALLY about equal. If you can find any that clearly don't compare well, cross those off. You'll nevertheless be left with a lot of possibilities.

Let's say you're left with only 10 items on your own list.

Sign up for a brand new sheet of paper.

Produce item number one about it, the very first item from your own original list.

Okay, that's it. That is your brand-new list of options - only one piece.

We have already decided that most your choices tend to be more or less equal.

So now you have got your action agenda. One item. Forget about indecision.

Now just go take action.

And those other 9 things? Whenever you get done with the very first process they will be there waiting.

See how easy decision-making can be?