Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Make (Small Bits of) Time to Plan


Photo courtesy of Stock.xchng


I am used to rare, mega-planning sessions. I will take a day a few times a year, and write voluminous notes on all the things I want to do in the next few months, year, or 5-years. I usually break it down into minuscule little segments so I have a to-do list. Then I forget about it until the next planning session.

That's right. I only rarely do anything with those copious notes. The problem is partly my personality--I struggle with detail, especially pre-planned detail. But some of the problem is my planning process. By the time I get around to the tiny details, my stamina for the planning process has waned. I want to get something down, so I write out my little steps, but they aren't realistic. One point may be "design new logo." Designing a new logo, for me, would mean several steps:
  • Brainstorming what I want a logo to accomplish
  • Spend several hours looking at possible logo ideas online
  • Make a few jottings
  • Determine any help I need
  • Price said help, including more do-it-yourself options
  • Finalize logo idea
  • Decide how to reproduce it for print and for products I sell

David Allen, in his book, Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity(affiliate link) taught me that a thing is not planned until you have all the actionable steps down. So "design new logo" is not a plan. All the steps above, perhaps with more detail, is a plan. Planning to that level of detail is exhausting for me. Today, a little light finally went off in my head.

A big block of time is useful to think through the goals I want to accomplish in the minutes that make up my life. But the actual planning is just too much work to do over a long work session. Today, I had about an hour free. I sat down (with a notebook--as much as I love my computer I'm finally accepting my brain organizes information better on paper) and mapped out several major goals I want to accomplish. When I started to tire, I stopped. I got a lot done and felt good about it.

I will pick up my work again tomorrow or the next day for another hour. My mind is fighting me a bit, because this slower process takes longer. But when I finally get all the pieces together, they will be a well-thought out whole. These "micro-planning" sessions are small in the sense that they deal in small amounts of time and they break projects down into very small bites.

This year, I have learned that slow effort beats marathon sessions. For me, that effort does not have to be consistent in the sense of having a detailed schedule or coming to it every day. But I do have to plan time to daydream, and think, and then nibble at the actual work of building something--whether it's a budget, a novel, or a clothing business--all things I have on my planning list, and I have even accomplished some of them.

This year has been a year of living slowly. I have learned a lot about patience. Now I'm learning the valuable lesson that marathon sessions of anything--cooking, planning, or treating patients--just do not work for me. Stay tuned for more on the importance of micro-work. In the meantime, what are your planning tips? Any programs, processes, or books you recommend?

***I will be archiving this blog later this year. I have consolidated my web presence to TeresaYGreen.com. Please visit the site, and join my mailing list to get more useful content!