“The difference between
successful people and very successful people is that very successful people say
‘No’ to almost everything.”
(Warren Buffet)
The new-year 2015 is approaching and as usual we all would
start to write down our resolutions for the new year. If you observe very closely, our resolutions
are always on the lines of things that we would do, things that we would finish
etc. As per a research, 75% of the
people break their new-year resolutions by the 13th-14th
of January, i.e., within a period of 2 weeks.
That’s purely because we resolve to be better by doing more.
However, have you ever felt that in our daily schedule we do
so many things that take much of our time, without adding any substantial value
in our life. We spend time watching
useless movies, we start our day by first checking our emails and then starting
the work, we gossip a lot with our friends and colleagues. All this leads to a criminal waste of time
and hence, our productivity. What if we
make a list of things that ‘we shall stop doing’ so that we can
focus only on those activities that make us more productive and provide a real
meaning to our life. Steve Jobs in one of his presentations said “Its only
by saying NO you can concentrate on the most important things”.
Even I personally believe that by having a ‘Stop Doing’
list, one can really start to be more productive and useful. If we imagine our day, we can easily identify
instances or acts, which if avoided, could have led us performing much better,
much more result oriented. Consequently,
if we list down those activities and take a vow that in the coming new year we
shall not spend time on them since those activities are not worth spending time,
I am sure you are going to be much more productive.
I wanted to share with you an incident that has been
narrated by acclaimed business management author Jim Collins who has authored
top selling books like ‘Built to last’ and ‘Good to Great’. He mentions that in his early age of 20s he
discovered the power of preparing a ‘stop doing’ list only because his
professor once told him the 20-10 story
which became a cornerstone of his intent to prepare the ‘stop doing’ list. The story was as follows:
The professor asked Jim to assume he has got $20million to
spend wherever and on whatever he wants.
However, the rider is that he is ill with some disease and has got only
10 years left in his life to spend that money.
He then asked him what would you do, or more particularly, what would
you stop doing.
Jim mentions that incident became a turning point of his
life and since then he started preparing his new year resolutions around the
things he would stop doing, rather than the list of items he would do.
Although, each one of you would have something different to
write down, here are few examples I wanted to share with you as things which
you might want to stop so that you are super productive and are able to do more
meaningful jobs in your life:
If you are a
student
1.
Not to spend time surfing
the net without any objective;
2.
Not to day dream;
3.
Not to chat with friends on
whatsapp or Facebook when studying;
4.
Not to chat with family
members during the time you are studying;
5.
Not to allow the feeling
that you aren’t ready for exercise today;
6.
Not to snooze the alarm and
buy some more time to sleep;
7.
Not spending too much time
biking around;
8.
Not to criticize your luck
or your circumstances, because after all no one is perfect in this world other
than God;
9.
Not spending too much time
watching TV and more particularly watching; useless and utterly time wasting
programmes such as Big Boss J
10.
Not to spend time in office
after office hours just for gossip;
11.
Not wasting weekends on
activities that are unrelated to studies.
I am sure you would have many more things to add. These were just few things which I stopped
doing when I was studying. In addition
to your professional/ academic career related things, you might also want to
have a ‘stop doing’ list for your personal life. It could be anything related to your love
life, your family, your friends etc.
Just think of the activities which you feel might not be relevant but
you still spend time on them and then put them on your list. You would be amazed with your new level of
productivity.
If you are a
professional
1.
Stop wasting time checking
emails first thing in the morning;
2.
Stop snoozing alarm to buy
more time to sleep;
3.
Stop looking at your phone
every time there is a message from Whatsapp;
4.
Stop that feeling of not
allowing you to exercise any day;
5.
Stop spending too much time
on water-cooler talks in the office (they just don’t help too muchJ);
6.
Stop spending too much time
watching TV or surfing net when bored;
7.
Stop criticizing, because
after all no one is perfect in this world other than God;
The whole idea is to guard your focus so tight that any
activity that deviates you from it is completely removed and killed. Remember – “Wherever your focus goes, your success
grows”. You must understand that for anyone to succeed in life he/she
should have a burning desire to achieve that success and unless you have a
monomaniacal focus, you cannot achieve that success. Monomaniacal focus can only be achieved when
you do not allow any noise to enter your mind and be highly disciplined and only
do those activities that are important and critical.
I want to share some quick tips to decide whether you should
‘No’ or not in any circumstance so that you proceed and conquer your share of
success.
1.
Have a list prepared for items to be finished and then keep reviewing
that list on a continuous basis
I have shared in my previous articles (‘Kabhi
to hoga matlab kabhi nahin’) the importance of scheduling your tasks and
then reviewing them regularly. A lot of
times you would realize that some action items are not important and should
therefore not form part of your to-do list.
2.
Don’t take impulsive decisions
Many a times we have the habit of taking decisions in impulse, i.e.,
immediately without realizing the future consequences. Thereafter, we realize that it was a mistake
that shouldn’t have been done. Actions
taken in impulse should be avoided and one should develop the habit of
auctioning only after a due thought is given to the situation.
3.
All ideas don’t work
It is important to understand that all ideas that come to our mind are
not always the most brilliant one and should be pursued at all cost. That’s not true. It is good to think and have new ideas in
life and in career, but any action on it should only be after weighing the pros
and the cons. Don’t worry, the idea will
not run away if you don’t action it fast.
4.
Don’t get influenced by your friends and relatives too much
Here, I am not trying to suggest
that you shouldn’t listen to your friends and relatives. Not at all.
You must respect all relationships and friendships. What am trying to say is that don’t always
get swayed by whatever your friend or relative would have done. They would have done or would have taken a
decision basis some circumstances that might be absolutely different to what
you may undergo. If your friend has
decided to take a dummy articleship because he/she believes that studies are
important and practical exposure is not, then that doesn’t mean you also follow
the same advice. Not at all
advisable.
You have your own life, own beliefs and own decision making
capability. Just believe in yourself,
believe in your goals and have a plan to achieve them at any cost. With some things when stopped doing would make
you feel a different type of energy that brings with itself enormous joy and
success.
I want to end the article with a beautiful quote from Jim
Collins:
“Most of us lead busy but undisciplined lives. We have
ever-expanding ‘to do’ lists, trying to build momentum by doing, doing,
doing—and doing more. And it rarely works. Those who built the good-to-great
companies, however, made as much use of ‘stop doing’ lists as ‘to do’ lists”
Wishing you all green lights in life….
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Authored
by Nimish Goel (www.nimishgoel.com),
a qualified chartered accountant who’s passion is to coach young chartered
accountants and aspiring students achieve the best in their life. Nimish used to work with EY and PwC in India
and has also worked with KPMG in Europe.
He now runs his own consulting company and runs a blog www.nimishgoel.com. He
can be reached for any queries and issues on his blog.
In my previous articles I have written a lot on the habit of
procrastination, i.e., the habit of delaying things. A lot many of us have this very peculiar but
common habit of not doing things when they are supposed to be done, rather
delaying it for some reason or the other. I don’t know why, but this is quite a common aspect
of human’s DNA and which to me is highly destructive your career and your life
as a whole.
When you start to write down the reasons on why you
procrastinate, the first thing you realize is that
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