You have goals but can’t seem to find time to do the things you need to do to accomplish them.
You’re busy. And there aren’t enough hours in the day.
You could hire more people. Which might be the best solution. But if you don’t want to do that, what then?
You don’t need a longer day, three hands, or a second brain. What you need is to reallocate some of the time you currently spend.
That means cutting back on some things, or eliminating them, to make room for others.
Think about it, if you had an “extra” hour each day, you could do more things that are aligned with your goals, couldn’t you?
Well, this is how you find that hour.
First, make a list of things you need to do to accomplish your goals but aren’t doing enough of or doing at all.
Second, take inventory of how you currently spend your time. Include everything—client work, admin, family time, alone time, commuting, exercising–write down how you spend your day or week.
Third, choose a number—the amount of time you would like to reallocate from your current schedule towards working on your unfulfilled goals. An hour a day, two hours a week, whatever. (It’s just a number and you can change it later, but you need a place to start.)
Fourth, go through your list of how you currently spend your time and ask yourself, “What am I willing to give up or cut down?” Or, “What am I willing to delegate?”
This is where the proverbial rubber hits the proverbial road.
You might decide to cut down on watching sports, playing games, or scrolling through social media. Or limit yourself to 15 minutes a day instead of an hour.
You might decide to withdraw from the class you’re taking (or teaching), outsource some of the things you now do in-house, or eliminate some of your practice areas that take up more time than they’re worth.
This may be difficult. There may be things you don’t want to give up. That’s your call. But before you make that call, think about your goal and ask yourself, “How bad to do I want it?”
If it is a priority, you find a way to do it. You put on your big boy pants and do what needs to be done.
By the way, if you need money to finance your goals, you should do the same exercise.
How much do you need? How much do you currently spend on other things that you could eliminate or curtail? (Don’t borrow if you can find the money by cutting down on some of your current expenses).
Whether it’s time or money, it all comes down to math.