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Kang
May 5th, 2008 @8:25 am  

I’m an efficiency freak too! :D

Have you checked out lifehacker.com?

It’s a really cool blog with tons of cool tricks. Looking forward to your new book!

ShriNagesh
May 5th, 2008 @9:36 am  

Very impressive doc. I’ll implement your strategies in areas where i’m not organized yet. Bookmarked.

*Flash* I almost forgot something very important and your post helped me. Thanks. I’m heading straight to attend that corner.

Shri

Matt Ellsworth
May 5th, 2008 @2:10 pm  

Sounds like a great system. After I read the “4 hour workweek” I decided to change my habits as well. I have something similar - and it works great!

Juho Tunkelo
May 5th, 2008 @3:03 pm  

Great post! i *love* setting up systems like that. You really HAVE to in my opinion, if you have a lot of things going on…

Bob Jenkins
May 5th, 2008 @3:04 pm  

Hey Dr. Mani - this dashboard idea works really well. I saw a similar idea from Mike Filsaime at the 7 Figure Code conference and immediately put it to use.

My categories are Email, Financial, My Sites (login dashboards), Learning Sites (forums, mentoring members areas), My Companies (MLM logins), Affiliate Programs (CJ, Clickbank, etc.), Advertising (email/classifieds), and Telephone (for teleseminars).

Also, when I start up my computer, I fire up my Freemind software and map out the day, review the previous day, etc. I have all my projects mapped out with that which has also rescued a lot of time for me.

And of course, I use Roboform constantly, which I’m sure gives me back at least an hour a day.

I really like your idea of a daily focus. I created an IM Task List mind map I can refer to in a cycle. Giving specific areas attention on a routine makes it a habit.

Great post!

Bob Jenkins

p.s. I’ve made it easy to download and learn Freemind. I hope this helps your clients/subscribers get organized.

Arina
May 5th, 2008 @3:54 pm  

The most useful article I’ve read this week! Thank you! Can’t wait for the ebook. :) (I hope it will have affiliate program available!)

Michael S. Copeland
May 5th, 2008 @5:57 pm  

Dr. Mani,
This post couldn’t come at a better time in my life. I saw your and Ross’ interaction on Twitter and couldn’t wait for the post.
The one thing I am finding as a problem is the interruptions. Like I have my week scheduled and planned, but something happens on Monday that kills that day’s schedule. However, that stuff still needs to get done, but where’s it going to fit because the rest of the week is already planned out? See what I mean?
Perhaps I need to not be as granular with my scheduling and leave room for fluctuations in the weekly plan. I’m still trying to find that happy medium.

I look forward to what you are working on!

Kathi
May 5th, 2008 @6:15 pm  

Great ideas… I’m looking forward to the book! I’ve been using the “dashboard” idea for about 3 years now and it IS a great time saver. I update mine regularly. I just started using Firefox about 3 months ago and found a plugin called Speed Dial that creates a visual dashboard of links. I love it! But I’m looking forward to incorporating the top 3 tasks idea too. Thanks again!

Steve Pohlit
May 5th, 2008 @7:54 pm  

Hi Doc: very good guidance. It seems to me that it is very important for each business and person to clearly define the near term outcome. By near term I usually think in terms of 6-12 months. Of course this should fit within a longer term view. Once you have a clear picture then most actions fall within an A, B, C classification. For example in business I always am focused on profitable revenue drivers even though I may evaluating the effectiveness of expenses.

The process is the same for an entrepreneur as well as a billion dollar company. Yes as you so wonderfully point out, there is an appropriate system for managing to the intended results including variance analysis.

Keep up the great work. You are an inspiration.

Steve
http://www.stevereports.com

Sandy Naidu
May 5th, 2008 @11:05 pm  

Great post…I like the way you explained the difference between ‘effective’ and ‘efficient’. I will try the ‘3 important things’ and see how I go…

Money.Power.Wisdom
May 6th, 2008 @1:20 pm  

@Kang, yes, I’ve visited the Lifehacker blog from time to time.

Another of my favorites is Leo Babauta’s ‘Zen Habits’… good stuff. He’s the author of ‘Zen to Done’, btw.

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@ShriNagesh, @Matt, @Juho, @Arina - thanks for the comments.

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@Bob Jenkins - Thanks for sharing your experience with personal organization, nice points in your comment. The daily focus bit was a lesson I learned from both ‘Zen to Done’ and Mark Joyner’s ‘Simpleology’ - another great course on personal productivity and effectiveness, imho.

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@Michael S Copeland - Interesting how Twitter has such wide reach! I noticed Ross’ tweet just a few minutes before taking off for dinner and decided to do this blog post on the spur of a moment!

Interruptions and distractions are an integral part of everyone’s life, so we just need to learn to cope with them, as best as we can. My earlier post deals with staying focused to achieve more.

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@Kathi - Thanks, Kathi. Just imagine what might have happened had you blogged about it 3 years back, and I had read your post then! :)

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@Steve Pohlit - Great perspective, thanks for sharing your thoughts here.

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@Sandy Naidu - thank you, and please share your results with the ‘3 important things’ concept.

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