
“Will we know a fork in the road when we see it?”
I had to finish about 200 things on my to-do list before I sat down at my desk today.
Wait. That’s a lie.
I chose to spend my time slaving away at that list, which is hefty enough to make a pack donkey bray.
Someone once asked if I got any satisfaction from a day spent checking things off my list. If so, they continued, did that satisfaction last more than a day?
Sometimes rhetorical questions are the safest way to give advice.
In the eBook What Matters Now, Gina Trapani offers a productivity test. She writes:
Getting things done is not the same as making things happen.
You can…
…reply to email.
…pay the bills.
…cross off to-do’s.
…fulfill your obligation.
…repeat what you heard.
…go with the flow.
…anticipate roadblocks.
…aim for “good enough.”
Or you can…
…organize a community.
…take a risk.
…set ambitious goals.
…give more than you take.
…change perceptions.
…forge a new path.
…create possibility.
…demand excellence.
Don’t worry too much about getting things done.
Make things happen.
If you’re at a fork in the road, read the rest of the eBook, What Matters Now. It might be the smartest thing you can do to catch up on the trends affecting the working world and society.
Laurie Phillips writes for and about businesses. She specializes in technology and motorcycling.
cool and creative photo courtesy of flikr.com/drcornelius
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