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How To Overcome
Inertia By Arthur Cooper (c) Copyright 2004
Do you find it difficult to
get things moving at work when faced with a seemingly impossible
assignment?
Are you frustrated by other
people's lack of `Get Up And Go'? Are they overcome by the enormity
of the job to be done. Do they give up before they have even started?
Or worse, can you apply
these comments to yourself? Do you find sometimes that your own `Get Up And
Go' has already got up and gone?
Don't despair. There are
simple steps you can take to get things moving again.
It is like trying to move a
loaded super tanker. At first it looks as though that you could never have
enough power to move it. It takes time before any movement can be detected.
But little by little it starts to move forwards until eventually it is hard
to stop.
If you follow these steps
you can tackle almost anything.
1. Renew the vision. Fix
your goals.
Focus again on what you are
aiming for. Visualise the end result. Fix in your mind and the minds of all
the others involved the final purpose of what you are doing and the
beneficial results that will flow from achieving it. Get enthused about
where you want to be. Fix the intermediate waypoints, the aims and the
goals.
2. Divide up the overall job
into smaller manageable segments. Think of it as a series of little steps
instead of one great leap. The entire project may be look daunting, so chop
it up into shorter, easier, less intimidating tasks. Make each individual
task sufficiently small to be acknowledged by everyone as possible.
Eliminate the doubts and the doubters.
3. Make a start. Get some
competed tasks in the bag. Start by completing some very small and easy
tasks to create an early sense of achievement. Celebrate and record these
achievements. Establish an early sense of progress being made.
3.
Make sure that each task has a clear finishing point so that it is obvious
when has been done. Record all of them as soon as they are completed and add
them to the growing list of achievements. Seeing the list of tasks completed
growing steadily and the list of tasks still to be done shrinking steadily
gives a real boost to confidence and a renewed shot of
enthusiasm.
4. Carry on clocking up jobs
done. Before you realise it you will be well on the way to overall
completion. Just as the super tanker moves imperceptibly, but speeds up
little by little, so with your mammoth project. Slowly but surely you will
build up a momentum that is cannot be stopped. Each little task builds up a
bit more speed. Each job done is a slight movement in the right
direction.
One word of warning,
though. Just as it is difficult to change direction in a super tanker once
it is up to speed, so it is with a large project. If you set off in the
wrong direction it is very difficult to get back onto track once you are at
full steam. So make sure your vision is the right one and make sure that
your aims and goals along the way are all correct before you set sail.
====== Arthur Cooper is a
freelance writer, publisher, and consultant. For more articles go to: http://www.barrel-publishing.com/
or join the mailing list at: http://www.barrel-publishing.com/mailing_list.htm
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