Articles

How To Be A Better Driver Of Your Own Decisions

by David Jones Digital Marketor
Decisions are very personal and go so far that it is often much easier to be indecisive. However, indecision does not support goals. Setting goals is crucial to increasing productivity. So how do we make a decision faster and how do we know it’s right?

Here are the 3 P's:
  • Personal motto
  • Priorities
  • Productivity

With each P, we break down the big and small decision. Suppose a big decision is related to a career and a small decision is a consumer division. Every decision we make either helps or damages the approach to supporting 3P

What is your personal motto?
Ideally, it helps if your motto reminds you of who you are and what you defend. Some great personal mottos replace destructive thinking with healthy self-regulation. Some mottos are designed to change the way. What it is is one. It drives your day and drives your day, it drives your decisions. Say, for example, that you see yourself as a leader. Your personal motto is to help the people and organization you lead. Because of that motto, you practice being selfless every day. When you make a decision, you check your motivation and ask yourself if you are doing it for personal gain or for the benefit of others. I imagine it is the latter.

"Live in the moment"
An example of a career decision is whether you should start your own business. Say your personal motto is “Take the day with you,” then starting a business can work for you. You are driving your own destiny and you want to achieve as much as possible in one day. Now try to apply this motto to the consumer section. You are deciding what to eat for lunch. If you haven’t grabbed the day yet, you’re probably looking for a quick alternative and something that won’t stop you from feeling too much.

"Priorities"
Second, what are your priorities? You may be trying to make better business decisions, own your own business, or try to earn more income. Or you may be trying to prioritize your health. No matter what they are, it is important to know and understand them all as well as know how they rank. As difficult as it sounds, identifying priorities will help you make decisions that will ultimately make you happier.

Let’s now apply your priorities to the same big and small decision we had before. You will still decide if you should start your own business. Here's how to list your priorities:

  • Income
  • Family
  • Health

Sure, starting your own business can be more expensive in the beginning, and you may not earn revenue right away, but there may be good opportunities to increase revenue in the near future. You may have to sacrifice some quality time with your family, but you may be able to offer them more in the future. You also have some flexibility when you want to work out during the day. As for your consumer shopping, you’re still thinking about lunch. Because your current income may or may not support a hearty lunch, you’ll likely decide to eat something quick and cheap when you value saving your income best for your family.

"Productivity"
Once you’ve set your priorities, it’s about associating priorities with productivity. Your ability to be productive is directly related to your ability to make decisions that apply to every area of ​​your life, not just work. Organizing and making decisions go hand in hand. Just approaching a task like sorting mail requires the ability to make serious decisions. What to answer, what to calendar, what to skip and what to delete can take more time than you understand.

Creating routines and creating systems for decision making will increase your productivity. When you realize there is a task you don’t want to do, like email that you can’t handle right away, it’s ok to do it later. All you need to do is make sure you’re actually taking steps to process it later, such as scheduling time on your calendar to process it. Creating themes for the week as you deal with administrator responsibilities, whether it’s invoices to be paid or snail mails to open, mean prioritizing tasks that require decisions. The only problem with saying I do it later is that sometimes later it never comes.

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About David Jones Committed   Digital Marketor

613 connections, 24 recommendations, 1,480 honor points.
Joined APSense since, October 6th, 2020, From La Jolla, United States.

Created on Mar 24th 2021 06:52. Viewed 249 times.

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