Have You Seen A Life Coaching Business Information Junkie Searching for More?

By Anthony Rogers


I am not sure about you but at a certain phase in my life; I was an information addict with no real coaching strategy for my business. I needed assurance and focus as to what I believed I had to do with my coaching business, so I would skip from one expert to another, keyed up to find the answer to my problems and a working strategy. Well, strangely enough, one day, I did get hold of some truly desired advice. I'm regretful to say I can't remember now who provided this counsel, bearing in mind that I would like to give credit where credit is due, but sadly it is a blur. Anyhow, the two things he said that in fact lent a hand are:

? Stop being an information junkie and concentrate on one thing at a time.

? Do the three most significant things that will truly bring in money to you before noon.

When I applied these two beliefs, it turned my business around.

Do You Have the Information Habit?

Does that sound familiar? There might be a lot of reasons why you think you need more information. You may be feeling like you require things to be ideal before you can progress, the right opportunity hasn't come along, you might not have the funds to invest, you just have to obtain this certification or take this program before starting or there may be more than a few other reasons. In spite of what your motives are, it is much more recommended to do something even inefficiently than to do naught at all. You'll get better as you stay on.

My dependence to information came in part from my enormous learning curve. I was busy with ideas, but to apply any one of them into reality, I had a lot to learn. And I had terribly little resources to spend to get help from someone who could finish it for me, or to hire an individual who could properly train me. This left me stuck in a boundless sequence of watching and reading quite a few information videos and articles to collect the desired information that I so really needed.

I had the thought that I was being productive because when we are packed with activity we feel that we are achieving something, but in actuality busyness does not equate to efficiency. Action is not to all intents and purposes accomplishment. Being successful is producing something, creating something, being productive, achieving results, having something solid to show for your work. I was actually busy but I wasn't being fruitful or achieving, so don't mislead yourself like I did. Validate to see if you are really being productive or just being busy.

As an alternative for spending hours on reading and watching everyone's newsletters, blogs, webinars, tele-summits, etc., I discovered that I just had to concentrate on one thing at a time. I had to prioritize and choose what I needed first, second, and so forth, to actually get my business going in a specific direction.

When we prioritize it entails us to repeatedly think further on, to recognize what's important, to know what's next, and to visualize how everything relates to the general vision. This was a great asset and aided me to concentrate and to finish one step at a time so I could truly accomplish something.

How to Kick The Information Addiction And How to Make a Real Coaching Strategy for Your Business

1. Start doing.

Contrary to what others consider right, we all need coaches, counselors and teachers but the objective is, you just have to pick one or two. Segregate the ones that you acquaint with the most, the ones you want to try to be like and follow because most all those folks are on the ball and what they present has impact. You just have to make a choice if they are useful to you at the moment, and if what they cover will lead your coaching business to the appropriate direction. You just need to single out one and stick with that individual and stop hopping like a grasshopper from one individual to the other. You have to focus, apply their methods, and move forward. Then when that coach has facilitated you all that they can, choose another if you need to grow in other areas or expertise to progress with your own coaching business.

2. Multitasking doesn't work.

Regardless of what people think, multitasking is not that effective. Studies reveal that our brain can only give attention to one task at a time, it needs time to incorporate, and then you can have focused time once more. It is stated that we can only focus well for 90 minutes at a time and that we have to take breaks. When I started writing down my top three priorities for the day, then I concentrated on actually doing them first thing at the start of my work day, before reading emails, I actually started to carry out something and make money. Now, I spend from 10:00--1:00 on a daily basis doing the three most imperative things that will bring in money and/or push me closer to my goals, including long term money making endeavors. This can be a collection of things, only you really know what the most noteworthy things to the development of your business are.

I didn't go cold turkey. I planned ahead for reading and studying but I didn't let it consume my most productive time. In actuality, I consider the reading and studying time my incentive-something I can do after I finish something of importance.

3. Don't Stop Reading.

I'm a great enthusiast of reading and its rewards, but if you allow it to become overwhelming and by no means put what you read into bearing, then it becomes an obstruction instead of a benefit. So choose one or two newsletters, blogs, or RSS feeds to read that have good value and interest to you. It's very significant to keep growing but not compromise to the information overload. And concurrently merge your gains by applying what you are learning. It's better to read not as much and really apply what you grow to be skilled at than to prolong filling yourself and never applying any of it.

4. Write it down.

While reading your preferred material, pristine ideas may approach you. As an option for jumping to a new thing, pay attention and note down those fresh ideas that are not on topic with the purpose of the day. This facilitates in keeping you centered on just one thing at a time.

Keep a running list of thoughts from what you are reading, and from those ideas, devise steps that are necessary to complete them, and then put it aside, so that you don't fail to retain information of those great ideas and you won't get sidetracked.

Allocate some time on a regular basis to review your ideas. Assess if it is time to shift your focus or to ensure that you are still on track. Verify that any new opportunities that may take place are also in line with your existing focus or have more worth and value than what you are currently focused on.

Varying your focus is not fundamentally bad for you, but ensure that it is a planned change and not just a result of every urge and fancy that comes your way.

The Mini Coaching Strategy

Once you break the information junkie addiction, things will start to pick up for you. You will have clogged a huge energy drainer and time consumer. Now, you can be consuming that precious time to be putting out as a substitute to just taking in and most especially, you'll be doing something with what you get. So to recap the mini coaching strategy:

? Come to a decision on one area you want to improve in.

? Hire a coach with the skill you are looking for to aid you in moving forward in your business.

? Stick with that program until you get hold of the results that you need, then go to the next.

? Do the three most vital things that will in effect bring in money prior to noon including working on long-term money makers.

If you position this mini strategy into action, it will provide you the time and energy to work on a better plan and overall strategy for your business.




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