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How To Be Successful in the New Year

January 2, 2018 by Lazy Man 87 Comments

Welcome to 2018!

It still feels like 2017 to me. The kids are still on their winter break from school. Tomorrow, I get focus on writing again. It feels like forever, and I’m so excited to get started. In the meantime, I’m going to continue a 9-year tradition… bumping up one of my most popular articles.

How To Be Successful In The New Year
How To Be Successful In The New Year

Start at the Beginning

I’m very biased here, but my more recent blog Be Better Now focuses more on success and self-improvement. It covers important topic from How to Make and Keep Your New Year’s Resolution to this Quick Guide to Success.

If you only read and followed through on those two general articles, I can almost guarantee you’d have the best year of your life (short of an unrelated tragedy).

However, let’s continue on:

Preparation and Planning

  • Make a List of Short, Medium, and Long Term Goals – Each night before I go to sleep, I try to write down 3-5 things that I want to accomplish the next day. I make sure that at least a couple are things that I can complete that day and purge from my to-do list. I also make sure to add a couple of small parts of medium or long-term projects.

    Here’s an example: Imagine that you want to write an eBook. The first day you create a rough outline of the book – just the chapters. The next day you might want to pick 3 or 4 things in a few chapters to cover in each chapter. Repeat this for 3 or 4 days and you’ll have a great plan for a whole 9-12 chapter book in less than a week. Then you simply need to spend a day expanding each chapter. In about 20 days you’ll have completed the first draft. Use the next 10 days (or more) to review, revise, and edit.

  • Catalog Your Progress – I started this blog to keep me accountable. I can’t go out and buy a Ferrari on credit. If I did, I’d have to write about it here. I have a strong streak of not buying a Ferrari on credit. See? Simple, right?

Fix Your Finances

This is important enough that I created a whole article focusing on it. Unfortunately, the article is quite out of date. Still the ideas are sound. Still there should be a half dozen easy ways for many people to save thousands of dollars.

Learn These Skills

  • Sales / Marketing – Even if you don’t think you have a product to sell, you do… yourself. I’ve learned that sales and marketing are not easy skills to learn. You can’t shout “look at me!” or people will think you are obnoxious. You have to find people who might be genuinely interested in what you have to offer. I always find it best to be open and honest with what I have to sell. If the product is of value, you price it accordingly, and have the right buyer, it should sell itself. I’ve found that if you have to “sell” too hard, it’s probably going to be a sale you regret making.
  • Public Speaking – I am most shy person on Earth. Talking to someone one-on-one often ties my stomach in knots. I’ve almost completely given up using the phone. Imagine how I feel about public speaking right now. There’s at least a 90% chance I’d faint.

    However, public speaking was a required class in high school. I started off horrible, but by the end, I had earned an A. The head cheerleader said that I was funny… which is the kind of thing that sticks with you 25 years later (Thanks Amy!) I have to remember that public speaking really is a skill where practice means everything. An organization such as Toastmasters, seems to be the best way to get that practice. Unfortunately, Toastmasters usually takes a back seat to the pile of other things that I’m currently focusing on.

  • Writing – Even if you are crafting a short e-mail, try to use proper grammar. You’d be surprised how many e-mails I receive where people make 6 mistakes in 6 sentences. Poor writing skills on the first impression impacts my view of the person’s intelligence and/or professionalism. Perhaps it shouldn’t be that way, but it is. A person who can write great commands my respect and my trust.

    I realize that my articles have more than their fair share of writing mistakes. This article probably has 3-5 in it. I feel that it is a balance. I’d rather spend my time writing another article than proofreading the previous one for a couple of typos.

  • Networking – Get out there and meet new people in your areas of interest. When you know a lot of people, opportunities multiply. [Editor’s Note, I’m going to date myself on this, but I wrote this about Pat Flynn of Smart Passive Income who wasn’t widely known in January of 2009 when I wrote this article:

    “To go back to the eBook example above, I met one person who has had some success with an eBook. He’s in the process of getting it translated into an audio book now. He could definitely be a great resource for me to learn from. He’s newer to blogging and doesn’t have the number of readers that I have. I can probably give him a few tips and help him out. Now if I knew 100 people like this guy, I’d have a solution to almost every question I’d ever have at my fingertips.”

  • Read More and Faster – I have always been a very slow reader. I simply don’t scan text very well. Perhaps I’m afraid I’ll miss a critical word or something silly like that. This is one area that I’m going to work on in the new year. Much of my time is spent reading, you’d think I’d at least be good at it.

Take Action

  • Help Someone with Something Everyday – This may sound like some kind of “Pay It Forward” hype. In some ways it is. I estimate that I’ve given guidance to around 50 or 100 bloggers who are just getting going that were looking for advice. Some of them became successful bloggers and some stopped blogging. The successful ones have returned the favor 100 times over or more. They link to my articles, they comment on my site, and fill me in with opportunities that I would have otherwise missed. This isn’t limited to blogging. If you mentor someone, you’ll be seen as a natural leader. I’ve always seen a strong correlation between leadership and success.
  • Make Mistakes – When I just got out of college, I took a job with a top ten Internet company. It was a very high profile job as I managed the search engine myself. It was about 20% of this 2 billion dollar company’s traffic… and some of their most valuable real estate (look what Google did with search). The thought that I’d make a mistake scared me to death. I spent each day walking on eggshells until the day that I made a mistake. It was a terrible mistake that crashed the whole database. A strange thing happened. No one got upset with me, and we were able to recover pretty quickly. From that experience, I learned to always have a back-up plan. This allowed me to take some risks, experiment more, and eventually produce ideas that made the company tens of millions of dollars. Perhaps as importantly, I learned to tolerate other people’s mistakes.
  • Surround Yourself with Like-Minded Individuals – There are studies that show an individual’s income will be somewhere around the average of your closest five friends. That formula works for me and my closest friends – or it did until I decided to build my career from websites. There are also studies that show your weight will reflect those who you hang around with. It makes sense if you think about it. If your circle of friends likes to bounce business ideas off each other while playing a game of pickup basketball, you’ll probably put yourself closer to the path of prosperity than if you tell fart jokes while eating Bon-Bons.
  • Exercise – Whenever I work out, I am all pumped up with endorphins for hours. It feels like nothing can stop me – as if I could tackle a bear. Instead of tackling a bear, I focus that energy on my list of goals and churn through it like never before.
  • Start a Website or Blog – It’s easy to talk the talk, but what matters is if you can walk the walk. A website or blog not only makes you accountable for the goals that you set, but can also help you network and gather useful information. For more inspiration read how personal finance blogging helped me.

Be More Productive

  • Don’t Get Wrapped Up in Television – I love television. However, I try to watch shows that you don’t have to follow too closely. This way I can work while it’s on. You won’t see me watching a lot of Law and Order because it requires too much of my focus. However, having the Red Sox on the background doesn’t distract me from accomplishing what I’m trying to.
  • Commute with Books on Tape (or Podcasts) – Most of the people I know have a 30-60 minute commute to work each day. You can listen to some morning talk show or a shock-jock DJ or you can learn some of the skills that I mention above. I’m not saying that you should throw away all entertainment, but if you are looking to increase your productivity, utilizing this downtime is a great start.
  • Declutter and Organize Your Home and Work Area – I used to waste a lot of time looking for stuff. The problem? I had stuff everywhere. I couldn’t find the stuff that I needed from the old stuff that was piled around it. It’s amazed me the number of things that I had around the home that I didn’t use. Finally I simply said “Stuff It!” and got rid of most of the stuff that I didn’t use and put other special stuff in a closet that I’ll probably ignore for another years. Just like in What About Bob, “baby steps…” I tell myself.

Think Your Way To Success

  • Think Positively – I’m not going to get Stuart Smalley, Motivational Speaker on you, but making the conscious decision to focus on being financially successful is extremely helpful. Bringing finances to front of my mind, instead of the back has made a huge difference in my finances.
  • Don’t Hate Money – Lose the thinking that money is the root of all evil. Start thinking about it as a key to freedom to do whatever interests you. Think of it as a way to help friends, family, and charities important to you. Think about how you could use money to make the world a better place.
  • Appreciate What You Have – Schedule a day to just appreciate yourself. Appreciate the things that you do have. The fact that you are reading this likely means that you are much better off than others in the world.
  • Be In A Good Mood – One of my favorite lines from Say Anything is when Lloyd Dobler (played by John Cusack) says to his sister, “Why can’t you be in a good mood? How hard is it to decide to be in a good mood and be in a good mood once in a while?”

The Most Important Key to Success…

  • Do What You Love – You aren’t going to be successful at something you spend all day dreading. When I was excited about software engineering, I was good – perhaps even above average ;-). When I got stuck on a project that didn’t interest me, I was honestly a poor software engineer.

    However, be careful about blinding heeding the “follow your passion” advice. You must also recognize supply and demand and work within those constraints. There’s a large supply of people who want to become professional baseball or basketball players, and the demand is for only a few hundred. This means you have to be so much better than everyone else. There are few people looking to be morticians because it creeps a lot of people out, but there is a big demand, leading to a high-paying lucrative career.

    Mark Cuban has a great article on a related to this: Don’t Follow Your Passion, Follow Your Effort.

Filed Under: Productivity Tagged With: business skills, Goals, Psychology, success

Keeping Yourself Motivated as a Startup Owner

February 14, 2014 by Guest Poster 1 Comment

[Typically, I don’t do like to do back-to-back guest posts here, but I couldn’t resist the topic given my own Money Start-Up… and I need all the motivation I can get. The following is a guest post by James Stevenson.]

Starting a business provides many opportunities but the process is also going to be difficult. At times, you will find it almost impossible to keep yourself motivated and to stay positive. Startups require a lot of time and effort. The results will become evident after a certain period of time. Follow these simple steps to keep yourself motivated from day one until you start accomplishing your goals.

Obstacles are there to be Overcome

As clichéd as it sounds, each obstacle should be seen as an opportunity. Things will never go according to plan. Expecting a certain course of development is only going to get you disappointed.

Remain flexible and think about the best way to deal with the specific situation. It may come out better than what you had initially planned. Use your creativity and business talent to find the best solution for every problem. The more committed you are to making it happen; the easier it will become to overcome the obstacles.

Solid Financial Planning will Make It Easier

Solid financial planning will facilitate the task of getting started because many startup owners worry about the monetary side of the project.

Come up with a good business plan for the first few years of your company’s existence. Try to be realistic in your estimates and expectations. Knowing how much money you will need will give you the motivation to find an investor or the best funding option.

Talk to professionals to make your financial plan adequate and representative of your startup needs. Visit a forensic accountant’s website to get more information. Forensic accountants will help you with the calculations and they will also make it easier for you to stay away from scams. You will also get to discuss taxation issues and tax investigations. Being prepared for the worst-case scenario will take the stress out of the equation and help you perform better as a manager.

Choose the Right Business Partners and Employees

Surrounding yourself with positive, knowledgeable individuals will help you stay motivated and keep going.

Many startup owners give up precisely because they lack the right kind of support structure. Get someone you trust involved in the project. Sharing responsibilities and hearing words of encouragement will really give you the strength needed to continue.

Be very careful when it comes to hiring employees. Choose knowledgeable people that have experience, even if you have to pay higher salaries. The investment in human resources will pay itself off very soon.

Set Achievable Goals

Coming up with one major goal is going to make the task very challenging. Instead, divide each phase into small, achievable goals.

Smaller goals are easier to accomplish. At the same time, knowing that you managed to do it will make you feel good about yourself and about your startup. Small goals will soon accumulate to something bigger.

Your business plan should be divided into achievable steps. The smaller they are, the easier it will be for you to get there and to enjoy the results.

Find an Emotional Outlet

Find the right kind of emotional outlet. Otherwise, you risk becoming the victim of stress and the medical conditions related to it. Being a startup owner is exceptionally stressful because all of the responsibility falls on your shoulders. Try to find something that will help you relax and forget about your business worries.

Fitness or an aerobics class will be great emotional outlets. Physical activity takes out the negative emotions and helps you overcome stress. Spending quality time with your family is another great way to unwind from the day at the office.

Your home should be a place of peace, comfort and relaxation. Leave the business worries at the office door. Thinking about your startup all the time is only going to decrease your productivity.

Allow Yourself to Celebrate Small Achievements

The celebration of successes is an important part of keeping yourself and your employees motivated. Many startup owners are so dedicated to moving forward that they forget to slow down and enjoy the current moment. Corporate victories are really sweet, especially in the start. Take the time to pat yourself on the shoulder.

Organize small parties, even if your company has achieved a really minor victory. Rewarding yourself makes you feel good about everything that you have accomplished on your own. You deserve to celebrate victories, even if everybody else considers them insignificant.

There is nothing more challenging than starting your own business. Everything is at stake and the level of stress is tremendous. To be active and productive, however, you need to discover the best ways of keeping yourself motivated. Motivation depends on your goals, your planning and the everyday business processes. There is nothing wrong with slowing down every now and then and finding an emotional outlet. Take care of your emotional health and you will increase the chances of startup success.

Filed Under: Entrepreneurism Tagged With: Goals, start up

Reviewing my 2011 Goals

October 13, 2015 by Lazy Man 5 Comments

With 2011 now a distant memory, it’s time to go back and look at my goals for 2011. That’s one major benefit of blogging, there’s accountability baked into everything I do. In 2011, I had set 5 goals, most of them business-related.

  1. Traffic to my Websites – Goal: Increase by 100%. Actual result: Increase by 21% – That’s a colossal failure, right? It could have been much worse. Google Panda hit many of my blogging colleagues and they lost traffic. I didn’t get the website I was hoping to off the ground, which was a direct consequence of #3 below.
  2. Revenue from my Websites – Goal: Increase by 50%. Actual result: Increase by 92% – It’s amazing what the right kind of advertising deal can do. By the end of the year, I was making in a month what I made when I was an underpaid software engineer that lead to the creation of this website five years ago.
  3. Continue to Fight Against MonaVie and other MLM Scams – This is a pretty big win.

    In my goals, I also mentioned iJango, which was pretty much a straight-forward pyramid scheme. It’s no longer in business. Consumers who paid a one-time fee $150, plus $20 a month to have their own web store were left holding the bag.

    I wrote about a new MLM, One24, which appears to be a straight-forward pyramid scheme. They threatened to sue me for defamation, but found that they had no grounds. So instead they had to create a podcast addressing my post, where they missed all the major points, especially the most important one of them hitting the FTCs guidelines of being a pyramid scheme. In fact, they tacitly confirmed it in the podcast.

    It was a good year in busting MLM punks. However, they are like the Hydra, and they keep coming back. Scamming people out of their money is too profitable I guess. As my friend Vogel says, “we’ll just keep chopping off heads.”

  4. Write an eBook – It didn’t happen. I had put some significant effort into it, but when I tried to outsource a couple of items (formatting and such) it didn’t work out. It would have cost me a good amount of money and if I wanted to update it, it seems like I’d have to pay the formatting costs all over again. I either picked the wrong person to outsource it too, or need to do it myself.
  5. Get Healthy – Goal: Lose 15 pounds and weigh 165 pounds. Actual result: Lost 5 pounds and weigh 175 – I had gotten below the 170, but the holidays and playoff football games has put a few more back. I’m still pretty happy with the result.

Overall, I’m pretty satisfied with the year’s results. Like everything there were some ups and some downs. I would like to have hit more traffic and made that eBook, but those are overshadowed by the larger goals of surpassing my revenue goals and helping consumers steer clear of MLM scams. If I were to do the same in 2012, you’d see a very, very happy Lazy Man.

Filed Under: About / Admin Tagged With: Goals

Is Investing Without Goals Like Golfing without a Putter?

December 18, 2009 by Lazy Man 3 Comments

Golfing without a putter?  No problem!
Golfing without a putter? No problem!


I caught an article on the Simple Dollar yesterday: Investing without Goals Is Like Golfing without a Putter…. It’s a great article (Lifehacker even picked it up) if you want to know the basics of having goals and investing. At first, I thought that analogy of golfing without a putter was brilliant.

Note the words “at first.”

I thought about it a little more and the analogy seemed off. It took me a few minutes to put my finger on it, but I think I have it. When I make it goal, it’s so that I have some direction – so that I know where I’m trying to go. The equivalent of this in golf is knowing where the hole is. Also, how I arrive at that goal depends entirely on the goal. Like with any goal you pick the right tool for the job. In the case of golf, the right tools usually include a driver and a putter. With investing the right tools may include mutual funds or CDs. Setting a goal is the answer to “Where?” while using a tool is the answer to “How?”

The other thing that got me with the golf-investing analogy is that it’s bad to overshoot the hole in golf. I don’t know too many people who are sad that they overshot their goal for an investment… it’s not like you are trying to reach a certain dollar figure. If you have Tiger Woods’ money (even with the sponsors leaving him) then certain goals are almost solved for you. For example, he doesn’t have to worry how he’s going to afford his son’s college education. For the rest of us, that would be a very reasonable goal.

There is a great golf analogy to make with investing though. I hinted at it early. An investment is like a golf club. There are aggressive investments that are essentially drivers. When you are far away from your goal, you may choose to sacrifice a little direction (volatility) to pick up large gains to try to get to the hole quickly. Then there are conservative investments that are like putters. When you get close to the hole, direction is the most important (minimized volatility) thing, not strength.

Filed Under: Investing Tagged With: Goals, golf

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