Finish: Give Yourself the Gift of Done pdfdrive com
part of the computer industry he was best suited for. Was he a systems analyst
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Finish Give Yourself the Gift of Done
part of the computer industry he was best suited for. Was he a systems analyst guy? Was he a programmer? Was he a network person? Without the data that taking the classes would reveal, he’d be flying blind. But taking classes online is easier said than done, right? We’re all too busy. People tell me this constantly. I have some goals, things I want to do, but I don’t have time. To that pushback, I’d simply say, “What is the data telling you?” When Steve looked at his week, he didn’t just see days and hours, he saw data. Cleaning the dentist office on the weekends and playing with his kids didn’t allow much time on Saturday and Sunday. Connecting with his wife and with friends, filled a lot of his evenings. He couldn’t take the classes via audiobook while he drove to work, so his commute was unusable. The data told him that the only free time he had was during his lunch break on the weekdays. So every day during lunch, he took his iPad to the car and took the free classes. Day by day, class by class, he finished. He wanted to take an intensive, all-day six-week class that cost $20,000. That would have been the perfect approach, but the data told him he couldn’t afford to miss six weeks of work and he couldn’t pay $20,000 out of pocket toward something that was only a curiosity at this point. That would have been like pouring an 80-year-old bottle of Scotch on a piece of steak. Data helped him see that his inability to take the shorter route wasn’t failure, it was wisdom. That’s one of the great things about data. It’s a shame killer. At any point during his hustle, Steve could have felt bad about himself: At my age, I should have a better job. If I was a better dad, I wouldn’t have to work on weekends. It would all be perfect if I could take faster classes. It would all be perfect if I could take faster classes. It would all be perfect if I didn’t have to go at such a slow pace. Perfectionism marched a parade down Steve’s street, but data blew up each float with the truth. Data told him his average job had a noble purpose—to meet his family’s needs. Data told him working four hours on a Saturday wasn’t the whole weekend and he was doing it to support his family, and was not ignoring them. Data told him taking classes an hour at a time during a lunch break was the only pace he could go at and was therefore ideal. Data won’t allow shame to take root. Steve is still on the job hunt, but he’s got something on his side that most people don’t have: data. You need data. If you really want to stack the deck in your favor, you need math on your side. The first way to make that happen is to measure backward. Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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