Award yourself one point for each statement that
describes you.
(1) Each day you don't quite finish what you hope to.
(2) So you start the next day already in a hole, and at the end of that day things are even worse.
(3) You're so barely able to
tread water that the idea of starting a major project -- even one on which your financial well-being may one day depend -- seems inconceivable.
(4) You find yourself thinking, "There just aren't enough hours in the day."
(5) You're mentally exhausted from having to keep up with everything you have
going on.
As of three years ago, I scored a perfect 5 on this.
How about you?
Even if you're scoring only two or three, that's still pretty rough.
Fruitlessly wishing there were more hours in the day doesn't do you any good. Making the most of the hours you do have, and ruthlessly applying yourself to this task until it becomes second nature, is what you know you need to do.
That's why I recommend a program I just bought: Time Management Hacks. It's under $10. It
teaches you simple strategies to get more done in the same amount of time.
But it saves you time in another way: you can sell this course as your own. Or you can give it away as a bonus, or to people who sign up for your email list if you have one.
You can edit it, put your name on it, change
the cover, translate it into other languages, make a video course out of it, whatever. Or just leave it as is.
And it's easily adapted to any niche. A few tweaks and you have "Time Management for Busy Moms." Or "Time Management for Entrepreneurs." Or "Time Management for Students." In general: "Time Management for [Fill in the Blank]."
Yes, you need this. It will pay for itself many, many times over, in lots of different ways.
Prove to yourself that you're turning over a new leaf by picking it up even over a holiday weekend:
Tom Woods