Get Your Morning Enthusiasm Back.

Have your days at work merged into one? Has your morning enthusiasm disappeared?

It is 9am, you walk into your office, see your desk piled high with that project that just will not finish. Immediately your enthusiasm drops. “Here we go again!”.

Part of keeping your enthusiasm going is making every day different and every day count. While it is obvious that how you start your day sets the mood for the day, what is less obvious is that how you start a day depends on how you finished the previous one. Making sure you close down the previous day means that you can start the next day afresh. Here are two simple tips to help you do this — they both happen at the end of each day.

1. Review Your To-Do List.
Towards the end of the day, take some time to stop and review your To-Do list. Check off everything you accomplished. Are there items on the list that you can quickly finish up before the end of the day? If there are, plan out how you will spend the remaining time until the end of the day to get these done. Doing this will achieve two things:
  • Create focus and energy to get some things done.
  • Stop small things spilling over to the next day.

2. Tidy up your desk.
Ten minutes before you leave the office, take the time to tidy up your desk. This means cleaning up papers, putting away files (even if you are going to use them again in the morning), packing away pens, turning off your computer, and taking the dirty cups back to the kitchen.

Your desk should be tidy enough that, if you did not show up for work, someone else could sit there and work comfortably.

While it might seem counter-intuitive to put things away if you are going to use them again the next day, coming in and sitting at a tidy, organised desk sets the tone for an organised day. A tidy desk means that you are starting the day anew not just picking up where you left off last night. As you take that file out, you are starting something and you always START something with energy, new ideas and new focus.

I challenge you to give this a try and see if it makes a difference. In addition to how you feel, it will likely also effect how others in the office perceive you. After all, don’t you prefer working with people who are organised and in control?

And if you are still struggling with whether this makes sense, let me give you an analogy. After dinner at home, you clear the dirty dishes from the table even though you need to eat again in the morning. Imagine sitting down to eat breakfast with last night dirty dishes still on your placemat.

— Anthony

By KT Admin 13 May, 2024
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By KT Admin 06 May, 2024
Are you a consultant? Do you want to be a “trusted advisor” to your clients? Maybe you need to trust THEM more! Strong client relationships are key as they create opportunities for providing more services. The pinnacle of this is: Being considered a “Trusted Advisor.” I was a consultant and a client of consultants. My realisation: many consultants think that are giving advice, and maybe they are, but its only technical and business at best. A “Trusted Advisor” is someone who adds the personal advice. In addition to outlining the issue and providing the options available they, the individual, goes that one step further and tells you what they would do if they were in your position. Why is this important? People like to know that they are making the right decision. In a professional service firm, it is easy to debate issues around a table and get different views. In a corporate environment, it is a lot lonelier at the top. Knowing that a similarly qualified person would do the same thing in your position is comforting and helpful. It can be that little bit of reassurance you need – the sanity check in your decision making process. Now to some people, and in some professions, this may seem like a risky thing to do. After all, what if it turns out that the decision is the wrong one. Can a client now blame you for giving bad advice? This is where the word “trust” comes in. Not all professional services providers are the same and likewise not all clients are the same. If you cannot trust that your client understands the difference between professional advice and personal opinion are you really going to be their Trusted Advisor. So my advice: pick clients who are sophisticated enough to understand what a trusted advisor is and then start being more personal in the advice you give. Firms aren’t trusted advisors – people are.
By KT Admin 30 Apr, 2024
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