Thursday, November 10, 2005

How to Easily Boost Your Productivity -- and Your Income!

How disciplined are you?

If you're like most freelancers, you love the "time freedom" of
your lifestyle. No more punching a time clock or being chained
to a desk. No more "hanging up quickly" when the boss walks by.

As a freelancer those days are gone forever...but one quickly
learns that in order to make a great living as a copywriter,
you're now the "boss" to whom you must be accountable!

It's ironic, to be sure. And as you strive for higher and higher
income and greater and greater success, you'll realize that
neither will come without strict time discipline on your part.

Setting Your "Policy"

Now that you work from home (as most freelance writers do),
people will know that you're available for rides to the airport
and other favors. Since part of the pleasure of freelancing is
its time flexibility, you might want to be able to say "yes"
from time to time.

However there's a big danger lurking called "part time work,"
and if you spend too much time not working, you wind up with
"part time pay." If you have a family or small children,
enormous amounts of time can also be siphoned away through small
but endless interruptions.

The best way to deal with "time thieves" is to institute a
"policy," as most businesses do. When you say "I'm sorry, my
policy is to devote two hours per week to doing favors and this
week I've already used them up," you'll probably find little
resistance. That's because policies are like printed signs:
people rarely argue with them.

A Simple But Powerful Daily Schedule Document

As a freelancer, you'll need to create your own work system and
your own documents. Over the years I've refined my own system
and documents to near perfection (I'm always changing and
improving as ideas come to me).

One of my most powerful documents is my "Daily Timesheet and
Schedule." It helps me prioritize my most important projects,
lays out what I need to do in half hour increments, shames me
into doing my daily exercise routine, and forces me to be
accountable throughout the day. If someone needs a favor of me,
it must go on the Daily Schedule where it "bumps" a work item.

Here is the Formula for Creating Your Own "Task Master"

Since it's so easy for us freelancers to procrastinate when
we're faced with a task we'd rather put off, I put right at the
top of my Daily Schedule the question, "How will I earn money
today?" And then I must write it down in the top position for
that day's work.

This forces me to put aside the fun but less important jobs, to
focus on the most lucrative.

My Daily Schedule also has two columns: the left hand column is
for "Task"; the right hand column is for "Activity." The Task
column shows what I should be doing at any appointed time. The
Activity column shows what I AM doing.

Having to write down what I'm actually doing under "Activity"
exposes those moments when I'm doing something I shouldn't be
doing...those time-wasters that detract from my income. You can
imagine how powerful it is to acknowledge -- by physically
writing it down -- that you're not doing what you're supposed to
be doing!

If you adopt this system for keeping you on the
straight-and-narrow, be sure to create your plan for the day the
night before. That way you can gather the tools, papers,
research and other items you need so you can truly stay on
schedule throughout the day.

By working from such a schedule you can identify your personal
work weaknesses, increase your billable time and effectiveness,
and conquer your procrastination.

Try this system for yourself and see if you don't get more done,
earn more, and feel more successful -- because you are!

About the author:

Award-winning copywriter and freelance writer's coach Chris
Marlow publishes a free newsletter for freelancers who want to
build a successful business. Visit:
http://www.FreelancersBusinessBulletin.com