Done vs. the elusive perfectly done

Solopreneurs love to do quality work, but perfection is not possible
Done vs. perfectly done

A few weeks ago I attended a workshop with Alicia Forest, one of my business teachers.  I’ve been sharing some of what I learned in the workshop and here’s another bit for you to enjoy.

During one of the sessions, we talked about the idea that “Done is better than perfect.”  I’ve also heard a variation on this which is “Perfect is the enemy of done.”  Both are great sentiments that can help us move ahead in business.  There’s something about using the internet for you business that just makes us want to add one more thing, to rewrite it again, to add more to the scope, etc.  It makes it really easy to get stuck on a hamster wheel of work where you are going, going, going but not getting anywhere.

The key thing to remember is that your goal is to serve your clients and customers, not to show the world how flawless your work is.  Every project you haven’t released into the world is help that people who need you are not getting.  It may also be money those people would happily pay you that you are not getting.

I’ve heard all this before and I’m sure you have too, but don’t take it for granted.  Take a few minutes to remind yourself of this important principle.  Yes, it’s important to do your best and give people what they pay for, but balance this against an endless loop of feedback and improvement that keeps the project from ever being done.  It’s a drain on your mental bandwidth and not a service to anyone.

One tip to avoid this is to clearly define the scope of the project before you start.  You might not have the exact parameters, but if you are trying to write a $7 ebook, it shouldn’t be 500 pages.  You can also change midstream if you find the original scope was too small or too big.  You can use time limits that are proportional to the price and expected use of the project – for example, you may decide that $7 ebook has to be written in 5 hours.

Take a look at your unfinished projects and see if any could be moved closer to completion by changing you standards to “What would serve my clients” from “Do this as best as I possibly can.”  You customers, clients and readers needs should be one of the biggest factors in defining any project.

Could you serve your clients better?

Solopreneurs can sometimes give too much information for it to be useful
Solopreneurs can serve best by editing what they know

I just got back a few days ago from a live workshop given by one of my favorite teachers Alicia Forest.  As promised, I’ll be sharing some insights I gained there over the next few weeks.

One of the outstanding things about this event was the perfect pace.  There were ample breaks and the days were not excessively long, and this made for great learning.  Contrary to what it may seem, I’m sure I learned more because of the “white space” the schedule provided.  I don’t think I would have been able to learn as much if we had long days, night sessions and short breaks.  Even though more information could theoretically be conveyed with a more intense schedule, the retention and the big shifts I got would not have happened.

Aside from being beneficial to me in this setting, it made me think about how often we as solopreneurs tend to “firehose” our clients in our fervor to serve.  We have so much to give and so much passion for helping that we tend to give too much information.  This might seem like you are being generous and selfless with your knowledge, and perhaps you are, but maybe you could serve your clients better by pulling back and filtering what you deliver to better suit their needs.  No client needs to know everything you know about a subject the first time they ask about it.

Why do we do this?  I think it’s a mix of a few things.  We are so on fire with what we want to share with clients and customers that we want to give it all.  Maybe they don’t have another session booked and we want to make sure we give so much that they can’t help but see the value.  Maybe it’s a desire to be recognized for how much we know.   Maybe we don’t remember that we gained our knowledge over a period of time and it’s best for our clients to gain it the same way.  Maybe we use our knowledge so much that we forget what it’s like to be a beginner.  Maybe it feels like cheating to hold back.

For whatever reason you might be overdoing it on the information delivery, try to recognize it and stop.  Take a few seconds and listen to what is being asked and then consider the range of answers you can give.  Instead of trying to give all you can every time, make your highest goal that which would best serve your client.  Even if you know much more than you say right now, that which serves your client best is the best answer to give.  You may know 10 ways to do something, but don’t give all 10 if they only need one.  They could Google and get the 10 ways to do the task, but only you could help them pick the one that is best based on your experience.  That’s what makes you valuable to your customers.

Have you ever stopped to ask for directions and the kind person helping you gives you 3 different ways to go, leaving you confused and in search of someone else to ask?  The best, most helpful answer is to give just one choice.  As a stranger in town, you have no way of evaluating the 3 choices, so that wanna-be-helpful person could be much more helpful using his knowledge to winnow your choices.

You might even want to frame an answer by saying that there is tons of information on this topic but what you need to know right now is the first few pieces.  Once they have the first few pieces down, you can give them the next few pieces in the right order for them.  That’s where you can add value.

Giving more information than requested or than a client can use is not being of service.  The best answer is just the right amount of information tailored to exactly where the client is right now.  Oh yeah, and for the record, I’ve been guilty of this but now that I’ve been taught both ways I’m resolved to do better.

What is your experience of getting too much information?  Is it a service or something you wish people wouldn’t do?  Have you been guilty of underserving by giving too much?

Get great results by assuming the worst

One of the best things I’ve learned about business management is to always assume the worst – assume that everything will go wrong and many mistakes will be

Solopreneurs should be prepared for things to go wrong
Solopreneurs should figure out what to do before things go wrong

made.  This rule has saved me and saved my projects when I was a project manager in corporate America, in my home renovation and of course in my business.

It may seem that this would lead to negative thinking, but I think it works just the opposite.  By always assuming the worst and being prepared for it, things will almost always go better than you think and when they don’t you’ll be prepared.   This helps me to keep a positive outlook.  Given the complexity of modern living, it’s realistic for things to often get messed up so acknowledging and preparing for it isn’t negative, it’s just realistic.  Even when things do go bad, I feel better about it because I know I’ve done everything I can to prepare.

What can you do to save yourself and your projects before things go wrong?  Here are some ideas:

  • Confirm the details at least twice.  Don’t give a second thought to offending anyone – communication is tough and your efforts will save everyone later.  It may not even be the other party that gets things wrong, so confirm for yourself as well.
  • Get things in writing whenever you can.  I’ve found that it’s much easier for two people to get different ideas from the same communication if it’s verbal as opposed to written.  If you are talking to someone, send a follow up email outlining your understanding of the conversation.  Having something in writing gives you something to refer to if things do go wrong.
  • Get clear on a next step.  What is to be done, who will do it and by when?  If the next step belongs to the other person let them know and get their approval to follow up with them if you don’t hear from them.  I say something like “So I’ll call you Wednesday if I haven’t gotten the report okay?”
  • Always have a backup plan or more than one if you can.  I cannot tell you how many times this has saved me when things have gone horribly wrong.  Try to think of everything that can go wrong and have a solution before you need it.  Before going to great lengths on this one, make sure to weigh the potential damage if things go wrong vs. how much effort it will take to make a backup plan because it’s not always worth it.  Some things go wrong and there’s very little negative effect so it wouldn’t be worth it to create a backup plan.
  • Knowing that things do go wrong, leave slack in all of your projects.  Build in extra time and money and any other resources that could sink your project such as technical expertise.  If you are depending on someone else such as a contractor or copy shop, give them a deadline well before you actually need it in case something goes wrong.

Do you use this mindset in your work?  Does it make you feel more positive?  Leave a comment telling me how it works for you.

New free resource for you!

I’m really excited to share a brand new tool I’ve created to help you build your solopreneur business faster and with more ease!
I often get into conversations where people ask me what tools I use in my business.  It’s one of my favorite things to talk about, and often people are surprised that there are free or paid tools to do the very thing they need to do.

I’ve compiled a list of the tools I use to run my business into a handy document called the Soloprneur Success Rolodex.  It has 32 of my tops picks for services and products that are integral to my success.

Grab you copy on this page:

Solopreneur Success Rolodex

To your success!

Solopreneurs need persistence

Solopreneur success isn’t determined solely by having a great product or service or even knowing the most about what you do.  Those things are of course critical

Solopreneurs need persistence
Solopreneurs need persistence

to success but they aren’t the only things.  One of the biggest traps we can fall into is to have too many ideas which are either not implemented or half done.  Most of the time ideas don’t produce revenue until they are fully implemented, so even one small idea completely implemented will usually bring in more sales than several that are half done.

This is a huge challenge for many solopreneurs and in fact for most people with the entrepreneurial spirit.  We thrive on ideas and our heads buzz constantly with them.  We have more ideas than we know what to do with!  A shortage of ideas is usually not the problem when I work with a client who wants to add to his or her business – usually the problem is picking which one to implement first.  It’s easy to think this is just the normal state of affairs for everyone, but it’s not.  This is one trait I find in almost all the solopreneurs I talk to.  Ideas come to us constantly – there’s a reason there are products made for taking notes in the shower!  Too many ideas is a great problem to have because it can be solved with some focus.

People who are drawn to being a solopreneur business owner love challenges and new ideas.  Jumping from project to project without finishing any of them is what is called “bright, shiny object syndrome.”  We are in the middle of something which has become more boring as we churn through the details and BAM a new idea pops into our heads and we’re all over the thrill of something new.

One of the key factors in solopreneur success is to be able to resist bright, shiny object syndrome and finish projects.  If you decide to abandon something, do it conscientiously and not because you dropped the ball when something better came along.  You won’t have more products and services to offer if you don’t see your ideas through to completion.  An obvious result is suffering revenues, but an even bigger impact is that your great ideas are not helping anyone.  If you need motivation to get you through the boring patches of completing a project, think of all the people who need what you are offering and aren’t getting it because you haven’t gotten it done.

A simple but effective tool for solopreneur time management

A simple but effective tool for solopreneur time management
A simple but effective tool for solopreneur time management

During one part of my career before I was a solopreneur, I worked for a holding company that was a parent company for engineering and architecture firms.  My job was to help standardize systems across all the companies.  Because of the job-by-job nature of the work, everyone filled out a timesheet – even the administrative staff.  I found that knowing I was going to have to slot my time into categories when I did my timesheet helped me to think more proactively about my time and use it more wisely.

For most of us, more freedom is one of the main reasons for being self-employed.  We love that we can work whenever it suits us and spend time however we want.  If you’re like me, you’ll be thinking “Ugh, I could never go back to something like a timesheet now.”  I thought this too, until I saw how it changed my business and my life.

I started using a timesheet 6 months ago when I felt like I wasn’t getting enough done in all the major areas of my life – personal, our fixer upper house and professional.  My husband went to school for engineering and now works as a computer programmer and it was his idea to start tracking my time.  In the engineering mindset, you can’t optimize a resource until you know how it’s being used now.  So, in an effort to diagnose the problem I reluctantly began keeping a timesheet.  Boy did I become a convert quickly!

So many great things came out of my using a timesheet it would be hard to list them all here.  I became more aware of how long things really take which makes me better able to plan.  I could preset how much time to spend on each area so that I invested my time according to my values.  Strangely enough, I felt a sense of freedom from being on top of my time.  I imagine it’s similar to when someone finally gets on top of their budget and spending.  You can’t have unrealistic ideas about your time if how you spent it is right in front of you.  My timesheet helped me remove unhelpful blurring of work and personal time, which is a big trap for work-at-home solopreneurs.

If you don’t keep track of how you spend your time, I invite you to do this even for a week or so.  It’s a great practice to do every few months or so to make sure you’re spending your time how you think you are.

For my timesheet I used a spreadsheet where each line is a time window, and then I spread out how I spend the time into columns representing the areas I wanted to focus on.  You could just write things down on a notepad or use a calendar if that works better for you.  Don’t get caught up in finding the perfect tool – just do whatever works and will get you the information you need to make the best decisions about your time.

Solopreneur Growing Pains

Most solopreneurs I’ve worked with start small and bend the rules to establish themselves.  It’s common to start by giving away some free services in exchange

Michele Christensen on solopreneur growing pains
Solopreneurs can go have growing pains

for testimonials or referrals and offer big discounts to hone your craft and gain some momentum.  Policies are only loosely enforced if they exist at all in those early days.  What almost always happens is that at some point the business is humming along and the business owner still has clients who came on board in the early days and this can create tension for the solopreneur who now has to serve those clients under the old rates or service plan even though it’s no longer appropriate for the business.  In those early days, it was fine to get a last minute cancellation since your days were wide-open, but now that means lost income from an empty slot you could have filled with more notice.  Maybe some of those early clients are only paying about half of what you charge now.

So what do you do?  How do you handle these growing pains?

Start by getting clear on what you want.  What rate do you want?  How much notice for cancellations do you want?  What travel reimbursement do you want?  What services do you no longer want to do?  Don’t worry if you don’t think you can get all these things right away and still fill your practice – it’s important to know what you want so you can at least begin moving toward that model.

Decide on how much you are committed to the model you want.  If you adhere strongly to your model, you may lose some clients off the bat.  It may be okay to phase things in over time or give someone a grace period.  You may decide to keep some clients even though they don’t line up exactly with your desired business model.  When making a change like this, you can do it gradually or all at once depending on your comfort level and your market.  If there are services or products you’ve offered that you no longer want to do, consider offering them at a premium price instead of not offering them.

This can be a painful and uncomfortable process but it is necessary to continue your business progress.  Your policies, fees, business model and array of services will continue to change and grow with you.  At least a few times a year, check in with how you feel about these areas of your business and see if it’s time to grow a little.

5 tips to help you guard your time

Time is a solopreneur's most valuable asset

I was talking to some acquaintances this past weekend and we got on the subject of how we value time.  I realized that my value of my time was much higher in dollar terms than the other people present and that a big part of that difference was due to being a solopreneur.  The conversation revolved around various trade-offs we could make where we spend time to gain money (e.g. fixing up something you want to get rid of in order to sell it rather than just donate it) or spend money to gain time (e.g. driving instead of taking public transportation).

As a solopreneur, your personal and professional life are more closely linked than they are for a lot of other professionals.  Work and home life can easily bleed into each other to a detrimental degree.  Your decisions about time and money are interrelated.

My litmus test for any time and money question is to weigh it against how that time would pay off if invested in my business.  If I save $5 by taking public transportation, but spend an extra 2 hours doing it then that’s not worth my time (environmental impacts aside).  I can make way more than $5 by investing 2 hours in my business even if I’m doing long-term activities.

As a solopreneur, activities that cost time have to be done very conscientiously.  Your time budget is at least as important as your money budget.  You make money by spending your time correctly.  Your time, even though you’re not punching a clock, is not free.  There is an opportunity cost to every minute you spend both in financial terms and in terms of other activities you give up to do that activity.  Guard your time like the most valuable asset it is.

Here are some tips to help you guard your time:

  • End your appointments at the stated time.  It’s your job to watch the clock, so make sure you start closing up the conversation early enough so that you can finish on time.
  • Set limits on tasks that tend to expand – for example, give yourself 20 minutes to clear your inbox.  Even if you don’t make your deadline, you’ll have an idea of how long this job takes.
  • Use a timesheet.  I do this myself, and it really helps me stay on top of how long I spend doing things.
  • Create checklists and procedures for tasks you repeat.  Don’t reinvent the wheel.
  • Don’t do anything free just because it’s free in dollar terms.  Make sure the activity is worth the time it takes.

Above all, placing a high value on your time should be a guiding principle in your business activities.

A solopreneur’s take on what tasks to do

Solopreneurs can choose their tasks
Solopreneurs can choose their tasks

When you’re an employee, you often don’t have a choice about what tasks you work on.  Somebody else creates the big picture direction for the company and your job is to carry out the specific tasks needed to bring that vision to life.  It’s a great role in some ways – you’re spared some degree of angst in deciding what to do.  You’re not responsible for making sure payroll is covered.  You may not be responsible in emergencies or for mundane tasks like insurance, licenses and taxes.  But being an employee doesn’t allow you to shape the destiny of the company, and you may not be able to innovate as much as you want.  That’s one reason why a lot of people are drawn to the solopreneur lifestyle – the freedom to sink or soar on your own merits.

I think many solopreneurs go through a bit of a let down when they see how many tasks they have to do that they don’t particularly like and this may be true even if you have outsourced help.  It’s not that they are doing anything wrong, it’s more of a problem of expectations.  Many of us go into our business with huge enthusiasm and a fire to help others, but without thinking about the less glamorous tasks like doing the books, filling out paperwork and finding new clients.  What makes things even worse is that a lot of these tasks aren’t optional!

The good news is that once you take care of the mandatory tasks required to stay in business you have some choices about what tasks you do.  Unlike an employee, you have lots of discretion as a solopreneur in what you work on.  You can even, gasp, make decisions that are bad for business but good for your spirit.  The important thing is that you do this with your eyes open.  For example, I have not yet really begun to use video in my business very much even though I know I know lots of people like getting information that way (and I will add video at some point).   The reason is that video is one of my least favorite ways to receive business information.  I’d much rather read, which I can do quickly, or listen which I can do anywhere.  Even though I know it’s probably not a great business decision, I’ve taken the liberty to make that decision since I can.  There are other important things beside the bottom line for a solopreneur.

If you’re doing any tasks that aren’t absolutely mandatory and that you dislike, I invite you to think about giving them up even if it may not be best for the bottom line. Outsourcing is of course an option, but before doing that consider if you even want to be engaged in those activities.  After all, being able to make decisions like that is one of the best reasons to be a solopreneur.

Product review – Google calendar

Michele Christensen Product review - Google Calendar
Product review - Google Calendar

The basics

Google calendar is included with all the features you get when you open a free Gmail account.  In spite of being free, it’s really robust and loaded with features.  I’ve used Outlook and Blackberry calendars before, and I can’t find anything that’s missing with Google calendar.  If you have an events calendar for your company, you can use Google calendar to get it published on your website without any programming skills.

What’s to love

Here are just the top 5 features that I love.  There’s many more, but this should give you enough incentive to check it out.  There’s also some newer features being tested at Google labs which you can enable as well (check under the Labs tab of calendar settings).

  1. It syncs with my Timetrade (timetrade.com) account so clients can schedule their own appointments.  Timetrade only shows when I’m available, not my appointments or what I’m doing when I’m not available.
  2. Custom privacy settings make it easy to share as much or as little data as you want with your spouse or assistant.
  3. You can invite other Gmail users to events and when they accept it shows up on their calendar.  This is great for getting things scheduled with no confusion.
  4. You can specify multiple calendars to see in your main view.  Mine shows appointments in red, birthdays I’ve entered in blue, US holidays provided by Google in blue and business tasks or reminders in purple.  This is helpful because I know at a glance what appointments I have and can look just at that if I want.  You could use this feature for various family members or company functions.
  5. I love the seamless sync with my Android phone.

I could go on and on (and often do!), but you get the idea – it’s a great product that happens to be free.  This is one of 32 resources I’ve compiled in my Solopreneur Success Rolodex, which you can download by clicking here.  The entire rolodex is a pdf with links to the best resources I’ve found for solopreneurs.  See a preview of some of the resources and grab your copy today by clicking below:

Michele’s recommended resources

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