4 Simple Principles of Getting to Completion
“If your mind isn’t clouded by unnecessary things, then this is the best season of your life.” ~Wu-Men
Post written by Leo Babauta.
When I hear about a great idea that a friend has, I get excited. I can’t wait to see that idea become reality.
Then I ask about the idea a few months later, and it often is not one bit closer to completion.
Ideas stop short of becoming reality, and projects seem to drag on endlessly, because of one thing: complexity.
A software programmer can allow the development of a new app he’s building to drag on and on for years (I know of cases where this happened), only to find Google release something that makes his app obsolete. The problem: the program grew and grew in complexity and features, but never shipped.
A web developer can work on a rad new website with killer features, but after months of work the website never launches. Problem: too complex, and too much of a perfectionist.
A writer can work on a novel, working in characters and plotlines, and then work on revision after revision, only to abandon it. The complexity of a book can become overwhelming.
If your project has been dragging on, or you’re having problems completing, try simplifying, and stop trying for perfection.
I’ve launched a number of projects over the last few years, and learned a thing or two about making ideas take life, and getting to done.
Here are some of those key principles:
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