I spoke to a lawyer yesterday who told me he wants to continue building his practice (which is doing well) and find something he can do on the side that might one day lead to bigger and better things.
He has an itch and wanted me to help him scratch it.
Most of our time was spent talking about ways to find ideas. For now, that’s what he’s going to focus on.
At some point, after he does a lot of exploring and researching and thinking, if and when he finds an idea he wants to pursue, he’ll need to decide what to do about it.
When that time comes, I’d tell him to do what David Allen suggests in Getting Things Done:
“Ask yourself two questions: What’s the successful outcome? And, What’s the next action (logical next step) to make it happen?” Allen says, “These provide fundamental clarity for Getting Things Done, and they lie at the core of most everything I teach.â€
These questions are equally valuable for parsing a task or project list as they are for choosing your future.
Whether you’re starting a new chapter in your legal career, a new work project, or a new business, ask yourself what “done” looks like for you.
As Stephen Covey said, “start with the end in mind”.
In my work, especially when I’m struggling to start a project, or complete it, asking myself, “What’s the next action?” has been a game changer.
I ask that question and it helps me figure out the best (or easiest) place to start. I come back and ask that question again and again, and it helps me figure out what to do “next”.
Go ahead, think about something you need to do that you’ve been avoiding. Look at the list of all of the tasks you need to do and ask yourself, “What’s the next action?”
Start there.
How I use GTD in Evernote