Categories
Productivity

Planning and “The Plan”

One of the main pitfalls I seem to fall into over and over again is failing to go beyond planning and actually getting my work done. I plan, plan some more, add planning to my to-do list, do even more planning, finish planning, get back to planning, re-plan and so on. It seems that planning –  for me –  is an end unto itself: I plan for the sake of planning.

To resolve this problem, it’s important to recognize the dual role of planning: planning as a process and as part of a process.

The Process

Planning isn’t simply done to pave the way for the actions that need to be carried out. Planning helps us resolve our own confusion and to manage our own thoughts. We put pen to paper, or mindmap on our computers or use any number of planning methods so we can clarify our own thinking about the project we intend to undertake.

In this respect, planning alone (without doing anything beyond the planning) remains a useful process to go through. It brings us clarity and relief. It helps us make sense of our projects. It helps us manage our own thoughts.

This is when planning can be considered as an end unto itself. We don’t need to do anything else to experience the relief planning, alone, can bring.

But to actually get things done, we need to see planning as part of a greater process.

Part of a Process

Most projects we undertake have a level of complexity that needs to be simplified – or understood – in order to manage the work associated with it, so we can get the desired results.

Planning is an essential step to take in order to bring clarity to any project and to define the action steps to take. The outcome of planning isn’t clarity and mental relief. As part of a process, planning must have a tangible output that gets fed into the next phase of the project. Planning is part of the “Thinking” phase of a project that defines how the project is to be carried out. The next phase would be the “Doing” phase, where the results of planning are put into practice.

What connects the two phases is The Plan.

The Plan

While planning, your intention should be to come up with an outcome that can be used to get work done. This is The Plan. While this may seem obvious, but if you default to seeing planning as a process (and not part of a process), an outcome beside mental relief is unnecessary. In fact, I’ve planned many, many times and simply forgot – or even threw away – my planning papers because I achieved the relief that I desired.

But to make planning effective, it must have a Plan as an output. A plan defines, clearly, what you intend to do in the “Doing” phase. Once you draw up a plan, the planning phase is completed and you can move on to undertake the tasks required.

Without a plan, planning can go on forever (and it usually does). There is always information to take in and alternatives to consider. But once a plan is drawn up, you can conclude the planning phase and actually get things done.

Categories
Productivity

Evaluating My Holiday

Today is the last weekday of my 5-week holiday. I had some very ambitious plans for the holiday (that’s why I took the holiday to begin with!). Some said my plans were overly ambitious and that if this is what my plan looked like, I might as well include “solving world hunger” on the list.

Were they right?

My answer is: “I don’t know.”

How many goals did I achieve?

None!

In fact, I would go so far as to say that I didn’t achieve anything in my holiday. You may have even noticed that I only wrote FOUR posts during my holiday (of FIVE WEEKS), while I was writing an average of one post PER DAY for almost a month before that!

Do I feel bad that my time was wasted without accomplishing anything? Kinda, but not really…

Why?

Because I just experienced the effects of a poor approach to getting things done and can now recognize the reasons for why I was unable to accomplish much. This doesn’t make me feel guilty or annoyed. In fact, I find it inspirational.

I took the holiday to find out if I can work productively at home for when I quit my job. The answer is clearly that I couldn’t. Not because it’s impossible, but because I didn’t approach it correctly, and can now pin-point where I went wrong. This is why I can’t answer the question of whether my plans were realistic or not. Had I done everything I could and in the right way, I would then be able to say whether they were overly ambitious or not.

I will hopefully be sharing some of these lessons with you so you can avoid my mistakes and worry about some other mistakes you will make 😛