Практика Shadowing: How To Be The CEO of Your Own Life (6 Unexpected Tips) - Изучайте разговорный английский с YouTube

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The wealthiest people have a secret.
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The wealthiest people have a secret.
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They don't work harder than everyone else.
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They just manage their time in unexpected ways.
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I used to be constantly overwhelmed,
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never making any real progress and trying to work harder than everyone else just to get ahead until I realized
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that I didn't need more time.
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I needed to manage my time better.
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And once I did, I made so much money and literally built my dream life.
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So if you wanna do the same,
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these are the six unexpected ways to manage your time.
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First up is a principle that successful people live by they aren't available to everyone.
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If you're always available to everyone,
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no one will ever respect you.
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And this was a hard one for me because I used to be available to everyone 24-7.
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People had my phone number,
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my email, and I would encourage people that I worked with to reach out to me at any time.
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But the problem was that people actually did reach out to me anytime and all the time.
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So much so
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that I ended up having no time to work on what
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I needed to do in order to move the business forward
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and i think part of this
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that isn't really talked about is it almost feels a little
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bit shameful not to be approachable to your team like i would actually feel bad
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if i wasn't giving them the time that they needed
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so i just allowed myself to be available and make sure
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that everybody knew i was there for them
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but i had to change my approach the moment that i realized
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that if the people in your environment can't make things work
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when you're unavailable they probably were the wrong person to begin with
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and if you own a business or manage other people in your current role,
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being constantly accessible is actually one of the biggest leadership traps.
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Harvard research shows that professionals who guard their time are viewed as more effective and high value.
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So just remember that.
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If you're always reachable, you're a responder.
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If you have boundaries, you are a leader.
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And the top CEOs protect their time because scarcity creates value.
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So starting tomorrow,
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go relook at how you respond batch your emails your return
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phone calls your messages into just a couple of windows instead
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of constantly checking I like the cadence of the middle of the morning
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and the end of the day I'm not a huge fan of checking my emails first thing in the morning
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because it sets you down a different path
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but mid-morning allows me to work on the most important things first
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and then later in the day allows me to get all the emails
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that have piled up here's the thing remember every person does not deserve immediate access to you.
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I guarantee that when you create space with the other people who depend on you,
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they will actually start solving their own problems.
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So protect your time by being less available and fill that time up with the things that you need to do.
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Next is number two.
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Successful people set up their strategy at the start of the week.
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There's a reason why you're always overwhelmed on Monday and the good news is you can change that.
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If you're always reacting in the day or the moment to the latest problem,
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you will end up losing entire control of your week.
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So every Sunday night, try setting up your own game day strategy.
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List out all of the priorities for the week.
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Think about your week in quarters.
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Every single day has a very specific purpose.
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What has to happen on Monday for you to know that by the end of the day on Friday,
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you are successful?
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What about Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday?
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The more you think about your week like a game and
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that you need to move into having confidence that you are going to win every single week,
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the more intentional you're going to be about the way you spend your time.
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This means that Monday can't just be you firefighting,
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Tuesday having meetings, to Wednesday being able to do deep work.
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It won't get you to where you're trying to go.
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And once you have these priorities,
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everything else doesn't get done.
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When you decide to play before the game starts,
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you stop reacting and start using your time effectively.
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Next is number three.
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If you want to be more productive,
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you need to stop treating your health like it's optional.
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I don't find time for my health.
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I make it an active part of my day.
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I don't schedule workouts in the evening hoping to make them happen,
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but maybe allowing the door to be open if a dinner pops up or something more important is going to take place.
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I schedule the workouts first thing in the morning to get them done
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because it's my job to be in peak state and peak condition and to feel good about myself.
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The most successful people know this.
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If you don't feel good about yourself,
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how helpful are you going to be to your team?
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If you don't do the things that you say that you're going to do,
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how confident or you're going to show up to a meeting that matters.
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There's a lot of limiting beliefs about people who are successful and trading off their health for their success.
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But let me shoot this to you straight.
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You can have both.
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It is not one or the other.
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In fact, your health, if you truly do prioritize it and use it as your foundation,
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amplifies what you're able to do every day.
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I had to cut out drinking Diet Coke.
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I cut out caffeine.
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I cut out gluten.
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I cut out dairy.
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I started working out three to four times a week and I sleep eight hours every single night.
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And what this has reminded me of is I don't need to squeeze more in the day.
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I need to prioritize my sleep.
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I need to prioritize eating right.
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And I need to make those things happen because it creates a better outcome in the workplace.
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It is not a detractor from the workplace.
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I refuse to use being too busy at work as the reason to let myself go in all those areas.
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And the big unlock of managing your personal time
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and your priorities with your work is to understand
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that your health isn't optional when your job requires you to be in a peak state.
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High performers, they don't squeeze in their life after work.
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They build their life to include the components that are important.
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Health being one of the main ones.
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They know that being exhausted and feeling like shit leads to bad decisions.
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And this costs way more than the hour that you saved by skipping the workout.
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So schedule it.
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Schedule your movement.
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Schedule your workout.
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Schedule your sleep.
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Schedule your eating time populate those things in your calendar
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and then protect those times like business meetings block your workout
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in the morning set a bedtime alarm for 9 30 my
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phone goes to sleep every single night at 9 30 alongside me
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and that allows me to get up at 5 30
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so I get a solid seven to eight hours of sleep every single night
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when you think about your food how do you take the
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randomity out of not knowing what to eat every single day you can batch meal prep
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or you can know exactly where you're order food from,
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but you have to have a game plan.
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And the little time that it takes to plan these things has a disproportionate effect on your ability to actually do them.
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I guarantee that when your health is stable, everything else runs better.
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Your energy, your focus, your patience with your team,
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your decision-making, and high-pressure moments.
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Health shouldn't come last.
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It's the foundation.
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Next up is number four.
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Successful people treat their calendar like an asset, not a suggestion.
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If you're constantly busy but never making any real progress,
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let's be honest, it's because you're letting other people spend your time like it's their time.
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And I used to get stuck in this all the time.
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So I really do understand why this is such a hard thing to get out of.
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The perfect example of this,
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and I'm a little embarrassed to say how recent this was
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is me with my inbox i used to spend hours a day in my inbox
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and my mindset around this that was so broken was that
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if my team members had something
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that they needed me to see i had to review every single detail i couldn't let something go out there
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that i didn't approve and i didn't review because what
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if they did it wrong and i always find things and
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so i would just get mired stuck to my email
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and not able to do more networking events
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or feel the weight of having to come home early from networking events
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so that I could respond to all of these incoming messages.
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So about six months ago,
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I told my team that I don't want to spend any more than 15 minutes a day going through my emails.
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So my team has actively had to change the communication around
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me to be able to get me down to where I'm actually only spending 15 minutes a day in my inbox.
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And since then, my time has freed up and I can actually spend more time writing LinkedIn posts,
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creating more content, working on my new podcast.
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I just went to Paris last week
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and had time to talk to people without having this worry that I was missing something.
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And I came across a study from the Harvard Business School where they analyzed 27 executives
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and found that the top performers spend about 43% of their time on pre-planned strategic moves
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while the rest of the world spends their day in reactive mode,
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answering emails, slack pings, and all of the ad hoc requests.
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So let's talk about this week.
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Look at your calendar as if it is your own money visualized.
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Look at every meeting, every commitment,
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every time block, and ask,
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if this time was money,
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would I spend it here?
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Maybe it's a daily stand-up call that could actually be an email.
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Maybe it's a lunch meeting where it never leads anywhere.
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When you identify those things that are wasting your time as if they are wasting your money,
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you either delegate them or delete them entirely.
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Anything that doesn't actually earn what you are investing,
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you'll find at least five to 10 hours that you're wasting on things that don't move your goals forward.
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Now we're on to number five.
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Successful people review and adjust.
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They don't just grind.
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You have to stop repeating the same unproductive week over and over,
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wondering why nothing changes.
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To understand this, just like we talked about previously,
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think of a football game.
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You've started with the game plan but by the third quarter
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or nearing the end of your week
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if your strategy isn't working you'd have to adjust you don't keep running the same play
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and the same play and the same play
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and failing your schedule works the same way
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when you set your schedule there will be problems
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that come up there will be priorities that have shifted
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or there will be quote-unquote fires at work and
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so the more you can in real time adjust not to be reactive
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but to ensure
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that the priorities are still being met the more you're actually going to be able to create the growth you want.
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I mentioned earlier the weekly review that happens on Sundays,
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but at the end of every day,
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I also do a review that makes me twice as productive.
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I review the day I just had and I adjust my plan for the next day.
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A Harvard Business School study found
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that workers who spent just 15 minutes at the end of
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each day reflecting on what they learned performed 23% better after just 10 days.
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So just taking a few minutes to review your day actually gets you better results the next day.
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And the cost of not doing this is repeating the same mistakes
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and wondering why you're stuck in the same place six months from now.
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So at the end of each day,
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block out 15 minutes to reflect on what you actually learned or did that day and then look at tomorrow.
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And when you do this,
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ask yourself, what worked today?
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What didn't work?
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And what am I going to move around tomorrow to make sure that I have a phenomenally successful day?
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Maybe you've discovered that morning deep work sessions are when you're sharpest.
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Maybe you realize that back-to-back meetings kill your focus.
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Maybe you found that responding to Slack immediately derails your momentum.
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Write it down, then apply those lessons tomorrow.
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That's how you consistently review and adjust to make sure your tomorrow is always better than today.
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Lastly, Number six, successful people protect their deep work time.
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If you're struggling with your focus,
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your attention, or getting all of the things on your list done every single day,
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you should mute your notifications during deep work time.
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For me, this looks like showing up in the morning and having a book,
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an article, or a whole research project that I need to do with ChatGPT.
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And during that time, I don't want any distractions.
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I don't want my husband talking to me.
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I don't want a text coming through and
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so i immediately put my phone on do not disturb
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but what ends up happening when i'm not disciplined about this
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or when i'm feeling mentally lazy is i'm working through this problem it's like coming together it's unraveling
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and i'm figuring things out
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and then all of a sudden i have this urge to check my email
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or to check instagram but instead of allowing myself to do
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that i stop myself because there have been
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so many times in the past where i didn't stop myself
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and i had this protected time for let's say two hours
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and for the first 30 minutes i was doing a great job of getting really into the problem
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but then i allowed myself to get derailed
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and all of a sudden the 90 minutes
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that i had protected turned into me randomly researching some ex-best friend's daughter
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that i once knew and seeing how much she's grown up and now i'm totally distracted So for me,
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I always block deep work time in my calendar in the morning because that is when I'm the most rested,
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I'm excited, and I'm focused.
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And I know that nothing can touch that time.
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And this deep work looks like spending time reading,
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doing projects that I know are going to get me to the goals that I have,
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career goals, business goals, all the things.
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And most people really struggle with deep work because they get interrupted.
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They put it at a time when they know that people are going to come into their office,
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talk to them, which entirely defeats the purpose of deep work.
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I read something yesterday from the University of California that blew my mind.
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Once people are interrupted, it takes an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to return to their original task.
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That means if you're getting interrupted even just a few times during your deep work time,
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you're losing 23 minutes.
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So deep work isn't something that you just squeeze into leftover time.
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It should be first, it should be scheduled,
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or it will never happen.
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Remember, the most successful people don't get paid to be busy.
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They get paid to think, to decide, to create.
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But most people treat deep work like a nice to have instead of the actual job.
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So tomorrow morning, block one sacred window for deep work before you check your email,
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before you have any calls, or do any messages.
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Make it a 90-minute walk.
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Maybe it's from 6am to 7.30 before anyone's awake.
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Maybe it's 9am to 10.30 after your first cup of coffee.
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During this time, avoid any interruptions by turning off all of your notifications,
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close Slack, put your phone in another room,
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shut down your inbox, and protect this time like your goals depend on it.
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Because they do.
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If you apply one of these,
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you'll immediately buy back hours in your week that you can now redirect towards money,
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towards impact, and ideally towards the light that you want.
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If you want to learn how to communicate like a CEO next,
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check out this video and subscribe so you don't miss next one.

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Контекст и фон

В этом видео мы узнаем о том, как успешные люди управляют своим временем и достигают финансового успеха. Говорится о том, что не обязательно работать больше, чем другие, а лучше научиться управлять своим временем более эффективно. Автор делится личным опытом — он столкнулся с проблемой постоянной доступности для всех и решил изменить свой подход к управлению временем, что в конечном итоге помогло ему построить свою мечту. Это видео предлагает неожиданные советы, которые могут помочь каждому стать "CEO" своей жизни.

Топ-5 фраз для повседневного общения

  • “Я не всегда доступен для всех.” — Эта фраза помогает установить границы и подчеркивает важность личного времени.
  • “Если ты постоянно доступен, то становишься просто реагирующим.” — Осознание этого аспекта может помочь в управлении своим временем.
  • “Важно защищать свое время.” — Принцип, который подчеркивает ценность времени.
  • “Создавайте пространство для важных дел.” — Эта фраза будет полезна для запоминания при организации своего рабочего времени.
  • “Успешные люди устанавливают свою стратегию в начале недели.” — Напоминание о необходимости планирования и структурирования задач.

Пошаговое руководство по shadowing

Чтобы успешно улучшить произношение английского и практиковать разговорный английский с течением времени, следуйте этим шагам:

  1. Слушайте видео — Постарайтесь сосредоточиться на интонации и тембре голоса рассказчика.
  2. Переслушайте фразы — Определите сложные моменты и выделите ключевые фразы для shadow speaking (shadow speak).
  3. Повторяйте за говорящим — Используйте технику shadowspeaks, чтобы воспроизвести звучание и rhythm речи.
  4. Записывайте свой голос — Сравните свою речь с оригиналом, чтобы выявить области для улучшения.
  5. Практикуйте регулярно — Уделяйте время каждый день для shadowing, чтобы закрепить усвоенный материал и улучшить произношение английского.

Следуя этим шагам, вы сможете значительно улучшить свои навыки общения на английском языке и научиться более эффективно управлять своим временем, создавая пространство для личного и профессионального роста.

Что такое техника Shadowing?

Shadowing — это научно обоснованная техника изучения языка, изначально разработанная для подготовки профессиональных переводчиков и популяризированная полиглотом доктором Александром Аргуэльесом. Метод прост, но эффективен: вы слушаете аудио на английском от носителей языка и немедленно повторяете вслух — как тень, следующая за говорящим с задержкой в 1–2 секунды. В отличие от пассивного прослушивания или грамматических упражнений, Shadowing заставляет мозг и мышцы рта одновременно обрабатывать и воспроизводить реальные речевые паттерны. Исследования показывают, что это значительно улучшает точность произношения, интонацию, ритм, связную речь, понимание на слух и беглость речи — что делает его одним из самых эффективных методов для подготовки к IELTS Speaking и реального общения на английском.

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