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Leveraged Action: How I Saved $25,000 a Year!

By Marilyn Schwader

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Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 26Jun2007
Word count: 643
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A few years ago I attended a workshop at the International Coach Federation conference in Atlanta. Jack Canfield, co-author of the Chicken Soup for the Soul book series, was speaking. He had us fill out a worksheet that detailed what we did each hour in our business day, for each day of the week. Then he had us place a dollar value on each activity. For example, what would filing paperwork cost if we had to pay someone. The third step was to add up the hours that we spent on actual revenue generating tasks and how much they were worth.

The entire exercise filled several pages and at the end, we applied a formula to calculate how much was lost or added to the bottom line each year by doing work someone else could do for you. According to that figure, by trying to save money and do everything myself, I was LOSING $25,000 per year!

This is an example of NOT using leveraged action. In my attempts to save money by doing the work myself, I was gobbling up time I could have been spending producing more income. Doing those tasks also gave me an excuse to not take action on my new ideas. That was a wake-up call for me.

To gain momentum, you have to take action, and the more you tap into other resources as you do that, the faster your results will appear. Once you start, you begin to attract the people and resources that will propel you forward.

Waiting until everything is perfect keeps you from finding out your next step. You'll spend all of your time fixing things without knowing if they will ever work.

So start. How do you do that?

1. Run, don't walk when you have a new idea.
2. Take massive action. A lot of parallel things will happen at the same time. You have to be okay with chaos.
3. Make your action simultaneous, not sequential. There are four "Step 1's". Start several things, then chase them.
4. Do it before you are "ready". As one of my mentors says, "Ready, Fire, Aim." Start without knowing. It's easier to clean up a mess than to start.
5. Leverage every asset you have:

- Other people's experience: If you aren't a bookkeeper and have to learn how to run an accounting program, the learning curve plus the time you spend entering data will add up. Tasks like this may not be cheaper in the present, but they will be cheaper in the long run.

- Expertise: Do what you love and let others do what they love. Doing more of what you do well will soon make you a master at it. You become an expert and your knowledge becomes more valuable.

- Connections: By joining associations, creating alliances, and participating in mastermind groups you meet people who might know or do what you need. Use their mastery to allow you to develop yours.

- Time: Make a decision that your productivity is more important than anything. Protect it. Invest in high priority activities.

Taking leveraged action also extends to my non-work activities. I decided some time ago that I wanted a lifestyle-driven business, so I soon saw the value of leveraging other people's time and energy to do household tasks as well. After a busy day at work, I have a need to relax, instead of doing things that are necessary but not pleasant for me.

Doing things I take pleasure in restores me. Although those tasks are not related to my work directly, I have more focus and energy when I don't have to do those things and it improves my bottom line indirectly.

So, take action, do what you love, and let others do what they are good at.

Getting your information from concept to marketplace? Visit author/coach Marilyn Schwader at http://www.clarityofvision.com . Looking for an accelerated information products education in an affordable, easy-to-use format? Go to http://www.jumpstartyourwealth.com .

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