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End of Year Lists

December 21, 2016 by MlleD

Next year my lists will be all hand-lettered.

 

The Winter Solstice is here and with it Mercury Retrograde. Although the latter comes with a little more woo woo (then again thinking about Stonehenge, perhaps they are equally wooish), they both offer the opportunity for reflection and planning. In what is now an annual tradition, here’s my end of the year business list for 2016.

Annual Digital Business Goals

1. Blog more often and on a consistent basis.

You, me, everyone with a stake in this interwebs game. My personal goal is 27 posts in 2017. I’m getting that number counting 2 posts per month , with an extra three thrown in for good measure/luck as the year ends in a 7:)

I reckon it takes me a week to think up a topic, and begin a rough draft (outline format) and then another week to flesh it all out with pretty pictures. Given my profession, I tend to overdue the images bit – i.e.: they’re definitely not just grabbed from the internet and stuck in there. Even when they are plucked out of the ethernet, they are always altered. In short, can take some time for the image aspect of the post, this post proving the exception to the rule.

Whatever your current blogging schedule / post count is, why don’t you try setting a goal to ramp up output in 2017? Mine is a four-fold ambitious increase, but 20% is good too. There’s a lot of debate about long post vs short posts, that’s a topic for another post (!), but the importance of consistency cannot be overstressed. Google definitely favours new content.

2. Review All Social Media Accounts.

Keep, exterminate or even, gasp, add more? This year I blogged for 153 days in a row as part of a public art project (A fictional blog set in 1938, I don’t count it towards business blogging) where I focused solely on twitter as an outreach platform. Yet, I noticed way more likes on the instagram end of things even though I didn’t post anything there (my account is dormant — it was all other folks sharing). Last Saturday, I took a delightful calligraphy workshop  at Fox and Flourish.  The owner Christina had a hashtag, but noted she mainly uses instagram.  Both of these got me wondering if I should (despite loathing this word) reboot the account.The value of said likes etc is also up for debate, and that too is a topic for another post.

3. Start a Newsletter / Develop A Mailing List

This is the year we too, will offer one of those annoying pop-ups to subscribe to the newsletter full of unicorns and other magical wisdom.

4.Plan to unplug

Every year I attempt to conquer my inbox and get down to the mythical state of “inbox zero” (coined by Merlin Mann). I do, and then a few days later the breeding begins. This year, I will plan to conquer the inbox every quarter at a minimum. Also to unsubscribe from e-mail lists that no longer align with my personal or business goals. Sometimes the newsletters are great, and yet they can represent a pressure to perform, to be, to buy into something….after a while you realize it ain’t gonna happen.

Creativity comes from boredom and doing nothing. It’s been proven. I can’t find the source quote, but intuitively you already know this.

5. Nap more.

Ok, this one’s not digital, at least not yet.

Cheers, and Happy 2017!

Filed Under: Blogorama Tagged With: 2017, blogging, digital decluttering, goals, lists, planning, social media, year in review

End of the Year Lists

December 22, 2015 by MzD

Use a Pen

My mother always made lists. I remember seeing them on the glass top of the side table beside the ashtray and coffee cup. They were lists for what you might expect — groceries, chores, events planning— and there were also more obscure lists, that might not have computed in my 6 year old brain, but their quixotic meanings do resonate now, as I make lists about the same mundane things and also more random notes that help me remember things at 4am. They are obscure and yet the writing down of the words —enchantress, mountain, yellow— while meaningless at a casual glance, they will help me remember in the morning to research more about Ada Lovelace, to finish the concept proposal I’m working on and to look for a yellow scarf. I saw a woman with my skin tone wearing a yellow scarf, and the lust for the perfect yellow accessory was born. Perhaps Santa will oblige.

I’m a big fan of lists. Written in pen. On anything, the back of an envelope, a bill, recycled, reused, you name it. Digital lists are important (we use basecamp as software of choice for project management) and yet the pen in hand has a kind of transmission to the brain that feels more solid. Not just an illusion, cognitive science studies endorse this perspective.1

The activity in the North Pole is almost at peak energy, and the nice and naughty lists are no doubt done. But there’s still time for some lists.

Here are 2 of my lists for the end of the year:

Annual Business Planning / Website Maintenance

  1. Domain Names
    Check your domain name’s expiry and mark the renewal date in your calendar. I let a domain name go past the expiry date this year (long story – old email address that didn’t send me the renewal) and had to cough up a staggering $250 to renew it. (the average price of a domain is 15 bucks). It was worth it, but a costly lesson. We have a gadzillion domain names, so this year I’m going to make a spreadsheet to keep track. Some will also be let go of. Hopefully not to vultures.
  2. Schedule Back-ups and Updates
    Set up a schedule (if you don’t have someone doing this for you – ahem:) to backup your website on a schedule, and to keep plugins updated on a regular basis. We do this on pretty much a weekly basis. Note the qualifier “pretty much” – this year it will be on the calendar scheduled on a specific day and time.
  3. Plan to Blog
    Put it on your calendar. Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly…. Make a master list of blog topics in advance. I started doing this at the end of November, and it’s been very useful. Also going onto Basecamp to keep track. With reminders!

 
And to contrast the practical to-dos, here’s a deceptively simple and yet ingenious way to consider planning et al.

Annual Word of the Year.

Christine Kane2 is one of several, but I believe the first, to introduce this concept. Instead of making New Year’s Resolutions, which are usually too big and rarely kept, choose one word to guide you for the year. The first time I tried this I chose “balance” and coincidentally ended up with a flu that gave me an inner ear thing and I had dizziness for months. It almost threw me off the pursuit, but in the end the word did help me prioritize my life in ways that felt more in balance. This year (2015) is was Value. Hence I did willingly part with the dough to renew a domain name for my artwork, as I decided it was valuable on so many levels.

  1. Get a fresh blank piece of paper, or nice shiny graphed notebook.
  2. Make a list of words.
  3. Let them dance around in your head. See which ones create “sparks of joy”. Read Marie Kondos’ book on decluttering for more on that concept3.
  4. Choose.
  5. Enjoy

FOOTNOTES

1. “Mueller and Oppenheimer postulate that taking notes by hand requires different types of cognitive processing than taking notes on a laptop, and these different processes have consequences for learning.” Scientific American
2.Christine Kane – herself a bit of an enchantress.
3. Marie Kondo – the enchantress of decluttering.

p.s. what’s with providing links in footnotes rather than the conventional and easy way right in the body of the text? I’m experimenting with less distraction.

Filed Under: Blogorama Tagged With: enchantress, lists, personal, planning

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