Start Finishing

Start Finishing
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How to Go from Idea to Done

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2019

نویسنده

Charlie Gilkey

ناشر

Sounds True

شابک

9781683643241

کتاب های مرتبط

  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Library Journal

August 2, 2019

Gilkey (cofounder, Productivity Flourishing) aims to encourage and guide people to complete the projects--both work and personal--that they care about most, what the author calls our best work. These projects are particularly meaningful to the person and can help them to thrive. Gilkey encourages readers to adopt the suggested methods immediately in order to see how they work in practice in a tone that is practical and optimistic. The author further notes that successfully concluding a project is often possible but not necessarily easy, explaining the concepts he introduces clearly. The chapter on building a project road map, however, could have been enhanced with an example and visuals of the completed documents. The author's advice stems from his own experience as well as his work with others. A list of suggested further readings rounds out the book. VERDICT Gilkey's constructive guidance will likely appeal to white-collar workers, especially those in managerial and administrative positions.--Shmuel Ben-Gad, Gelman Lib., George Washington Univ., Washington, DC

Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

A manual advocates an array of unconventional approaches to achieving productivity. This new book from Gilkey (The Small Business Life Cycle, 2014), founder of Productive Flourishing, delivers an assortment of thoughts and strategies for isolating doable projects and ushering them across the finish line. The author asserts that projects allowing people to do their best work are "bridges to a better world." Gilkey opens his overview with a stern look at other productivity and personal development guides, many of which intentionally or unintentionally make people feel faulty. He stresses instead the plasticity of potential: "We're more than the thoughts we have and actions we take and we can adopt new thoughts and take new actions that lead us to be the best versions of ourselves." On the journey to accomplishing these projects and realizing those amazing versions, one of the main obstacles the author identifies is "thrashing." This is the kind of "emotional flailing and metawork" people do while resisting the commitment to complete a task, the stirring of "head trash"-like fears and insecurities. Paradoxically, it's when faced with attacking the projects that personally mean the most that many people experience "creative constipation," an "inner toxicity" that can lead them to lash out at others and themselves. In order to relieve this stress and move things in the right direction, Gilkey proposes many tactics, including such concepts as "chunking" (breaking projects into more easily handled segments), "linking" (connecting some "chunks" with others), and "sequencing" (lining up "chunks" to fall in a smoother order). And, human nature being what it is, there are also tips on how to combat the thoughtless or obstructive actions of others. In expanding on all of this, the author's tone is infectiously upbeat and exceptionally forgiving. The "grind hard, grind harder, eventually die" attitude on prominent display in so many productivity books is entirely absent in these pages. Gilkey's advice includes such simple practical items as assessing your work environment (a change may unblock some key piece of congestion) and handling email more efficiently ("processing" it only when you have email-related work to do rather than "checking" it far too often for no constructive purpose). He also recommends reshaping the habits and routines that can remove "scores of daily microdecisions" but can also clog up productivity if they're not policed and periodically reexamined. In brightly well-designed and inviting chapters, Gilkey warns his readers to beware of projects that seem easier because they involve less "thrashing": "Thrashing is...not a sign that you can't finish the project or that you're doing the wrong project. It's a sign that...you'll need to show up powerfully to get it done." In one crystal-clear insight after another, the author provides readers with an enormous trove of strategies designed to help them succeed, whether their key projects are business-related, creative, or personal. He gives intuitively catchy names to the mental snarls that readers experience when working alone or in groups. The author cautions readers that it's seductively easy to spend an entire life "in the meantime," never hunkering down to create their masterpieces. His comprehensive book is a formidable corrective to that inertia. A powerful and optimistic guide to clearing out the clutter and finishing your best work.

COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)



Booklist

July 1, 2019
Giley, founder of Productive Flourishing and a U.S. army veteran, shares how readers can incubate ideas, turn them into projects, and advance them forward to completion. He offers suggestions for organizing one's productivity by providing guidance in different ways. This is both a fast read and an easy-to-reference business book, and will be accessible to readers interested in learning how to manage a project's budget, implementation, timeframes, and assessment needs. Giley's checklists, questions, and quick rundowns for planning a project from scratch are useful tools for anyone prone to procrastination or getting lost in the process. He provides strategies to minimize and reduce digital distractions and addresses how to combat the negative thoughts and self-doubts readers may feel when they find themselves stuck. For those interested in project management and entrepreneurship, this book offers creative solutions for developing habits and routines that will set them on a path to starting and finishing projects successfully.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)




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