Auteur/autrice : marc

  • The 10 rules to thrive through a time of crisis

    Photograph by Morgan Sessions - unsplash.com
    Photograph by Morgan Sessions – unsplash.com

    Day 514. Between December 2008 and April 2009, while the financial crisis was in full swing, I started this blog and published posts on 8 rules to thrive through the crisis. I announced I would be publishing 10 rules, but posted only 8… the crisis probably took a 20% tax. Nevertheless, 6 years later, the financial crisis is still there. For sure some countries have better weathered the storm, but some are still lagging behind. Emerging countries seem better off than developed countries, will it be the case in the coming years.

    However, if each crisis is an opportunity, there are simple rules that have always worked for me to weather any storm, any crisis, any hurdle, and any challenge and those are the ones I will share in the coming posts over the next month, based on the 8 I posted 6 years ago. They are drawn from my personal experience and my personal research. You may know some of those, if not all, and the one thing I can say is that they work! What they are not:

    • A silver bullet. You will not get all that you want by following them. You need to adapt, tweak, act and take risks.
    • A philosophy. I am a pragmatic guy. Although I love thinking and imagining what I could and want to do, I am hands on and do not think for the pleasure of it. I think for the pleasure to act.
    • A shield protecting you from failure. You will fail, integrate this. Failure is an integral part of any learning and any success! Those rules will not avoid you to fail but will help you to get back on your feet faster.

    What are they then?

    • A set of means to an end. Simple, pragmatic activities you can put at play to reach your own objectives faster and better.
    • A solid foundation. The building is yours to build!
    • Simple down to earth principles for a rock solid life of success whatever the weather is.

    Ready to enhance your life? Come with me then!

  • Switch your criticism time to creation time

    Photograph by David Mao. unsplash.com
    Photograph by David Mao. unsplash.com

    Day 513. When have you criticized something lately? May be it was your coffee this morning that was too hot, or the traffic that was too dense, or your boss who has been pushing too much work to you… whatever it was, what did it do? Probably nothing on the outside, but it fueled your negativity on the inside. Some will argue that it’s good to criticize, it helps to make things better and it feels good. It helps to make things better if, and only if, you can contribute to make them better. In the case of your hot coffee, you can definitely put it in the fridge, add cold water or just wait. On the traffic, if you are not working for your city, you cannot act upon the traffic but on the time you go to work for instance to avoid the peak time. On the feel good side, you succumbed to your archaic system, the path of least resistance, criticizing without proposing a solution.

    Your coffee’s too hot? Great, you can cool it down by applying one of the solution I shared. The traffic is horrendous? Great, you’ll have more time to listen to this fantastic audio book and you will seek alternative route or different time to go to the office. Your boss is pushing too much work? Great, here’s a way to shine and to look for ways to get more productive, or to have a discussion to share your concerns. In all the cases, you archaic system makes you rant, and your prefrontal cortex makes you find a solution. The first is in charge of your Cro-Magnon side, the second of your personality and social behavior. Why do I write about your brain? Because each of your decision happens here and YOU are in charge. There’s no magic, it’s all yours to change, or not.

    By criticizing without offering solution, we lose our precious time and are undermining our credibility. By criticizing AND proposing a solution, we move to a more advanced and respected behavior. The ultimate step is to not criticize and propose a solution to what is perceived as a challenge or a problem. Tomorrow, I will wake up five minutes earlier to have time for my coffee to cool down. Next week, I will leave home thirty minutes later to avoid the peak traffic. Today, I will have a discussion with my boss on my workload that is increasing. Less talking, more acting, and probably, more connecting. Switch criticism time to creation time, not easy, but essential to get a better and more fulfilling life!

  • The 7 best hacks to reach 100% productivity

    Photograph by Craig Garner - unsplash.com
    Photograph by Craig Garner – unsplash.com

    Day 512. With all the media around us trying to grab our attention, a scarce resource, it may be difficult to stay focused. Beyond this, we are all equal in terms of hours: each day has 24 hours. How do you get to 100% productivity, unleashing your best work, day in, day out? Here’s what is working in my daily life:

    • Early morning work. 5AM is a wonderful time. Dawn in summer, darkness in winter, it’s always a very quiet time. I generally grab a good cup of coffee and use this fine hour to produce my best work, in the quietness of the early morning.
    • 50-minute chunk. With some training and discipline, you’ll be able to stay focus for almost a full hour. What I experimented as the best is a 50-minute chunk followed by a 10-minute walk, stretch or nap.
    • Switch off distraction. Switch your Wi-Fi off while you work on a specific activity, switch off all push notification. The best invention? Airplane mode. Activate the airplane mode on your laptop, tablet and phone, and start working.
    • Switch on for a limited time. Dedicate a special 50-minute chunk for email, social networks and any other online activities.
    • Appreciate the sound of silence. Get a noise-cancelling headset, switch it on if you happen to live or work in a noisy environment. Use it to isolate yourself from the surrounding noise. If you’ve never tried, I can guarantee this is a unique experience that you will never regret. One caveat: invest in the best possible technology here. Cheap does not last. Look for high end.
    • Use inspiring music. My soundtrack is probably not yours, but chose one that inspires and moves you. I love Mozart and Bach, relaxation and lounge music, Brahms lieder and some light operas, but the choice is yours.
    • Every day sweat. If you have not read Spark!, do it! There is scientific evidence between physical exercise and brain activity. invest at least 30 minutes of every day to do some physical activities. As the authors of the book say: « Aerobic exercise physically remodels our brains for peak performance ».

    Once you get started, produce, produce, produce until you ship. Production without shipping is a waste.

  • Stop all the noise in your life to unleash your greatness

    Picture by Luke Chesser - unsplash.com
    Picture by Luke Chesser – unsplash.com

    Day 511. It has been proven scientifically that multitasking is less productive than monotasking. This means that if you have multiple activities to undertake, it’s preferable to do them in series, each one after the other, than in parallel, all at the same time switching back and forth. There’s another thing I’ve discovered in terms of the ultimate productivity is to stop any form of noise.

    What do I call noise? Loud music, switched on TV, social networks… noise can be heard, seen or felt. You CANNOT produce quality work if you are distracted by noise. The only way is to be razor-sharp focused on what you are producing. Quality comes at the price of 100% focus. Switch off the noise and get back to work, one step at a time.

  • Do you want to become the best of the world?

    Best of the world
    Image from Joshua Earle – https://unsplash.com/joshuaearle

    Day 510. I was listening, while driving, to Seth Godin. The talk titled « Leap First » touched many topics close to my heart and the one that clicked particularly well over the week-end was the notion of « best of the world ». Of course becoming best of the all world is scary, is crazy and is probably not reachable for most of us, but who knows? However, look at the difference between the title and the scary piece above.

    In the title I wrote « best of the world », in the scary I wrote « best of the all world ». The difference lies into this single word all. Being the best of the world is becoming the best of your world. You define your world. If you bake bread, do you want to bake the best bread of your neighborhood? Do you want to offer the best value to your customers when it comes to bread? This is a crucial question. Because this is what defines to be the best of the world and potentially be allowed on the path of becoming one of the bests of the all world.

    Of course, it will require talent and efforts, but in the end do you want to become the best of the world and be recognized as such? It’s not only a powerful concept, it’s the only way to make work that matters to you and to others.