Many of us suffer from shiny object syndrome – the inability to focus on one thing long enough to finish it before jumping to something else, and not finishing that.
For me (eventually), I realised that the problem wasn’t having too many ideas; It was not having a system for capturing and processing them.
I’d stupidly start acting on a flash of an idea before I’d explored if this thing even had a right to exist – buy a domain and build something… quick, before someone else thinks of it!
Older me likes a slower pace, so now I just capture the idea in my “Shiny Objects” note.
Giving the idea space in a document was an important step to get it out of my head, and prevent me from doing dumb stuff.
In a document it’s contained and can be considered… Left alone in my head, it’s urgent.
Once in the document, it has to earn it’s way out by answering a few questions. Something like:
Just a high-level gut-check to gauge if there’s anything worth exploring here.
Make your shiny objects work for your attention – then shut everything else out by fending it off into your Shiny Objects document for another day.
For self-employed creatives, normal business traps are easy to fall into and overcomplicate things - but they’re totally avoidable when flying solo.
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