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Need More Hours in Your Day? If you want more hours in your day, more days in your week, you’re not alone. This is the biggest complaint we hear from entrepreneurs. There is a solution. Of course, we can and should maximize our time, become more efficient, automate and delegate, but this alone won’t resolve the time deficiency crisis. As small business owners, we must balance the many aspects of running a business—marketing, sales, keeping up with customer demands, industry trends and the latest technologies, etc.—with family and friends. The fact that we don’t have to answer to anyone else for how we use our time adds to the challenge. On top of that, we’re constantly barraged with a seemingly endless array of opportunities and new ideas—many of them worthwhile, even valuable. There are more wonderful things to do, to see, to buy—more ways to spend our time, energy and money than resources allow. You simply can’t do it all. If you’re to accomplish your dream and look back in the future without regret, you must identify what’s truly important to you, clarify your vision, keep a laser-like focus on your goal, avoid tempting distractions along the way and keep on course.
There really are enough hours in the day—but only if you define what’s important to you. You’ll need to spell out your vision, keep a laser focus and be choosy about how you spend your time. Only then will you begin to get time on your side.
About the Author: Victoria Munro is co-founder (along with husband Dave Block) of Make-it-Fly® LLC, a company dedicated to creating success for small-business owners through creatively designed programs and tools. Victoria has started and run nine different businesses. To receive FREE business success articles with tips to help you with your business, sign up for their award-winning ezine, “In-Flight Refueling,” at: www.Make-it-Fly.com, and receive a free copy of the eBook, Get More Done in Less Time: 101 Quick and Easy Time Tactics & Tips. You’re welcome to “reprint” this article in your ezine, print publication or on your website, as long as it remains complete and unaltered (including the “about the author” info at the end).
Copyright © 2003-2007 Victoria Munro. All rights
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