ez ✔

ez ✔ is an extremely powerful, yet simple and fun to use software product that gives you the superpower to focus on building solid habits of the most important activities for your success in Life and Business.

The more you use it, the better it gets... and so do you.

Price: Free. Start Now: Read the User Guide

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Showing posts with label Why. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Why. Show all posts

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Your words create your reality

In tune with the New Year, and thinking of resolutions, I was taking some time to improve my EZchecklist™ and got to thinking about the third item in my list: Meditate. It struck me as something that was flat, without a good motivating visual.  

Do I really want to just meditate, or do I want something more. Actually what I want is the result of meditation. Just meditating is not very motivational. Meditating is the what. I need the why.

I'm assuming we are all familiar with Simon Sinek's classic TED talk "Start with Why". It is almost a cliché among product development startup founders who are so obsessed with what they are building that the have a difficult time expressing why are doing it. The communicate very clearly how the thing works, but not at all clearly why someone would want to use it.

A very good friend of mine, George Walther, wrote a book about 20 years ago called "What you say is what you get"  that clearly explains that the words we use create our reality. Many books have followed his in this same vein. 

So, putting the why into my meditate action item on my checklist, and coupling it with words chosen to create what I'm really trying to achieve with meditating, I came up with "Build a Beautiful Mind" which, to me, is so much more motivational than simply "Meditate".  

Now, when I get to that time in my morning, I look forward to Building a Beautiful Mind. What could be better than that?

This was a great start at improving my EZchecklist™ and I'm looking forward to going through the rest of the list to make similar improvements. 

Let me know how you are making continuous improvements to your list.


Monday, November 2, 2020

EZchecklist™ Update - November, 2020

  

The EZchecklist™ Update

"all the news that's worth checking"


I've been busy making some powerful improvements to EZchecklist™, and here are a few of my favorites. Click the links for more information, or schedule a zoom/hangout meeting to learn how these can work for you.


1. EZchecklist™ Lite 

Everything you love about EZchecklist™ Pro, but less.

2. Most Successful Activities

Distilled and available with a double click. When I started on this checklist adventure I did a good bit of research on the activities that successful people say they habitually do. The theory is that what we do is what creates our success, or lack of it. If we do what successful people do, then there is a better than average chance that we will enjoy the same results. Simple.

3. Laptop open tab arrangement

My favorite way to view the checklist on laptop. I have a need to see the checklist "Today" column centered in my browser window instead of all scrunched over to the left. It's easy enough to do: just drag the right side of column A to the right so Today is in the middle. Bingo! Click the link for a screen shot.

4. What is your "Why"?

It may seem obvious, but unless it's written down, there is a lack of clarity that can slow even the most focused of us. The first thing to do every day, at least once a day, is to rededicate ourselves to the Purpose for the things we will be doing. This gives extra power to our Actions. This feature is available in Version 12.6 but is easily retrofitted to previous versions. Click the link for more info. Call for help. 

5. Give yourself a bonus!

Some activities are more important than others, so you might want to give yourself a bonus for doing that particular activity, and have it show up in the daily Score. It's easy to customize how you keep score. 

6. What can I do for you?

Have you been thinking of ways to make your checklist better, easier to use, more powerful... Me too.  Email me: mm@DBLM.com or schedule a phone meeting

   


Extra Credit

National Checklist Day, October 30, 2020

The story of the first checklist. It seems like such a simple thing, so obvious, and yet so essential. Where did checklists come from? It was a matter of life and death. 


Friday, October 9, 2020

New Version 12.6

 


Cosmetic improvements are focused on a cleaner look, lighter colors, and more white space. The big improvement is on the addition of that most conspicuous "Checklist Purpose" cell, which is to be clear about Why you are doing this. Focus on the Why gives power to everything you do.

To View it in daily use by you know who, click here.
Permission may be needed, but always enthusiastically granted, of course.

Version 12.6

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Checklist Power




Checklist Power

Why Use Checklists?

When you are working on your business you are probably multi-tasking and dealing with all sorts of distractions. This can make it easy to forget to do certain tasks or mean having to spend time trying to remember how to complete a specific activity. When you are under pressure or rushing to complete something it is easy to forget a small but important step in your process. This is where checklists can be valuable to help you get things done.

Checklists for business processes

In the context of business processes, we are discussing process/procedure checklists rather than checking off items on a to-do list. With a checklist associated with a process or procedure, you write down all the steps or tasks needed to complete an activity or process. The list of tasks does not change which means that you can use the same checklist every time you carry out that particular activity/process. To-do lists will typically have new items added once earlier ones are completed and additional tasks are identified.

Key Checklist Concepts

It's easy to forget exactly what needs to be done to complete an activity or set of tasks. In many cases not only must you complete a set of steps but these must be done in a specific order. Checklists are a simple tool that can help improve the effectiveness of individuals or teams carrying out complex tasks.

A checklist will help ensure that important steps of a task are not missed out.

Perhaps the seminal, and certainly the best known, work on checklists is The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande. The author is a surgeon who recognized how useful checklists could be for patient care where a large number of staff are involved in the process, each carrying out different tasks and with different responsibilities. Gawande introduced a simple checklist to a number of hospitals during a research study and patient deaths fell by 47%.

Example uses for Checklists

  • Airplanes
    • Pilots must complete a checklist before every take-off
  • NASA
    • If you have ever listened to a shuttle launch you will have heard the controllers working through a checklist that ensures each part of mission control is ready
  • Human Resources
    • New employee ‘on-boarding’ processes
  • Virtual Assistants
    • Providing your worker with a precise set of steps to follow to complete their assigned tasks.

Benefits of Checklists

  • Checklists ensure that the essential tasks get done. Even if a step is very simple it can still be forgotten. Checklists also stop the use of ‘initiative’ by those following them, i.e. where they think they know better than those who designed the process.
  • They help avoid distractions by forcing you to only do the tasks that are on the checklist
  • Checklists free the mind from having to remember the steps that need to be completed and worrying about the possibility of forgetting to do something.
  • Checklists can save time. Having the steps written simply and in order makes them easy to follow and is likely to result in less errors, therefore avoiding time wasted needing to fix issues. They also help avoid the time-wasting “what-should-I-do-next” indecision as the checklist tells you what to do next.
  • Checklists provide discipline and consistency. Depending on your business lives might depend on the process being completed correctly. The use of checklists can help when things go wrong – providing evidence of whether a particular step was completed.
  • Checklists can improve productivity – there is something that humans find satisfying about ticking items off a list and research has shown that using checklists make us more likely to complete tasks. This fits well into the new theories of ‘gamification’.

Types of Checklists

There are two types of checklists, according to Daniel Boorman of Boeing, who was consulted by Gawande:

  • Read-Do: you read each step of the task, and then perform them in order, checking them off as you go
  • Do-Confirm: you perform a number of steps of the task from memory until you reach a defined pause point, when you go through the checklist and confirm that each step has been completed.

 Creating Checklists

  • Start with areas of your business where you have been experiencing issues with processes you carry out regularly.
  • Make sure the checklist focuses on the most important things that need to be done for the task to be successful.
  • Each item on the checklist should be non-negotiable and be your single focus of attention, having only a yes/no or go/no-go style that prevents you moving forward in the list until you have checked off the item. This is how the checklists used by pilots work, ensuring that each item checked is air-worthy before continuing through the list. As a passenger you would not want the plane to take off unless every item in the checklist had been confirmed as air-worthy. Imagine if the pilot marked one item as “maybe okay” or “couldn’t check this one”!
  • Test the checklist to make sure it delivers the required outcomes. It is very likely that you will miss steps when you first create the checklist. If appropriate, have someone else use the checklist and confirm that they can use it successfully to complete the activity.

Tips for Creating Checklists

  • Keep it simple – use short, precise, easy to understand descriptions of the tasks
  • Keep it simple – keep the list to one page if possible
  • Make it easy to use – include a checkbox or leave a space to mark items complete
  • Review it regularly – looking to edit and simplify the tasks involved
  • If using pause points – no more than ten items between pauses, preferably five to seven

Reposted with permission
source: https://www.richarddally.com/why-are-checklists-so-powerful/

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Now that you know the power of checklists in aviation, medicine, and general business, you can see how a personal checklist can add power to your daily routines and achieving your goals faster and with less stress.  

✅  EZchecklist™ ✅  Your superpower for Success in Life and Business