Opening the doors to my Fearless Work program

I just opened the doors to my Fearless Work program! This is a 6-week online course focused on helping you find more time and energy to do the creative work that matters most to you.

Some huge things we tackle in this program:

  1. How to prioritize the actions that matter most.
  2. Key tactics to remove distractions from your life.
  3. How to say no to energy-sucking activities and yes to tasks that lead to your goals.
  4. The core connection between energy and time — and how to get more of both in your daily life.
  5. Simple productivity hacks that deliver a huge return on investment.
  6. The tools and workflow you need to better manage your days.
  7. The value of white space — unstructured creative time — and how to integrate it into your busy life.
  8. How to reduce that nagging sense of overwhelm and fear that may be holding you back.
  9. Simple ways to measure success and ensure you see incremental growth week by week, month by month.
  10. How to develop a community of supporters who love your work and help you create more of it.

I am also offering ways to stay accountable by working directly with me and my team as you move through the course. Check out full details on FearlessWork.com.

Deadline to register is Friday January 29th.

Thanks!
-Dan

Let’s talk about the author’s role in publicity and marketing

I’m excited to announce a new collaboration with myself and bestselling author Miranda Beverly-Whittemore. It is a series of blog posts called “How I Book,” where we dig into the reality of an author’s role in publicity and marketing for their book.

Here is the first post, nearly 4,000 words on everything Miranda wishes she knew 5 months before she published her first novel.

Our intention is to be sharing (mostly) weekly posts for the next several months.
Thanks!
-Dan

“Not only doesn’t it get any easier, it actually gets harder.”

I shared a guest post over on Writer Unboxed that explores this quote from author Dani Shapiro:

“Not only doesn’t it get any easier, it actually gets harder.”

So very often, someone pursuing creative work waits for “the right time,” or “the right tool,” or for a solution that somehow makes it “easy” to move forward.

That can leave you waiting forever.

Likewise, people often assume that once they find success, things will be easier. As Dani indicates, it isn’t.

You can read my full post over on Writer Unboxed, where I explore the core first steps one needs to take to build momentum.

Thanks.
-Dan

Why I said ‘no’ to a free trip to Hawaii

Last week I was offered a free, all-expense paid trip to Hawaii. This included airfare from New Jersey, a hotel room with an ocean view, luau, hiking, the whole package.

The context was this: I was invited to speak at what looks to be an AMAZING conference. The organizer invited me herself, and I was bowled over by how impressive she is, and how thoughtful the event was.

I would be sure to meet some “heavy hitters” in the publishing world as well.

But after much thought and consideration, I said, “No thank you.”

Today, I would like to talk about why I came to that decision, and how this relates to how each of you can find more time and focus to do the work that matters most to you. At the end of the post, I’ll give you a small assignment to get you started.

What I Say YES to Matters More Than What I Say NO to

In the past few years, I have seen lots of articles and talks online about “the power of saying no.” This really seems to resonate with people, this word “no.”

For one, I think most people have a very difficult time saying no. We want to please others; we want to avoid conflict; and oftentimes it is easier to just do the thing they are asking than figure out how to get out of it.

I never resonated with NO though. What I focus on instead is saying YES.

Like, full-on, deeply, emphatically saying YES to a handful of things that matter most to me.

For me, saying no to Hawaii wasn’t a negative. It wasn’t a loss. It was saying YES to the things I care about deeply.

Very often, when I hear people talk about “the power of saying no,” it is in the context of removing things that they don’t want to do. For instance, “Say ‘no’ to going to the PTA meeting that you dread.” Or “Say ‘no’ to volunteering for a committee at work that you don’t believe in, but would only do so because of peer pressure.”

In the past few weeks, I have been talking a lot about what stands between you and your creative work (here and here.) Distraction is high up on that list.

This distraction includes real responsibilities, as well as new and shiny things. This may include checking Facebook constantly, or rushing over to Target for a big sale, or — yes — a free trip to Hawaii.

Something so appealing that it seems like an obvious “yes.”

Let’s try this out:

Me: Would you like a free trip to Hawaii?
You: Um, of course.

But this is so often why we are overwhelmed. Why we feel like we are constantly distracted. Always treading water. Always distant from our passion.

Distraction takes us away from devoting our focus to the things that matter most. The problem is not just that we say yes to too many things, but we don’t identify the few key things that matter most, and commit fully.

In other words: we don’t say YES to what we want with emphasis. We say “yes” meekly. This is a huge problem.

You may be asking, “Gee Dan, what do you believe in so deeply that a free weeklong stay in Hawaii would get in the way of?”

Two things:

  • My wife and son
  • My work

These are the two things that matter to me more than anything. The things I have taken huge risks in my life to focus on in the best way I can. The things that I wake up each and every day deeply thankful for. I don’t treat these as flippant obligations for even a moment. Instead, I view them as privileges I must honor.

Sorry if that sounds flaky, but that is genuinely how I feel. Let me explain…

To go to Hawaii without my wife and son means being away from them for a week, which is a big gap. I especially don’t like having such a big experience as Hawaii without them. Yes, I did the math on bringing them along. It doesn’t work out (I’ll take you through the math in a moment).

For my work — this is my passion. I love the work that I do, who I get to collaborate with, and the vision I have for what is being created because of it.

This is where math comes in. Right now I have a full plate of clients and projects. I LOVE working with these folks. To take a week off would require me to not charge them for that week. With a full roster of clients, that would cost me thousands in lost billing.

Likewise, to bring my wife and son along would cost at least a couple grand.

So, just for the sake of this post, let’s say it would be an outright cost of $5,000 to take this opportunity. That is still way less than a normal Hawaii vacation.

But then Diane Krause, who works for me, framed it this way: “Lotta money for a trip that’s not 100% vacation.”

In other words, I would be half-assing it.

There are things in life I gladly half-ass. I half-ass it when I wash the car. But I don’t half-ass it when it comes to my family or my work. I’m all in.

Are there very good arguments for going to Hawaii? Of course. As my brother pointed out, “It would take only one good connection that turns into a new client to make this wildly worthwhile.” In other words, going to the event could feasibly turn into tens of thousands of dollars of revenue.

And that is 100% true.

This is another aspect of saying YES vs. saying NO. I mentioned I have a full roster of clients. To me, that means I am saying YES to them as emphatically as possible. I will not trade a bird in hand for two in the bush. I see myself as a partner with my clients. I am invested in their mission.

Removing myself for that for a week because I am chasing some big name client does not resonate with how I like to work.

Another person I spoke to when weighing my options was Jennie Nash. She talked about how this opportunity was the shiny object that leads to distraction. She put it this way:

“EVERYONE would say yes to this. Even if it meant they would be busy and overwhelmed, and it meant their wife would be mad at them. It’s because they rushed for the shiny object and were distracted from what matters most.”

This is why Jennie and I are friends. For the record, my wife was very supportive of my decision.

But in this process, I wanted to fully own up to my motivations. At every step, I had to ask myself, “Am I considering taking this trip because it is a boondoggle?” This is the word I remember from working in corporate America, used to describe an expensive trip that executives wanted to take for personal reasons, only mildly justifying it for business reasons.

I didn’t want to just selfishly grab at a free vacation. That would not honor the incredible generosity of the event organizer. It wouldn’t honor my clients and my commitment to them. And it wouldn’t honor my own intentions to my work and family.

Clarity Should Provide Direction

When I wrote out those two things above, that my focus was intently on my wife and son, and my work, that sounded kind of trite, right? You perhaps nodded your head, “Duh, Dan. Of course those things matter to you.”

For me, being super clear about what matters is not meant to illustrate values, but instead to provide direction. It is a decision-making tool.

For instance, have you ever heard someone say, “The thing I want most in the world is to write.” But they never write. Or someone who says “Time with my mother is more important than anything.” Yet, they barely see her.

Clarity is a tool. One you have to use actively.

This is where a simple list of what matters most to me turns into a strategy. A strategy to creating the experiences and results I want most in my life.

In the Hawaii instance, it was a fun idea to imagine, but the bottom line is:

  • I would be creating distance between me and my family.
  • I would be walking out on my clients.

The two things that matter most to me.

In writing this post, I reflected on my decision-making process. How was a choice about a free trip to Hawaii something that could be viewed as strategic, instead of reactionary? How could it be filled with clarity?

These are the three steps I took:

  1. I listened to my emotions. What was my gut telling me?
  2. I wrote down justifications for going vs not going. I tried to clear away the sparkle of the phrase “FREE TRIP TO HAWAII.”
  3. I spoke to trusted business advisors. This consisted first of Diane Krause who works for me, then my brother, then Jennie Nash. And of course, my wife.

Below I am going to give you a small homework assignment that aligns with these three steps. I give each a title:

  1. Your true north
  2. Your map
  3. Your compass

But first…

Your Biggest Challenge

A few days ago I sent out a newsletter and asked “what is the biggest challenge standing between you and your creative work?” I received dozens of thoughtful responses. The big overaching theme in the answers was this:

“Me. I’m the biggest thing standing in my way. I can’t get out of my own way.”

Of all the responses, this one jumped out at me:

“My job was so draining that I always felt too tired and hopeless to try writing again.”

“Then, guess what? I got cancer last year. It was the best thing that ever happened to me. My friends and family couldn’t believe that I wasn’t wailing and grieving, but I saw it as a way out of my prison.”

“I have 4 ebooks out now, nearly finished with 3 more, and 11 more in the research stage. I’m almost finished with my first fiction, which I thought I could never write.”

“I’m loving my life and I get up every morning looking forward to getting back to writing. Never, in the last 30 years, have I woken up happy and excited like this. We are poor right now, but it is what it is. I don’t know if I’ll ever make a living by writing, but I bet my last years will be wonderful. This is better than retirement.”

“It sounds so trite to say life is short, but that is an understatement. I hope other writers don’t wait for cancer to free them from themselves.”

In other words, it took CANCER for her to get out of her own way, and to emphatically say YES to the things that mattered most to her. It took cancer for her to find her true north, her map, and her compass.

Again, this is where tactics fail us, and where strategy becomes essential. The scope of changes she needed to make in her life couldn’t be solved by downloading a new to-do app, or via a simple “life hack.” It required a massive reshift.

Scary, right? Not just the cancer, but the thought of needing such a shift. Most people hate uncertainty and change. I get that. So, let’s do a simple task to get things started for you…

Here is Your Homework

This is what I would like for you to do, the goal is to create a system that helps accomplish three things:

  1. Identify what matters most to you — your true north.
  2. Decide where you want to go — your map.
  3. Ensure you stay on that track — your compass.

Finding Your True North
Get out a stack of index cards, or a suitable substitute. Then, one item per index card, write down everything that is important to you.

When you are done, lay them out on the floor or a large table.

Move them around with the most critical things at the top. This may take some time. Try to create layers of threes. A row of your three biggest priorities at the top, then three beneath it that are a tiny bit less important, then three beneath that, and so on.

Take a photo of it.

Then, wipe away everything beneath the top three items. Have a trash can handy.

Again, this is not about saying NO, but about emphatically saying YES to the three things that matter most to you.

The final step is to honor those things. If you want to do meaningful work, but hate your job, then you need to address that.

Okay, now you have your true north.

Creating Your Map 
If you are following along with my emails from the past week, you should already have this one done. Answer this question:

If you knew you couldn’t fail, what is the one thing you would like to accomplish with your creative work?

Think about it perhaps not as a milestone to reach, but an EXPERIENCE you would live each day. Or an EFFECT you want to create in the lives of others.

This is your map.

Setting Your Compass
Your compass is what keeps you on track. What helps you make decisions when the variables aren’t so simple. This is not a “thing,” but rather, trusted advisors. Someone you can bounce ideas off of; who offers a different perspective; whose wisdom you trust.

Spoiler alert: this is not always someone from your immediate family. Sometimes it is someone who understands you as an artist before they see you as someone responsible for house and home. Someone who defines in terms of what you can create, not just what you provide for them.

I listed four trusted advisors above. How they became so varies:

  • Diane Krause is someone I hired. She is my go-to person on a day-to-day basis to discuss business and strategy. We use Slack (a text messaging service) to chat when we need to, without interrupting each other.
  • My brother is someone I trust implicitly. He also tends to have a slightly different perspective than I do, which is why I called him next. Clearly, this was a relationship I was born into.
  • Jennie Nash is someone I have a private mastermind group with — meaning we meet weekly to review challenges we are working through. As I have said before, Jennie is amazing.
  • My wife — my most trusted partner.

Two of the above are family. But TWO are relationships that I had to take efforts to forge in the past couple of years. I would encourage you to do the same. Map out clear steps to identify others who can be trusted advisors outside of your family.

This is your compass.

Take Action

In the next few days, click reply and email me the following:

  1. Your true north: The three things that matter most to you.
  2. Your map: A single sentence describing where you want to go — the experience you want to create in your life — with your creative work.
  3. Your compass: The first names of 1-3 people who are your trusted advisors.

These things represent clarity. The biggest tool you can have when battling distraction, overwhelm, and lack or resources.

On Monday I will send you another note with something really special I will be offering to help you take your true north, your map, and your compass and embark on your own journey to doing more of the creative work that you love most.

Thanks.
-Dan

4 mistakes that sabotage your creative work

Last week I asked, “If you knew you couldn’t fail, what is the one thing you would like to accomplish with your creative work?”

I received dozens of responses, many of which were brutally honest about challenges and fears. Do you know what I noticed?

How simple people’s aspirations were.

Now, I don’t mean simple as “insignificant.” I mean simple in terms of “easily understandable, and completely doable.”

No one told me they wanted to save the world, or cure cancer, or live to be 1,000 years old. Instead, I received responses like these:


“I’d try writing full time.”

“I would paint again.”

“I would design flowers for weddings.”

“I would love to claim the title of ‘author’.”

“I would use my art to encourage people to not give up.”

 

In other words, each of these people already had the skills they wanted, and a reasonable goal. But… their dreams feel distant.

Every answer resonated with me, but this one jumped out:


“If I couldn’t fail, I would like to give myself the permission to write a book I’ve been thinking about for twenty-five years. What’s more, I would like to stop waiting for ‘one day, when everything settles down’ and find the courage to do what makes me happy, now, rather than pursue avenues I feel I must to earn a living I hate.”

That one stopped me cold.

Imagine that… thinking about doing something for 25 years, and not doing it. Not because you lacked the tools (paper and pen, or any word processor), but because you lacked courage and time.

The thing is, I hear this often. That, what stands in people’s way is not 10 years of specialty training, but instead, courage and time.

In my last note, I reviewed the four biggest challenges standing between you and your creative work:

  1. You are drowning in distraction.
  2. There is never enough time.
  3. You can’t get creative habits to stick.
  4. You struggle to feel you have permission to pursue your dream.

Today I want to review the common ways people try to tackle these problems, and how these “solutions” set them up for failure.

Okay, let’s dig in:

#1 Buying is not solving

When we get serious about solving a problem in our lives, a typical first reaction is to buy something. Somehow, spending money equates to “taking action.”

But spending money does not always equate to “investing.” And it certainly is not always a step towards solving the real challenges that you want to overcome. Too often, the first — and only — effort to battle distraction and find more time for creative work is something like:

Buy a book.

Buy more tools.

Download an app.

Sign up for a conference.

The result? That book sits on your shelf. Next to all the diet books and personal finance books that now suddenly seem like fads that never really caught on in your life.

If solving the problem was as simple as buying the right tool, we would all be super thin and have our finances completely in order. The same holds true for battling distraction and finding more time to do your creative work.

Tools are only part of the solution. Buying is not solving.

#2 Going it alone

It’s easy to romanticize being that “lone wolf” who beats the odds in a dramatic storyline. But too often, the real reason people try to win their battles in secret is that they are partly ashamed of the problem they have to fix (and how defeated they feel by it), and because they are nervous to fully commit to eradicating it.

Going it alone means they can bail at any time.

This is why Weight Watchers works with dieting. Why personal training or CrossFit works for getting in shape. These are inherently social programs, that require accountability to another person.

Without that support and accountability, people flounder, alone.

#3 Waiting for the “right time”

When your creative vision is conditional on other things, it means that you give everything else the power to sideline that vision.

Tell me if any of these sound familiar:

  • “I would work on my writing, if only I didn’t have this big project at work.”
  • “I would work on my writing, if only the house wasn’t such a mess.”
  • “I would work on my writing, if only the holidays weren’t coming up.”

The normal demands of life leave you feeling swamped each day, so you begin to imagine a time in the not-to-distant future when things “calm down,” and magically, you have the time and clarity to do the work you really long to do.

But that time never comes.

Investing in what matters most to you can’t wait. The longer you do, the less likely you are to truly take the action you need to.

Five years ago when my wife and I made a radical shift in our lives so that I could launch my company. We put everything on the line. I left my job at the height of the recession, a month before we had our son, and then a year later, my wife quit her tenured teaching job.

Why did we do this?

Because I knew that if I didn’t take this risk at age 37, that I wouldn’t take it at age 42. Or 47. Or 52.

If you are waiting for the right time to focus on your creative work, you have to begin considering this: That day may never come. What are you waiting for?

#4 A false belief in “balance”

Last week I shared my conversation with Dawna Ballard, a professor who studies chronemics — the intersection of time, communication, and work. What did we chat about? How “balance is bullshit.”

You may have adopted the belief that you can perfectly balance everything, and thus “have it all.” This entails reaching some kind of magical state whereby the following things coexist peacefully in your life:

  • Your day job
  • Your home
  • Your kids and family responsibilities
  • Your relationship to a spouse or significant other
  • Your community responsibilities
  • Your finances
  • Your friends
  • Your physical health
  • Your mental health
  • Your hobbies
  • Oh yeah, let’s not forget your creative work. Maybe you are writing a novel, or trying to launch a little shop on Etsy.

Maybe you create a plan — a diagram that shows all of these things in pretty colors.

But it fails.

Why? Because you want to do it all. When you make no choices about where to put your very finite resources of time, focus, and energy, it means you end up giving others the power to choose for you, because you haven’t chosen what matters most to you.

When you focus on what matters most, that decision requires you to cut away the things that matter least.

Most people resist this. They want it all, they don’t want to make diffcult choices; instead they want to please EVERYONE ELSE around them.

The result? They feel imprisoned. Trapped by too many responsibilities.

Does any of this sound familiar?

These 4 mistakes are common — and pervasive. I see creative professionals making these mistakes every day. They take an action, which makes them feel like they are doing work, when in reality, they are dooming themselves to failure.

To being stuck.

On Friday, I’m going to share with you a simple way to ensure you can take meaningful action in finding the time and focus to do the work that matters most to you.

In the meantime, please reply below and tell me the following:

“What is the biggest thing standing between you and doing the creative work you dream about?”

Thanks.
-Dan