Planning Done Well

It’s better to look ahead and prepare than to look back and regret. – Jacki Joyner-Kersee

This quote has me thinking about planning, and about how people misunderstand planning.

A couple things I’ve noticed: either people don’t see any value in planning or they worry that it will hinder their spontaneity.

There’s not much one can say to the former group, but the latter are missing the mark.

Planning, and it’s partner, goal-setting, don’t hinder spontaneity, if done properly.

By “done properly” I mean seeing planning in a constructive way.

When you plan you imagine your desired future. You give yourself license to want what you want and imagine the path to getting there.

As Covey has said, things are created twice, once in planning and then in reality.

When you plan you inoculate yourself against the stress of uncertainty and the myriad demands that will compete for your time and attention, if you’re not clear on what you want – and what you need to be doing.

The other key to planning done well is you can modify a plan as it unfolds.

In fact, you “should” be modifying your plan as you learn – what works and what doesn’t.

People will sometimes think that if they have to change their plan they have failed.

Nope.

Adapting a plan to new information and changing conditions is intelligent and is what makes something succeed.

Or you can, Joyner-Kersee says above, not plan and look back with regret on a life where you accomplished less than was possible.

Similar Posts

  • Build Yourself First

    “Work harder on yourself than you do on your job.” – Jim Rohn The simple fact is if you don’t develop yourself over time you’ll fall behind. And, if all you do is develop yourself for your current position, you’ll soon find yourself well equipped for a job that no longer exists (to inelegantly paraphrase…

  • Sharpen Your Axe

    Give me six hours to chop down a tree, and I will spend the first four sharpening the ax. – Abraham Lincoln I am not suggesting that you spend 66% of your time exercising, but you – absolutely, positively – must exercise some, consistently. Is it hard to do? Yes and no. The actual doing is easy,…

  • Know Your Priorities

    “The key is not to prioritize what is on the schedule, but to schedule your priorities.” – Stephen Covey The critical bit here is you must know your priorities to schedule them. Not: what’s demanding your attention from moment-to-moment, or the pressing thing, or what you want right now because you think it’ll make you…