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My 2012 Plan To Stay Out of Busy-ness (& In Creation)

by Abby Kerr

in Uncategorized

About this column

Breakfast, computerside, Abby Kerr Ink.

I’m not a business development coach, but I have been doing business online for 6 years: first as the creator and proprietor of an indie boutique that shipped internationally through its website, and currently as CEO of Abby Kerr Ink.

I’ve got a few things to say about how the work of a creative online business gets done. And while what I have to say only applies to me and my business, I bet the paradigm may be useful and/or interesting to you*.

*J’adore productivity hacking, but only when it’s pressed up against ample spaces of non-taskable time, time in which to root around, see what’s shiny and promising, and bring up it up into the light. I also have a dorky voyeuristic obsession with how other creatives get stuff done. For instance, this simple little post on how she rocks time entrepreneurial time management is one of my all-time faves from Danielle LaPorte.

Because if there’s one thing I know for sure about digital entrepreneurship, it’s this: no two online business owners approach staying in creation and out of busy-ness in the same way.

My well-optimized weekly schedule probably looks nothing like yours.

Over the years and across two very different business models, I’ve tried out several {mostly frustrating and short-sighted} approaches to structuring my work flow, tracking my productivity, and optimizing how stuff gets done most effectively and with actual pleasure — as opposed to with heart palpitations and knuckle-biting. {I’ve had the tooth marks to prove it.}

It being the start of a new year, my Mastermind partner and I are especially focused lately on setting up structures to make 2012 our best years in business yet.

We’ve been calendaring our goals, developing content strategy, and planning to build out our businesses the way we want to. Accountability rocks and possibilities reign.

But we know how it tends to go, and so do you: January’s all about great intentions and even better expectations.

Unless you create a structure to contain your brilliance, momentum ebbs and flows, and your $20,000 idea gets lost in the roster of client projects and sessions {which, of course, you’re very thankful for} and you end up in reaction mode instead of in creation, which is where you want to hang out most of the time.

So finally, in Year 6 of creating my own work in the world, I got wise and dared to design a workweek that meets most of my criteria for uptime and downtime, hyper focus and blessed ease, and administrative thrills and creative throes. {I say most of my criteria because while I’d like to schedule in thrice-weekly indolent lunches with friends downtown, those would only slow me down.}

While I can’t tell you what your ideal workweek looks and feels like, I highly suggest you take some time to freestyle on what feels right to you.

What you’re tracking for: the structure that feels like just the right balance of client-centered and self-indulgent, big picture thinking and every-detail-matters delivery, luxurious swaths of time and tightly focused hours to blaze through. Designing your ideal workweek — and then actually allowing yourself to practice working it, sans Twitter Interruptus and other candy-like distractions — could be the most important, rewarding, and lucrative move you’ll make all year, and it’s only January.

Here’s the workweek I’ve designed for myself this year to keep me out of busy-ness and in creation:

Three weeks in and I can report that my weekends feel longer, my skin is clearer, and my client delivery dates {I durst not use the word ‘deadlines’} all magically seem easier to meet. And for the first time in six years of business ownership, I’ve got an entire calendar year of service/product/program releases planned out and an editorial calendar to match. Now, to deliver . . .

:: MONDAYS

Focus: Abby Kerr Ink. Biz dev and planning. Make sure Google Calendar looks tight and right. Light social media planning for the week ahead {I don’t auto-Tweet, but I do frame out my focus for the week based on what’s coming up on the blog, on the creation calendar, etc.}. Write the week’s blog post{s} and e-newsletter. Heavy-ish admin {including personal admin} to set me up for a clear-minded week.

Mindset: Easing in self-indulgently. Focusing on the big picture. Letting it be easy. Re-connecting with my voice. Seeing what’s up on Twitter — taking the temp for the week.

:: TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS

Focus: Client sessions and copywriting projects. Immersion in their brand identity, voice, and right people market segments. In between and afterward, light admin related to client work: emails, preparing Mp3s, scheduling, etc.

Mindset: This is my clients’ time that they’ve invested in me: dollars for value. I make these days all about them. Have planned so that this year, I only take as many 1:1 copywriting projects as I can manage in 8 eight-hour days a month.

:: WEDNESDAYS

Focus: Abby Kerr Ink service, product, and program development. Creating content to sell. Developing income streams. Writing sales pages. Co-working on Skype with a peer.

Mindset: Deeply tuned in to my right person avatars — their needs and wants, business phases, desired results. Honing and articulating the unique value I provide.

:: FRIDAYS

Focus: Connecting with peers on Skype. Big picture strategizing with Mastermind partner. Finish early — keep it to a half day.

Mindset: Shaking out what worked this week and why. Fine-tuning approach for immediate future. Big convos: strategy, sustainability, what thrills me. Lots of love flowing.

And, a few nuances I’ve discovered work well for me:

On studio hours: Monday-Thursday, 8/9 AM – 5 PM, with 60 minutes or so of unstructured time for eating, stretch breaks, textfests with friends. Friday, 8/9 AM – Noon. No evenings, Saturdays, or Sundays, unless I’ve gotten myself off-schedule and need to make up hours for a client project in order to meet a delivery date. {Though I set my own delivery dates for my copywriting projects and am not above adjusting them as need be.} Three days a week, start the day off at a park with a friend and our dogs.

On connecting: I’m an introvert, albeit a decidedly un-shy one. I’ve learned {the hard way} that even one non-client hourlong-plus Skype session early in the day can toss me out of my flow to an unrecoverable degree. It’s not worth it. My personal rule: no more than 3 peer Skype sessions a week, including my 90-minute long Mastermind session. And never more than two hours of Skype on any one day, including client sessions.

On email: We all know how many hours a day email can eat up — if you let it. Back in the darker days of my shopkeeping career, I used to let it consume the better part of at least a couple days a week. {Upside: I’m really great at teaching/consulting/advising over email.} Not no more. Email gets processed almost immediately as it comes in, but segmented into mental folders like 2-Minute Reply Now, Reply By End of Day or Tomorrow By Noon, and Reply Within the Next Week If Possible. No free consulting over email, ever.

On working conditions: Usually at home. Occasionally at a coffee shop with free Wi-Fi, which is my preference, but on client session days, I prefer to be at home where the acoustics and the noise level are better and I can get a clean recording for them. Often in loungewear/yoga-type clothing, but better in my favorite Gap Long & Lean jeans and a top I love. And earrings.

On productivity tools: I live Monday-Friday by Google Calendar, color-coded and time-blocked to the hilt. Because my inner taskmistress is a linear thinker, I maintain my prodigious To Do list on WorkFlowy. And I like TickTockTimer for structured writing or admin bursts. All free tools. I schedule client sessions via TimeTrade [not an Affiliate link] for a very reasonable yearly fee, and it syncs with Google Calendar.

Hope this dissection of how I’m doing business lately is interesting for you.  While a nuts-and-bolts post like this is a departure from the usual convo, planning for success has been top of mind lately and I felt compared to share my personal approach.

Have you figured out your ideal workweek? I’d love to hear about it in the comments.

{ 25 comments… read them below or add one }

Anonymous January 25, 2012 at 8:12 pm

Hi Abby – This is something that I’m really working on right now.  For health reasons I have to limit my productivity time so that my body can get the rest it needs.  Figuring all this out takes a lot of time and playing around, but I’m starting to get my groove.

I’m gonna read this again and see if I pick up any tidbits I haven’t thought of :) – thanks for sharing!

Reply

Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 10:59 am

Thanks for reading & commenting, Jessica! Yep — it will take you some time to figure out what schedule feels best for you. You could think of it in terms of one-week experiments: This week, I’m trying out *this* schedule to see how it works for me. I’m convinced the right schedule for each of us leads to an immediate increase in productivity & flow! Happy experimenting.

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Laura January 25, 2012 at 10:41 pm

Abby, this is a terrific and generous post. I’m already overwhelmed by 2012 and it was just what I needed to read to give me ideas on how to be more intentional about my scheduling—thanks for sharing your system!

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Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 11:04 am

Hi, Laura! —

It’s my pleasure. Honestly, I could write about this stuff all day and I love hearing how other creatives make it work for them. ;)

I also want to give a nod to Sarah Robinson’s simple but excellent post here: http://escaping-mediocrity.com/mapping-out-2012/ Although it’s not about business planning per se, it helped me get started on what is now my fully fleshed-out calendar.

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Laura Simms January 25, 2012 at 11:24 pm

Abby, I geek out about this stuff, too (check tomorrow’s post). Totally relate to limiting your Skype hours. As a non-shy introvert, I once did three sessions pretty much back to back and was wrecked. Mama gots to space ’em out!

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Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 11:12 am

Ooh, Laura, I see that your new post is up & I’m going to go read after I respond here. There’s a place in the productivity convo for more free-flowing, sexier schedule-talk than what is already out there & popularly shared. You & I can add to it!

So you share my introvert’s struggle with Skype. Love connecting with people so much, as I’m sure you do, just have to protect my creative time, so rules there must be.

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Laureen Marchand January 26, 2012 at 12:41 am

So useful, Abby. I’ve got three brains (right, left, and what is that other one?) going in three directions and sometimes it feels like we’re all going to spin out together. Love your ideas about structure and especially the nuances. Couldn’t be better timed – thanks!

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Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 11:14 am

Hooray, Laureen! Happy to hear that this post worked for you. Idiosyncratic, self-guided structure — that usually only makes perfect sense to the one designing it — is what works for me. Wishing you a time of figuring out your optimum workflow, too. :)

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Tara Swiger January 26, 2012 at 1:00 pm

I love how you’ve really highlighted the difficulty in doing both YOUR work (for AKI) and client work. It’s tricky when what we do for others is similar to what we’d do for ourselves. 
I find the way you’ve broken it up intriguing + inspiring!

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Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 4:16 pm

Thank you, Tara. Excellent point: it is tricky when how you serve your clients is similar to what you need to be doing for yourself every day. We’ve all heard that advice to make sure you and your biz are your best client. Trying to implement that advice this year!

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Anonymous January 26, 2012 at 2:57 pm

“And earrings.”

I love this detail. {& it’s no surprise}

I find it’s important for me to ground out, so to speak, after a peer to peer Skype call, especially when it’s chock full of inspiration. If I don’t write down {pen to paper} the ideas, they become like applications continuously running on my mental hard drive, distracting me the rest of the day. This makes it important to create a buffer between calls/tasks.

Thanks for allowing us to peek in {& geek out} on your process, Abby!
xo

Reply

Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 4:18 pm

Hey, Gini! —

Whoa: great metaphor here from you — “If I don’t write down {pen to paper} the ideas, they become like
applications continuously running on my mental hard drive, distracting
me the rest of the day.
— about the after effects of a Skype call, especially a really great one. Going to try this technique next time! Thanks.

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Laura Calandrella January 26, 2012 at 5:45 pm

I would love to leave a comment, but I have to go try out your TickTockTimer right now {and get something done}.  ;)

But in all seriousness, brilliant post.  So helpful to lay not just your tools and process out there, but the mindset it requires to actually put them to work.  We entrepreneurs love a good system, a good piece of technology, a good way to organize – but it means nothing without the committed strategy of the person behind it.  

Now to Tick Tock.  

xo

Laura

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Abby Kerr January 26, 2012 at 5:55 pm

Thanks for your vote of confidence for this post & my process, Laura. And YES to needing the big picture strategy underlying it all. Tools alone will yield nothing. You have been a huge help to me in figuring out my strategy for this year. xo

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Create Your Life January 30, 2012 at 4:45 am

Thanks for sharing you workweek ! I’m pretty well organized but it’s really enriching to see how other people get organized. It’s all the more interesting for me as I have a full-time teaching job and launch a personal business at the same time. So I need to change my organization regularly to adapt to my main job. 

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Abby Kerr January 30, 2012 at 12:32 pm

Hello! I empathize with your position. I was a full-time high school teacher when I was first conceptualizing my brick-and-mortar boutique and had to contain all of my research and admin to after hours. I recall it as a very exhausting time in my life. Wishing you great success as you figure out what works best for you, organizationally!

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Pj January 30, 2012 at 6:21 pm

I use GTD philosophy to get stuff out of my head and into a system that tracks it. This system is quite elaborate, with a lot of software & apps to capture it all. I enjoyed your process. I too am a voyeur.

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Abby Kerr January 30, 2012 at 6:40 pm

Hi, PJ —

Thanks for commenting. Have heard great things about GTD from its devotees, but haven’t personally tried it out. Glad this post was interesting to you!

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Ali Mac January 30, 2012 at 6:33 pm

What a terrific take on weekly planning. Absolutely love it. I’ve just been thinking about my own weekly schedule (which looks fairly similar), aware that it’s very easy for the big picture time to get frittered away.

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Abby Kerr January 30, 2012 at 6:42 pm

Hi, Ali —

Oh, great point: very easy for big picture time to get frittered away. To prevent that, I set mini-sized, concrete goals for myself {example: plan out 2nd quarter blog content in Excel spreadsheet} and set TickTockTimer for about 10 minutes less than I think it’ll take me to actually do it, then try to beat that time. Highly idiosyncratic approach to self-accountability and it works for me. If I look at my big picture/biz dev/strategy time as one, long, uninterrupted swath of time, I end up not using it efficiently! My secret to productivity: know thyself.

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reese spykerman February 9, 2012 at 2:54 am

Thank you Ms. Abby for so many delicious morsels to snack upon here. This article helped prompt me to sit down and draw out how my ideal schedule looks, in a way that honors my own patterns & business needs. Really appreciate your inspiration and insights.

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Abby Kerr February 9, 2012 at 3:25 pm

Ooh, love hearing that, Reese. Would love to hear more about your ideal schedule. Glad you enjoyed this post! {I loved writing it.}

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Kylie February 16, 2012 at 11:28 am

Abby, thank you for sharing this! It really, really helps me as I inch ever-closer to full-time entrepreneurship. I especially love your boundaries, like the Friday half-day and the introvert Skype limits. Thanks, m’dear!

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Abby Kerr February 16, 2012 at 11:49 am

Hey, Kylie! Thanks for commenting. I find that boundaries — self-designed, of course — are perhaps the *most* important element of me getting my best work out there. Excited for you as you edge ever closer to full-time entrepreneurship. YES!

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Melissa Hager January 2, 2013 at 11:43 am

Thanks so much for sharing! The idea of making my schedule and goals for 2013 has been a little daunting to me so this definitely helps. Great to see someone so organized!

Reply

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