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How To Change Your Life By Designing Your Day - Yaro Starak

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Conteúdo fornecido por Claire Giovino. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Claire Giovino ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

“What you focus on in the moment becomes who you are in the future… but until you find direction, every path looks interesting."

Yaro Starak is blogger and podcaster who decided after graduating college that he would never work for someone else or have a real job again. Since the age of 19, Yaro has been running his own online businesses that have gone on to produce seven figures. He has been featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, Foundr and interviewed in close to 300 different podcasts. The average lifespan of a blog is reportedly 3-4 months, whereas Yaro’s blog continues to inspire countless readers 13 years later.

Today’s episode is definitely not just for entrepreneurs, but if you’re interested in jumping to the really meaty topics and don’t have time for the full episode, skip ahead to the 13-minute mark.

Highlights

In today’s episode, we talk about:

1) How to design your ideal day

2) Why energy management is more important than time management

3) How to create a life where 20% of your time is spent is working and 80% is spent doing the things you love

4) How to create a decision filter and when to say no

5) Why curiosity is more important than any outcome or goal)

6) How to choose the obstacles you want to overcome

Behind the Scenes

Yaro became one of my clients a few years ago when I started my own business. We then joined forces and cofounded InboxDone.com, which allows busy people to outsource their inbox so that they never have to deal with emails again. After reading Yaro’s blog for years, I feel very lucky to now call him my business partner and my friend.

As Annie Dillard says, "How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives." I'm drawn to the idea of designing your ideal day, one where you spend the most time on things that bring you energy and joy (instead of keeping those things in the margins of our lives). I often ask people to walk me through a day in their lives so that I can get a sense of what's important to them.

Over the past year, I've been treating each day like an experiment and applying different iterations to see how much energy I have during different activities and times of day. I've learned that I'm most productive when I immediately login to my laptop to begin work right when I wake up. I've also learned my energy is lowest between 2pm and 7pm, then I get a second burst of focus after dinner. My processes are still evolving (clearly not every day is ideal), but it really opened up once I started to treat my day-design like a big experiment.

Who should listen?

If you're struggling to create something new, but the process is feeling heavy or arduous…

If you want to design your ideal day, but aren't sure how to start...

If you want to learn the exact questions to ask yourself in order to become “unstuck”...

...have a listen.

For new episodes, questions and quotes, sign up at TheBetterQuestions.com. Each bi-weekly email is packed with insight and applicable takeaways.

And if you’re enjoying these episodes, please share with a fellow podcast listener. That’s how the show will continue grow!

This podcast is sponsored by CreativeMoneyCoaching.com. Book your free call here and never worry about money again.

  continue reading

30 episódios

Artwork
iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 303947007 series 2923057
Conteúdo fornecido por Claire Giovino. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Claire Giovino ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

“What you focus on in the moment becomes who you are in the future… but until you find direction, every path looks interesting."

Yaro Starak is blogger and podcaster who decided after graduating college that he would never work for someone else or have a real job again. Since the age of 19, Yaro has been running his own online businesses that have gone on to produce seven figures. He has been featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, Foundr and interviewed in close to 300 different podcasts. The average lifespan of a blog is reportedly 3-4 months, whereas Yaro’s blog continues to inspire countless readers 13 years later.

Today’s episode is definitely not just for entrepreneurs, but if you’re interested in jumping to the really meaty topics and don’t have time for the full episode, skip ahead to the 13-minute mark.

Highlights

In today’s episode, we talk about:

1) How to design your ideal day

2) Why energy management is more important than time management

3) How to create a life where 20% of your time is spent is working and 80% is spent doing the things you love

4) How to create a decision filter and when to say no

5) Why curiosity is more important than any outcome or goal)

6) How to choose the obstacles you want to overcome

Behind the Scenes

Yaro became one of my clients a few years ago when I started my own business. We then joined forces and cofounded InboxDone.com, which allows busy people to outsource their inbox so that they never have to deal with emails again. After reading Yaro’s blog for years, I feel very lucky to now call him my business partner and my friend.

As Annie Dillard says, "How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives." I'm drawn to the idea of designing your ideal day, one where you spend the most time on things that bring you energy and joy (instead of keeping those things in the margins of our lives). I often ask people to walk me through a day in their lives so that I can get a sense of what's important to them.

Over the past year, I've been treating each day like an experiment and applying different iterations to see how much energy I have during different activities and times of day. I've learned that I'm most productive when I immediately login to my laptop to begin work right when I wake up. I've also learned my energy is lowest between 2pm and 7pm, then I get a second burst of focus after dinner. My processes are still evolving (clearly not every day is ideal), but it really opened up once I started to treat my day-design like a big experiment.

Who should listen?

If you're struggling to create something new, but the process is feeling heavy or arduous…

If you want to design your ideal day, but aren't sure how to start...

If you want to learn the exact questions to ask yourself in order to become “unstuck”...

...have a listen.

For new episodes, questions and quotes, sign up at TheBetterQuestions.com. Each bi-weekly email is packed with insight and applicable takeaways.

And if you’re enjoying these episodes, please share with a fellow podcast listener. That’s how the show will continue grow!

This podcast is sponsored by CreativeMoneyCoaching.com. Book your free call here and never worry about money again.

  continue reading

30 episódios

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