How to Stay Focused in Freelancing
A freelancer always has plenty to see, and
plenty to do. A project deadline here, a football match
there; a meeting on one hand and a party on the other. As compared to
people who work full-time, freelancers can have more hours of leisure to fi=
ll
their day and still be at the top of their game.=
Or so
they think. Why miss out on a rugby game when you don’t have a boss waiting=
for
you at the office?
u. You
DO have a boss; and that boss is you. You decide how best to spend your time
and stay focused. For a freelancer, focus is what differentiates between
success and failure. If you’re looking to make $100,000 rather than $20,000=
per
year as a freelancer, you know what you’re going to need in plentiful quant=
ity:
Focus!
Easy. All you need to do is follow these three basic steps.
goals helps you focus, since it creates an awareness of having to complete a
task by a certain deadline. Setting goals can be done, not only monetarily,=
but
also project-wise via timeline setting. It is one way of ensuring that you
retain your focus.
a new
innovation. Keeping a time plan not only helps you avoid temptations, but a=
lso
serves to do you a lot of good. Every work at home freelancer should have an
effective time plan to keep themselves productive. Apparently, with no boss=
to
chain you to your desk, the mind drifts towards the better things you could=
be
doing at this moment. Mine does too. In fact, my time plan works better if I
dangle a suitable reward in front of my table.
‘t
concentrate on your work, it’s time to shift to a new career which will hold
your interest. Some people tend to have a short attention span, and should
hence make provisions for it in their time plan. Set a timer, and start it =
when
you begin working. And then ignore the timer whilst you work. When your mind
starts wandering, you’ve reached your saturation point. Stop the timer. Is =
it
forty minutes? Fifty? An hou=
r?
Three hours? Now you know how much time to give yourself for work between
breaks.


