Start
There web and bookstore shelves are full of authors and advisors urging us to produce instead of plan, to do instead getting bogged down in deciding. Some urge readers to “Ready, Fire, Aim.” In The Art of the Start, Guy Kawasaki says
GET GOING.
Start creating and delivering your product or service. Think soldering irons, compilers, hammers, saws, and AutoCAD—whatever tools you use to build products and services. Don’t focus on pitching, writing, and planning.
The planning is not the start. The deciding is not the start. I often fool myself into thinking I am starting something, when actually I am working on the stuff I think I need to do in order to start. In most cases, I’m wasting time.
For this blog, the 20 minutes I spent looking for a great Wordpress theme could have been spent starting this post.
For iPhone development, the 30 minutes I spent looking through a short stack of iPhone development books, trying to decide which to buy, could have been spent actually starting iPhone development.
Don’t worry about the details just yet. Right now, today, Just Start.
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[...] Continuing with the guitar example, I assert that you will be more likely to end up playing your mother’s favorite tune at her birthday party next year if you publicly commit to it now. Ask yourself: Once your dad, brothers, sisters, and long-time family friends have been looking forward to your moving performance for a year are you more or less likely to do it when the time comes? If you kept the intention private, there is a great chance you will either forget you ever had the idea or the time would come and you will feel ill-prepared and chicken out (because you want everything to be perfect). [...]