Something I did this week to get two days worth of writing done in less than two hours.
On this episode Russell talks about writing his upcoming Traffic Secrets book and how he’s been doubling his productivity levels the last week. Here are some awesome things to look for in today’s episode:
-- Why writing a book is painful and people gravitate toward pleasure rather than pain.
-- How Russell has managed to change the way he sits down to write and double his productivity.
-- And how you can use Russell’s technique in your own life to get crap done.
So listen here to find out about Russell’s sneaky hack to help get stuff done faster.
Anyway, so it’s just like if I don’t keep it moving, I’m going to get into a lot of trouble and have to pull 22 all nighters in a row from the time the event’s done till the book is actually due, which I don’t want to do. So word counts been this thing. So I’ve been trying a bunch of things. I’ve been trying to get up early. I’ve been trying to stay up late. I’ve been trying different things.
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What’s up everybody? This is Russell Brunson, welcome back to
the Marketing Secrets podcast. I am once again cruising in my Tesla
to go pick up Dave from the airport and I wanted to share with you
some of my thoughts.
Alright everybody, I hope you guys are doing awesome today. So I
have been working over the last couple of days really, really hard
on writing the Traffic Secrets book, which has been fun. And I’ve
kind of talked to you guys a little bit about the process of some
of the stuff I’ve been doing, but I’ve been also using instagram to
tell stories and show behind the scenes of me writing the book, and
where I’m doing it and how I’m doing it.
And it’s crazy because last week we were in an RV driving down
10 hours to Lake Powell and my wife was driving and I was in the RV
typing the book away, right. And then on the way home she was
driving I was kind of in the back seat making sure the kids don’t
kill each other while writing the book. And then it’s funny
because, if anyone’s every written a book, you know how hard it is,
and I was listening to a podcast that Rachel and Dave Hollis did
and they were talking about writing, I think Rachel was talking
about writing her book and how the biggest key to writing a book is
word count, word count. Getting the words in and getting the words
in.
And it’s hard for me because I don’t know, I’m probably
different than some people, how they write their books, but it’s
not just sit down and write like crazy. It’s like for me, sometimes
I sit there and for a day I’m just daydreaming. I’m a visionary
type person. Like I can see it first, I’m looking, I’m doodling,
I’m trying to figure out the concept and the framework and I’m
trying to put all these pieces together. And when I see it I’m
like, ‘Okay, now I have the framework.” And one of the stories is
synced to each part of the framework, and how do I do it? And it
comes back and then I actually start writing it.
But that thought keeps going through my head that I heard from
Rachel was word count, word count. So I’m like, ‘How do I increase
my word count each day?” Because my deadline is looming. It is
getting close. My publisher wants the book to them in about two
months, which would be awesome except for there’s two, three
things.
Number one, I still run a hundred and something million a year
company, which is like you know, not a tiny task. Number two, I’ve
got an amazing family that I love and I want them to continue to
love me. So I’ve got to be present with them, especially now that
it’s summertime and they’re you know, not in school anymore. So I’m
trying to take less hours and trying to work out in the morning
with them and try to weave my kids into as much as humanly
possible.
And then the other thing is that in less than two months from
now we have a big event, which is the unlock the secrets event,
which is an event for our coaching program, coaching members, which
is a big thing as well. So it’s like, there’s a lot of stuff
happening. Also that event is a three day long event, and I’m
teaching all the sessions except for I think, 90 minutes of being
taught by other people. But the rest of it is 100% me, which means
I have three days worth of presentations that I’m doing. And
they’re not tiny presentations, in fact, I might do a podcast just
talking about how I’m preparing for the event and just all the
stuff I’m doing for it. But it’s a big ordeal too. And on top of
that, I have to write the book.
Anyway, so it’s just like if I don’t keep it moving, I’m going
to get into a lot of trouble and have to pull 22 all nighters in a
row from the time the event’s done till the book is actually due,
which I don’t want to do. So word counts been this thing. So I’ve
been trying a bunch of things. I’ve been trying to get up early.
I’ve been trying to stay up late. I’ve been trying different
things.
But this week, what’s been really, really good is one of my
buddies John Parkes, he gave me this gift a couple of years ago,
it’s been sitting on my desk. It looks like a big dice and there’s
different numbers like, 5, 25, 30, 50, 60 all these different
times. And what you do is you sit down and you turn that to, if you
want 60 minutes you put the 60 up, if you want 10 minutes you put
10 minutes up. But it starts a timer and then you just do the task
for a little while right.
Because there’s something, Ican’t even remember off the top of
my head, there’s a whole bunch of studies that I remember reading
about this probably a decade ago, but basically the human mind can
focus for like an hour at a time. I think it was like 57 or 58
minutes or something like that. So the whole concept of this is
like sit down, flip the thing over for an hour and then just focus
for an hour. And then as soon as it beeps you have to stop, jump
up, run around and reset, then come back down and do it again.
So I was like, “I’m going to try that this week.” And so I did
that. I totally got the, and I think if you go to Amazon and type
in like Cube Dot Timer, or Dice Timer, you’ll see one for like a
buck or two, they’re not expensive. But I did that and I flipped my
phone upside down, I turned off all my instant messenger, Skype,
Facebook, everything that somebody could possibly contact me on,
and then I flipped it to 60 minutes and I was like, “Go time. Word
count. Go.” And I just focused on writing during that 60
minutes.
And it was cool because I made a rule for myself, like during
the 60 minutes I can’t deviate. I can’t go and flip my phone over,
I can’t all these different things. Our human minds, we always want
to go towards the, wherever the least resistance is. We want to
move towards pleasure and away from pain. And writing for me and
for a lot people I’ve talked about who write as well, is very much
pain. So it’s like you’re moving towards pain. It’s like, ugh.
There’s all this pleasure around and you want to jump to all these
other things. But I basically made it where all those things are
shut off now and all I have is the book. And pleasure is in 60
minutes when I’m done writing. And I’m going to be angry if I get
to the end of 60 minutes and I haven’t done writing. There’s a lot
of pain there. So it’s like, I gotta write to get the pleasure. And
it forced me to write.
And what I found is that it compounds the attention. Like
normally I’m writing for 5 or 6 minutes and then I’m checking my
phone. Every 5 or 6 minutes checking it and my mind is jumping.
Whereas when I focus for an hour and everything else is done, I
just got an hour, but I know in an hour I get freedom. Man it was
like writing for 3 or 4 hours in that hour. And then as soon I
heard that thing beep I jumped up, I checked my phone, checked my
Facebook, checked my everything, ran around the office and said hi
to everybody, went and got a drink of water, went to the bathroom
and just move my body and like smile, and have some fun, then went
back in, sat down, turned everything off, flipped the thing, boom,
another hour.
And in those two one hour sessions I got more done than I
typically get probably in two days worth of writing. But then after
that I was beat up. I was like, “Well, I’m good. I’m not writing
anymore today.” But it was okay because I got two days worth of
writing done in two hours.
Anyway, just a thought because I know that, you know, you may
not be writing a book, but I do know that whenever you’re moving
forward in any project in business, you’re building a funnel,
you’re writing a sales letter, you’re trying to create a product,
like all the things, our brains are always running toward a path of
least resistance. It’s always moving away from pain towards
pleasure. And it’s tough because the creation of the thing usually
we all associate a lot of pain with it in our minds, so our brains
are always looking for other things. So this is just a really
simple, easy, $3 way to make it simple. And you wouldn’t even have
to use a dice, you could literally set an alarm on your phone and
flip the phone over, which maybe is an even easier thing to do, but
just the concept of blocking out that time.
I don’t remember exactly, oh I remember. When we were first
launching clickfunnels, I was trying to convince Todd and everybody
to move to Boise because I want all my friends in Boise and that
makes total logical sense. And about that time there was a book
that came out called the re-work and it was all about Base Camp,
how they all work remote. Anyway, it was really interesting. And I
remember we were at that and we kind of made the decision like,
“Let’s actually make this a remote team.” So we did that and that
was kind of the decision.
And it’s been good but I remember it was interesting in the book
Re-work, and then I also, oh, excuse me, not Re-work, it was
Remote. Those are both their books and both of them are amazing, so
read both Re-Work and Remote. Remote was the one about working
remote.
But anyway, when I read that, and I also watched, he did a Ted
Talk about Remote as well. It was interesting, he talked about how
when you have to get something done, where do you go? No one says,
“I go to work.” They say, “I come in earlier” or “I stay late.” Or
“I work from home.” Or whatever, to get something done. It’s like,
work doesn’t actually happen at work most times because there’s so
many distractions and things happening. And you know, I was looking
at that, if everyone on my team, I mean, just for me, I wrote for 2
solid hours, and I got more done than I did in two days because I
forced myself to block everything off. If everyone on my team, we
all sat down and just blocked out 2 hours of dedicated time with
nothing else, I wonder what would get done? How much faster things
would move?
Anyway, I thought it was kind of interesting and fascinating all
wrapped into one. Anyway, I wanted to share that with you guys and
hopefully that gives you some ideas and some ways to get some stuff
done. It’s one of my new productivity hacks. I’ve done it two days
in a row and this book is going to get done on time and it’s going
to be amazing because of it.
So all I want from you guys is a commitment right now that the
second Traffic Secrets goes live, you go buy a billion copies, or
at least one. And that way you can support all the work, because I
am killing myself and it’s going to cost you a couple of bucks to
get all this stuff that I’m doing. And hopefully it will be a good
exchange and value for you.
Alright, that’s all I got guys. Have an amazing day; I’m almost
to the airport with Dave. I might record another episode with you
guys before I go see him. So with that said, appreciate you all,
have a great day and we’ll talk to you all soon.
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