Posts tagged UnWork
7 Ways to Fail at Lifestyle Design
May 22nd
Here are some sure-fire ways to fail at creating the UnWork lifestyle.
- Read too much about Lifestyle Design. This one may be surprising to some, but reading too much can actually prevent you from accomplishing your goals. First, reading too much can cause you to become overwhelmed with ideas and then get so bogged down that you never act. Second, you can’t read it all, so saying that you just need to read that next product before you start is a guaranteed way to fail. So if you are looking to fail, go ahead and read too much.
- Never focus. Businesses that try to be everything to everybody usually don’t succeed. Even companies like Google who seem to be doing everything started with a very small focus (in Google’s case, providing the very best search engine). When starting your business, whether it’s a product, a blog, or anything, focusing on a very narrow niche or providing one well defined service helps you succeed. You can also always add more to it later once you have grown a bit. When you are starting out, if failure is what you are after, don’t focus.
- Never start. The best way to fail is to do nothing at all. Never start your blog or create your product. Never take the first step towards your new life. Of all the ideas for failing listed here, this one is the best. If you don’t want to succeed, never even try.
- Quitting too Early. Most lifestyle businesses don’t have instantaneous success. It’s not “build it and they will come.” But given that you are providing value to an audience that needs value provided to them, they will come. You just have to keep at it. If you find that they are not coming, try evaluating why and change your tactics slightly. But even if you are totally awesome, your success will not be over night. There will be times when you feel like you are writing to no one. If you want to fail, that is when you quit. If not, just keep at it.
- Not Quitting. When you start out, you may go through many ideas until you find the one that you like best. No matter what your niche, if after a month you can’t stand thinking about it, maybe that is not the niche for you. You need to be able to really enjoy your work. Don’t be afraid to quit something if it’s a bad fit for you. Trying to do something that you hate is a great way to fail.
- Don’t Produce Value. I mentioned this above, but it’s worth repeating. If you don’t add value, you are doomed to fail. Don’t repeat others. Don’t copy. Add something special that only you can add. Your whole topic doesn’t need to be unique, but you need to add something to the topic in order to succeed. If you don’t, do one would have a reason to buy from you.
- Don’t Market Yourself. Face it, if you are online you are a marketer. Jonathan Fields wrote about this in greater depth a few weeks ago. It is through marketing efforts, usually through social media and networking, that people find your blog for the first time. If no one ever finds your blog or sales page, no one will ever be a reader or buyer.
What other ways can you fail at all creating a lifestyle business?
8 Ways to Find Your UnWork
May 1st
My last post was about looking for your UnWork in your childhood. I wanted to follow that up is some more ideas about places to find your UnWork.
1. Your Job
Okay, I know this is suppose to be about gaining freedom from your job, but if you like your job at all, that is a great place to look for your UnWork. I work as a Web Developer and really like the work that I do. I definitely plan on incorporating programming into my UnWork lifestyle. What aspects of your job do you like and want to continue doing?
2. Your Social Groups
Are you in any clubs or groups for social reasons? What attracts you to them? Is that something that you want to keep in your life? Some social groups may be purely for entertainment, but others may have real substance to them.
3. Your Friends
Think about your close friends. What attracts you to them? What do you enjoy to do with them regularly? What have you helped them with in the past? Another option is to just ask them what they think would be a good fit for you. You may get answers that you didn’t expect. Even if you don’t get any ideas for UnWork, it’s a fun experiment to do to learn more about yourself.
4. Your Reading Material
This one was a big one for me and ultimately what led me to my UnWork ideas. What do you read on a regular basis? What topics do you enjoy reading about? Would you be able and interested in writing about any of those topics? This is especially true for blogs that you may read regularly.
When searching for my UnWork, my rss subscriptions were really telling. Most of them were either programming, productivity, or lifestyle design. Those are the three topics that I consider to be my UnWork.
5. Your Hobbies
What do you do in your spare time? What of these activities add the most value to your life? Even if the activity itself isn’t something that you’d consider to be UnWork, some variation on these activities can lead to both UnWork and product ideas. I have an unannounced product that I’m working on that was inspired by an activity I enjoyed but also considered a waste of time.
6. Twitter
Who do you follow on Twitter and other similar social networks? Whose tweets do you just love reading and why? Are they tweeting about topics that interest you? What are you tweeting about?
7. Vacations
For many people with a regular job, vacations are a rare and treasured time. What do you choose to do with this time? What do you go see and learn about? Do you have any future vacation plans that could tell you something about your UnWork?
8. What Do You Love
What things do you just love? What topics could you just learn more and more about and never get tired? Really, all the previous ideas boil down to this one, but its worth stating on its own. What makes you want to get up in the morning?
Have you found your UnWork? If so, what helped you discover it? I’d love to hear your ideas in the comments.
What is UnWork?
Apr 25th
When you introduce a new term into the lexicon, people are always going to wonder exactly what you mean by that term. So here is my definition of UnWork:
An activity that one does regularly that is motivated by passion and interest rather than money.
But that is just a hobby, you may say. A hobby is a type of UnWork, but usually only in one’s spare time along side a regular job. UnWork is like a hobby that takes up the time you would be holding a job. Your UnWork is primary. You income is secondary. That is the key.
In the UnWork lifestyle, you do what you are driven to do. You do what you love to do, not only in your ’spare time’, but whenever you want to. Money comes secondary to living the life you want to live.
But what about making a living? Won’t I starve?
If you just quit your day job today to start rock collecting without any forethought and planning, you may, in fact, starve. And I don’t want you to do that. But with a little planning and some initial hard work, you can quit your day job and still make a living. You have two basic options:
- You can make money by turning your UnWork into a business.
- You can start a lifestyle business that earns you money while you do your UnWork.
I will go into more details about each of these in later posts.
So what is your UnWork?
PREP for Freedom
Apr 20th
Most of you reading this probably want more freedom. It may be the freedom to travel without having to worry about running out of vacation days. It may be the freedom to spend more time with your kids and love ones. It may be the freedom to choose what you do everyday. But whatever your reason, you want more freedom in your life.
But how do you get freedom?
The attainment of freedom focuses on two main areas: your money and your time. To gain more freedom, you need to free your time to do more of what your want to and to free your finances so you can afford to do what you want.
I have distilled this into a convenient acronym for the process of gaining freedom in your life: PREP, which stands for passion, revenue, efficiency, and play.
The steps of PREP
- Passion. To start off, you need to find your passion. I refer to this as finding your UnWork. It’s that thing which you love doing and would still be interested in doing even if you didn’t get any money from it. It’s what you wake up in the morning burning to do. Your passion also can give you motivation and inspiration as you continue towards freedom.
- Revenue. The next step is to find a way to free your finances. This may be a way that you use your passion to make money or a business that makes money without taking much time. Both work. The key is to make sure you have time and money to follow your dreams and doing your UnWork.
- Efficiency. Once you get revenue, the next step is to clear as much clutter out of your schedule as possible. Just think of IDEA: improvement, delegation, efficiency and automation. Use these to free up as much time as you can.
- Play. The last step is to have fun and get the most out of life. I’d bet that this is the step you want to do most, but remember, it’s last for a reason. It’s your reward.
A Book Changed My Life
Mar 20th
It was a nice fall day in Houston, Texas. I was planning to meet some friends for dinner at 6. It was 3 and I was already in the correct part of town.
Driving around, I saw a Borders bookstore off to my right. What a great way to waste some time! As a total book junkie, I love just wandering around aimlessly in bookstores with all those book and their seemingly endless supply of knowledge. So I pulled in.
In a bookstore, the books draw me in and lead me from place to place as something new catches my eye. Today, it was the self help books that were calling to me. That’s when I saw it. ‘4 Hour Work Week’ was its title. Little did I know, that book would change my life.
I sat down with some quality time with Tim Ferris as I started to read the first chapter. In it were exciting stories about Tango and Travel (both of which I love too). Well that book had me. I bought it and read it all that weekend.
Speaking to my Heart
What that book was able to do was to awaken a deep desire inside of me. Growing up, I had always claimed that I would take the bull by the horns and live a life that was uniquely me. I wasn’t going to work for someone just to earn money. I wanted to make a difference.
What Tim Ferris’s book awakened in me was that same desire. Decrease the work and increase the play. Or for me, if was to decrease the work and increase the ‘UnWork’, or the actions that you are truely passionate about and adds to your life and to the world.
UnWork
I coined to word UnWork to distinguish it from being lazy. Going to start a preschool in Asia or traveling the world to further develop a better understanding of your world neighbors is not lazy (as opposed to spending all day watching TV), but its also not work as in sitting in a cubicle and doing whatever your boss tells you to.
So my goal… decrease the amount of Work I do and increase the amount of UnWork. I want to be judged by the amount of UnWork that I do. As such, I am becoming an UnWorkaholic.
If you had all the money in the world, what would you do to make a difference?
Photo By: http://www.flickr.com/photos/adangarcia/ / CC BY 2.0




