I presented this past weekend at The Traveluxe Ignite 2024 Conference. Their tag line for the conference was “Aspire to Inspire”, I love that!
It was so fun to be in a big room full of fantastic human beings, and I am truly grateful they welcomed me into their circle.
I spoke to them about Goal Setting, using the tools of SMART Goals and PACT Goals, both topics that I have presented dozens of times and spoken about in past articles and podcast episodes.
Leading into the Goal Setting segment, though, for these folks, I first brought up the idea of Focus Areas.
Our Focus Areas are where, in our life, we use our resources of time, money, energy, passion, focus, etc. Our Focus Areas are what is important to us. And while I mention “Find Your Focus Areas and stick with them” in my Stress Management presentation, and I have published an article and podcast episode about them (if you want to know more, go check out December, 2022), I needed to expand my teaching content for this presentation and I wrote that content in the last couple of weeks.
The Questions I ask are:
- “What are your Focus Areas, right now?”
- Knowing that, “What do you want your Focus Areas to be?” and then
- “What do you NOT want to focus on?”
Today, we are going to look at that first step, that first question, “What are your Focus Areas, right now?
Productivity Coaching is all about awareness first. We start with awareness.
We ask, what are we doing? What are our focus areas right now? Where are we spending our resources?
Because, here’s the thing, we may think we know what our Focus Areas are, but we also may require a more realistic report of what is actually happening. Sometimes were are not full aware of what we’re spending our resources on. I can believe in my heart that I am focusing on what I want to focus on, but how I spend my resources may tell a different story.
Once we identify our current Focus Areas, then we can ask what we DO and Don’t want them to be, but first we have to identify what they are right now. And, to determine what our focus areas are right now, I suggested a few questions for my participants to reflect on.
I asked, What are our resources? Broadly, our resources are time, money, energy, emotion, passion, space. Right? All of those things are our resources. And all of those things are finite. So we want to make sure that we are spending our resources on the right things.
We’re checking in on what is. And how do we do that?
I recommended strategies in my presentation to find our focus areas. I recommended that, to identify what you are focusing on, look at your bank and credit card statements for how you are spending your money. Review receipts if you pay for items in cash. Start gaining awareness on where you spend the resource of money.
And that caused a little stir in my audience. Apparently, something similar had been part of a conversation some other time in the conference, so, reading the room, it caused a stir, though not in a bad way, per se.
I know it’s hard, but that’s why we’re going through this process, right? We want to make sure that we’re doing the right things in the right areas. We want to determine what that is for ourselves. We want to make progress. Yay.
Productivity coaching. That’s what we do.
But we need to know where our resources are going. And once we know, once we are aware of where our resources are being spent, we can then ask – is this where I WANT them to go?
I’m reminded of a conversation I have had with a family member a couple of times now about travel, as in “When are you going to travel internationally?” And my answer is, and has been, “I have well educated children.” To remind them that our resources have been dedicated to areas other than international travel for the last 10 years or more.
So, as we identify Focus Areas, wee look at where we are spending our money. And we can review other resources, as well.
Where are we spending our time?
If you’re curious about, or seeking awareness around how you spend your time, look at your calendar. This week, of course, but also the last few months or years, and what you have on the calendar looking ahead.
I would like to say that I am dedicated to my own wellness, that it is a Focus area, but a review of my calendar shows that while I am up to date on my medical stuff, I have gotten out of the exercise habit and now it is not on my calendar. With that awareness, I can either recommit (which I hope to), or I need to be more realistic in the story I tell myself about my Focus Areas.
“How do I spend my scheduled time?” is a good question, and we can also look at our past to-do lists and our current to-do list. Many of the women I spoke to at the conference mentioned they love paper planners, so another great place to look to identify your Focus Areas is past journals and planners. In one of my next articles and episodes about Bullet Journals, I will likely talk about how I was never much of a journaler / diary keeper until I started using a Bullet Journal and now I am glad I can go back and review past journals to help me guide my actions today.
Next, was can ask, How do I spend the resource of energy, focus, passion? An indicator of this is to look at your incoming and outgoing communications, like your phone calls, emails and texting history.
(That suggestion caused a stir, too).
But it is true. Texting is very personal for most of us, and it is an indicator of our Focus areas. A quick review of my last week of phone calls showed checking in w family, and lots of new client calls. My texting shows the themes of Family / My Parent’s wellness, my kids and husband, ministry at my Parish, Board of Education work, and personal and home management. Yep, sounds about right.
I have walked through this process myself, of late, when creating this content. And I feel like another upcoming article and episode will be how to clean up our spending, as I have begun that adventure for myself now that I have gained more awareness. But that is for another day.
As I wrap up today, let’s recap:
- Thinking about Focus Areas is important to setting goals and getting things done.
- It is important to identify what our current Focus Areas are to then ensure that we are doing what we want and need to be doing, and making adjustments if necessary.
- And
- To identify what our focus areas are, we can review where we spend our resources, those personal and precious and finite resources we have, like our money, time, energy, focus, emotion, passion. With that awareness, we can then decide for ourselves how we want to move ahead.
I hope you found this helpful, and please let me know how this helped!
Super!! I love the thought about looking at texts and emails to see who I’ve been communicating with!!
Thank you! Great information to build on!!
Awareness is so important! It’s a great way to figure out where the week went, too, if you’re wondering “how is it Friday already?!” etc!