Be the Boss: Success Habits for Your LNC Business

Success habits will keep you energized as you focus on growing your LNC business. Use them to supercharge your productivity. Use these time-tested tips to make your business life easier and more pleasurable.

Success Habits for Your LNC Business

Make Music Playlists to Fuel your Purpose

Music can energize, galvanize, and inspire. It can also calm, de-stress, and soothe. Use energizing music when you are exercising, cleaning, or sailing along through your tasks, getting them out of the way.

Use soothing music when you need to de-stress or center yourself, such as during meditation.

Making separate playlists to suit your mood can really help make your day more productive.

Cut the Coffee

Even if you’re addicted to caffeine, try to cut it down to no more than two cups a day. Any more than that and the energizing effects are reversed.

You will be prone to side effects like:

  1. Upset stomach
  2. Nervousness
  3. Palpitations
  4. Insomnia
  5. Tiredness

And if you must drink coffee later in the day, switch to decaffeinated after 3 p.m.

Honor Your Learning Style

Everyone has a predominant learning style or even a mix of styles.

Decide which type of learning is most effective for you:

  1. Visual: You find it easier to learn from graphics, videos, cartoons, diagrams, webinars, or infographics.
  2. Aural: You’ll pick an .MP3 file or a podcast over a webinar or article any day!
  3. Kinesthetic: You need to learn “hands-on”—by doing things, touching them; jumping right into a new platform or software.
  4. Verbal: You prefer the written word—transcripts, written instructions, articles—in fact, you can read an article faster than you can watch a video.

Once you have determined your best learning style or style, honor it.

Dictate that article, if you’re an aural learner.

Draw little icon-pictures instead of writing things down or use a mind-map, if you’re a visual learner.

If you cater to your preferred learning style(s) you will find that tasks flow easier and you remember things better, leaving you with more time, focus, and energy.

Automate Your Day

Why do something from scratch when you can automate it, using resources, apps, tools, and templates?

Use timers, tracking apps, and scheduling suites—whatever makes tasks easier for you or helps you perform tasks and take care of responsibilities more efficiently.

Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff

Throw out any task that isn’t absolutely essential. If you can’t throw it out, delegate or outsource it. That goes for household chores like cleaning—hire a cleaning lady—or grocery shopping too—many supermarkets allow you to order over the phone and have your groceries delivered.

Just Say No

Do you ever find yourself in a reactive state, where your routine slips out of control? Chances are, you’re agreeing to take on other tasks and responsibilities when you should be saying “no”.

Protect your routine by learning to respect your own boundaries. Never give excuses or reasons why you can’t do something (this just encourages argumentative pressure).

When a person recently approached me with a great idea to revolutionize nursing, I realized the time commitment of what she was proposing. I said, “No, my plate is full” and referred her to a colleague who might be ready to listen.

Don’t Multi-task

No longer are we expected to be multi-tasking machines. Numerous studies now claim that multi-tasking reduces productivity and focus.

A better idea: Plan your day ahead of time—either at the end of the day before or in the morning as part of your routine, away from the computer.

Planning and prioritizing often reduces or eliminates reactive behavior—which can include multi-tasking!

Take Frequent Breaks

Don’t just think lunchtime will do as a break. If you spend your days sitting at a computer, schedule a break every hour (two at the max) and use a timer with an alarm to remind you, until it becomes a habit. Then get up. Walk around. Walk around the block. Do some exercises. Or just lie flat with your legs on a pillow, letting your mind wander and your backrest.

Make the breaks short—ten to fifteen minutes, maximum.

When you go back to the computer, you may find that the break stopped you from going off on a tangent, getting too involved in extraneous research, or giving you the perfect opening for your next video. Solutions may suddenly present themselves, or your day will just get back into focus, so you can zoom in on your priorities.

Are you not convinced?

Before you try this, track and assess how much you actually accomplish during your regular week. Then add the breaks, track, and assess.

Was there a difference? Did you get more accomplished, even though you took breaks? The same? Less?

Eat Healthy Snacks

As part of your morning routine, prepare or select healthy snacks to take with you. Protein bars, fresh fruit, fresh veggie sticks, cheese, mini one-serving cans of tuna, nuts—whatever takes your fancy.
wearing many hats
Remember to include healthy drink options too—sachets of green tea, or water with lemon or lime.

Start Your Day with a Balanced Breakfast

Many people like carbs or something “light” for breakfast—but your brain and energy levels will do better if you eat a breakfast that is balanced. That means including protein and fresh produce too.

There are lots of healthy options for meals. I start my day with yogurt and fruit. A glass of milk or yogurt for protein; protein powder mixed in with porridge or with a smoothie; a protein bar plus an apple (that gives you all the protein and carbs you could want).

Adding spinach to your smoothie also gives you those crucial “leafy greens”—and you won’t taste spinach. It becomes a neutral flavor in smoothies.

Start Work at the Same Time Every Day

If you’re self-employed and you live to be flexible, keep yourself to one set time slot—and that’s starting work at the same time every day. No matter how flexible you are the rest of the day, getting yourself into the habit of sitting down to work at the same time every day will help you accomplish more—and avoid procrastination.

Find a Partner

Some people find it really inspiring to exercise with others or have an accountability buddy to help them stick to a new routine. Find a peer or friend who wants to increase productivity too, and discuss how you can help each other—and cheer each other on.

Create Rewards in your Day

It’s a fact: If there’s a reward at the end of a difficult road, people are far more likely to stay the course. What is your ideal reward for being productive?

Remember that rewards are not always tangible. While it’s nice to eat a truffle every time you exceed seeing three clients a day, you can also indulge in rewards like using a Fitbit to measure the number of steps you take; or going for a swim, if you shave an hour off your work time.

The important thing is to identify the type of reward that would appeal to you—and set it up so you can achieve it. It should be neither too unreachable nor too easy, for the best emotional impact.

Learn to Tune Yourself Up

You’ve likely made adjustments at the beginning of the day, but to make your morning routine extra-effective, get into the habit of stopping for a quick “tune-up”—just after lunch is ideal.

Review where you are in your day. Exercise or meditate, if you need to. Refocus and tweak your day’s calendar, if you’ve run into snags or miscalculations.

Read One Inspiring Article a Day

Find inspiring blogs relevant to your goals for business and your personal life. Bookmark them and subscribe. Choose one article a day, and read it.

Search using keywords like “best XYZ blogs 2023”

Shorten Tasks You Find Difficult

If you know it’s going to kill you if you exercise for fifteen minutes in the morning, exercise for five. If you know you’re going to hate devoting a timed hour to cleaning out your inbox, just unsubscribe from six contacts or delete twenty letters.

The important thing—especially if you’re trying to take on a new resolution or activity—is to get into the habit of doing it first. Worry about “how long” later, when the habit is firmly adopted!

Schedule Time for Yourself as well as Time for Clients

Physically schedule time for your own projects on your calendar. You’ll be much more likely to start your project and not let it get bumped by some other task or issue.

Realize that “Urgent” is Not the Same as “Important”

Especially when the urgency is true for someone else—not you. Urgency is often unfortunately paired with reactivity:. And that’s a counter-productive state and trait.

Switch Off Unnecessary Devices

Disconnect from the net and close your browsers unless you are actively researching or uploading/downloading. Turn off your phone. Concentrate only on your top priorities for the day—and don’t turn your devices again until you’re done.

Keep Track of Ideas

When you’re in a productive zone, ideas tend to fly at you out of nowhere. Make sure you devise and adopt a system to keep track of them: A physical notebook in your purse and one each beside your bed and favorite chair, an app such as Evernote on your computer or iPhone.

You may think you’ll remember those ideas later, but it’s a proven fact that most people don’t: So make sure you catch them while they’re hot!

Give Yourself a Time Limit

If you often find that the more you try to complete something, the more work it seems to generate, meaning you never finish, then give yourself a time limit—and focus on meeting that deadline.

Don’t overwhelm yourself by trying to implement all of these ideas at once. Select a couple to begin with, then add more once you’ve mastered those new habits.

Being a ‘Boss’ has its challenges, so it is vital that you develop a solid routine to take care of yourself and your business.

Successful LNC Be the Boss
Finally, take a long-term view.

Are you ready to tackle those bad habits and grow your business on solid ground?

Check out my book, ‘Be the Boss of Your LNC Business’, and put yourself on the right track. Avoid pitfalls new business owners make by not taking care of themselves.

You don’t have to do it on your own, aka the hard way.

 

Pat Iyer is president of The Pat Iyer Group, which develops resources to assist LNCs in obtaining more clients, making more money, and achieving their business goals and dreams.

Pat’s related websites include the continuing education provided on LNCEU.com, the podcasts broadcast at podcast.legalnursebusiness.com, and writing tips supplied at patiyer.com.

Get all of Pat’s content in one place by downloading the mobile app, Expert Edu at www.legalnursebusiness.com/expertedu. Watch videos, listen to podcasts, read blogs, watch online courses and training, and more.