You have good ideas. Don't let them disappear.
Good ideas come and go every second, but what doesn’t happen very
often is the capturing of those thoughts. You can have the brightest and
sharpest ideas that could take your life and business to a whole new
level, but they mean absolutely nothing if they're pushed aside
and forgotten.
It doesn’t matter what our education levels are or where we come
from, we all have great and wonderful ideas. The only problem is that
most people let the hustle and bustle of life get in the way and
interrupt their ability to capture their golden ideas.
Now, you might not come up with the world’s next greatest
invention (or maybe you will). But everything we use in our day-to-day
lives was once just an idea. Not every idea will be worth a billion
dollars, but perhaps one or two of them can change the trajectory of
your business and life for the better.
We all have 24 hours in a day, no more or no less than the next
person. Think about how many times where an idea or thought comes to
mind but you do nothing about it. There really is no value for us if we
don’t take the initiative. The other reason why it is so imperative that
we capture our ideas is because coincidence or not, some of our best
ideas don't come to us in the office.
Here are three steps to take every day:
Have a system. The best way I have found to capture
ideas on a regular basis is to take a systematic approach to it. We all
prefer different ways of doing things. Some of us prefer electronic
devices while some of us stick to the trusted pen-and-paper route.
Either way, pick what works for you and stick with it. I prefer to
log all of my ideas and thoughts into evernote and then at the end of
the day analyze each idea. After I dig a little deeper, I transfer the
ideas that I may want to act on immediately or in the near future into
my moleskin journal.
Pick the good ones. Just because you start capturing
your thoughts and ideas doesn’t mean everything that comes to mind is
going to be something that you will act on. Finding time alone where you
can analyze what you logged for the day helps tremendously. This is
where you can determine whether a specific idea is worthy of your time.
Throw out what’s useless.
Make it a habit. Just like with any new habit that
we try to adopt into our everyday lives, it takes time. I truly believe
that if you make a determined effort on a regular basis to capture your
ideas, it will greatly benefit your personal and professional life.
Of all the great men and women I have had the fortune to work with,
they all knew the importance of keeping track of their thoughts and
ideas. Stick with it.
(Source: Entrepreneur)