Organize Tomorrow Today: 8 Ways to Retrain Your Mind to Optimize Performance at Work and in Life

Organize Tomorrow Today: 8 Ways to Retrain Your Mind to Optimize Performance at Work and in Life

Matthew Rudy

Language: English

Pages: 240

ISBN: 0738218693

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


Sports Psychology Meets Wall Street

Dr. Jason Selk helps well-known professional and Olympic athletes as well as Fortune 500 executives and organizations develop the mental toughness necessary to thrive in the face of adversity and achieve elite-level results. Tom Bartow, following a career as a winning college basketball coach, became one of the country's top financial advisors and is now one of the premier business coaches nation-wide. Together, Selk and Bartow reveal the secrets of how both elite athletes and business leaders climb to the top.

In Organize Tomorrow Today, two of the top minds in human performance come together to deliver the pathway to extreme success. Doing more is not the answer, and Selk and Bartow walk you through how to achieve more by doing less. There is a huge difference between knowing something and understanding. There is an even wider gap between understanding and doing. Highly successful people never get it all finished in any given day; however, they always get the most important things completed. Selk and Bartow offer the 8 fundamentals of doing what it is most important. OTT will show you the performance gains that athletes, executives, and salespeople spend tens of thousands of dollars to achieve.

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teach people how to do more with the time they have. Time maximization teaches you to create more time. The ultimate limitation for all of us is time. There’s only so much time in the day, and you can only focus your attention on a certain number of things. Hundreds and hundreds of self-help books have focused on the concept of time management—ways to get your time organized and build your list of commitments into a manageable plan so you can be more “productive.” They mean well. But most

on your schedule as early in the day as possible. Attacking the open space is simple. When you find yourself with a few extra moments, ask yourself what is the most important thing you can get done with the available open time window. The tasks you will do when you have those extra few minutes are not from the “3 Most Important” list but are other important tasks that you can now fit into your day even though they were not on the primary lists. Most people in this situation will go to their

4.  ______________________________________________ CHAPTER 3: MAXIMIZE YOUR TIME 1.  The more successful you become, the smaller the unit of time you should be thinking in. 2.  Attacking the open space, prioritizing the priorities, and trimming the fat are all effective methods of creating more time. 3.  Once you’ve identified that thing, “chop it” by separating out the first action step you can take on it. 4.  ______________________________________________ CHAPTER 4: WIN YOUR FIGHT-THRUS

think about which of the eight concepts address some of the issues you’re having in your professional or personal life. Pick the one that resonates the most. Start with that, and commit to following the step-by-step guidelines in that chapter. The key to high-level success is to pick one thing to change—yes, just one—and master it. The title of this book, Organize Tomorrow Today, comes from the concept that has been the most popular starting point among the attendees at Jason and Tom’s seminars

traveled to different offices around the country to take the pulse of advisors and try to give them some guidance on how to help clients who had seen their portfolios crushed by the downturn. As Tom made what he called his “world tour,” he knew he needed to offer a straightforward strategy that would help advisors—and clients—fend off panic and make rational decisions with the right amount of perspective. It started with two lists. First, Tom asked the advisors to make a list of the things they

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