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Having Trouble Fitting It All In?

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Having Trouble Fitting It All In? (New Ways to Slice the Pie)

Let's face it we all know that mastering time is a big piece of being successful. And even more, is fitting it all in, especially when you have a career in music. It seems like every artist I meet is pretty overwhelmed these days everyone needs help managing the hours in a day, and knowing how to better slice the pie. Most of us still spend far too much time on Facebook as it is, sigh. (Whoops, that's not the type of time management we need.)

But not getting control of time, or not learning how to manage it, will leave your career and you in the dust and I know those of you reading this (or me for that matter) are not the kind of people who are up to letting THAT happen!

So, how can you get a hold of your to-do list and not only get it all done, but continually make progress? I've been looking into it and decided to exercise my hand in creating a system one that works specifically for musicians I'm calling it: the Self-Management System for Music Creators and Creative Types, because I think it's not only about managing time it's about managing You managing time, structure, clarity and a system to work off of that incorporates you, your music and music business time.

You know I hear so often many artists say, If I just had a manager, thinking a manager is the magic answer. But honestly, if you can't manage yourself, no one else can either! If you're truly going to have a successful Artist-Based Career, the first step is Self-Management. Let's face it, the better you are at it, the more successful you will be, and it starts right here.

As a part of the pilot run of my brand spanking new Fast Forward to Fame Program & Blueprint, I am revealing for the first version ever, my new Self Management System for Music Creators & Creative Types. And today, I'm bringing you a preview for how it breaks down and how to better slice your pie.

The Self-Management System: Time Management for Music Creators & Creative Types

At the core of everything you do is primarily one thing that you can't live without You. So guess what happens when you are not at the helm? Everything else suffers. This is a constant lesson for those of us with careers in music. Now, most of you will say (even myself included sometimes) that's a bunch BS. Because we just want results, we don't want to have to manage ourselves that's for someone else to do but not when you understand what it can do for you.

What happens when you suck at managing you:

  • You get sick (often) because you run yourself into the ground splattering your energies everywhere all at once.
  • You have to cancel your tour because you think you can just blow through it and you could even end up having throat surgery like poor Adele (love her but, oh no!!) and at the height of your career while the whole world is watching AND waiting, sigh ;(.
  • You waste your precious time and efforts by having to do things two or three times over, because you weren't focused the first time you did it, and you didn't plan for what was coming, sigh.
  • You hire a publicist who does absolutely nothing for you because you thought THAT was the answer.

Sound all too familiar? I know because I see it happen every day and it happens to me too! That's why I'm creating this system (selfishly) because even I aim for more mastery of this stuff I know there's always a better way and I want to bring it to you too!

Slicing the Pie:

Here's a new way to slice the pie three ways: Self Management >> Music >> Business

If you are not at the helm, everything else suffers. Self Management is first at the Foundation, followed by Music second and Business third. It's kind of the evolution of how this thing goes. You Commit to yourself and become a Musician (Self Management), you Create your Music in the World (Music) and you Bring it to the World (Business).

The breakdown of the pie is based off of the 10,000 Hour Theory, which says that in order to be great at anything (music, sports, dance, even business) you need 10,000 hours of it (read Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers the part about the Beatles and their 10,000 hour rise to fame).

Add to that the fact that today you not only have to be good at music but you have to be good at business and management- in essence, you would need 10,000 hours for each category, but wait don't freak there's a plan!

Now let's break down 10,000 hours into 10 years:

10,000 hours divided by 10 years = 1000 hours.

Divide 1000 hours by 48 weeks (give yourself 4 weeks off) = 20 hours per week.

I've broken it down into two versions one for those of you who do music full-time and the second for those of you who have a day job.

So, there are 96 hours in a week to be productive (sans 8 hours for un-negotiable sleep-time and one full day off). And yes, I know that includes eating, grooming and traveling, but I have created some ways to multi-task so even those minutes are focused and effective (you'd have to see the whole plan to get the whole picture).

So, If You Do Music Full-time:

So you have Mon Sat = 6 days x 16 hours = 96 hours per day (sans 8 hours for non-negotiable sleep-time and one full day off).

Divide those 96 hours into 3 sections: 1- Self-Management, 2- Music and 3 Business, and you have 32 hours per week for each category.

Weekly: Self-Management= 32 hours, Music = 32 hours, Business = 32 hours.

If you have a Day Job:

Let's say that you work 4 days a week, Mon-Thurs, 8 hours each day, that's 32 hours (and if you don't have a 4-day workweek get one!)

So you will have to subtract 32 hours from the 96, which leaves you 64 hours. Divide 64 hours of into the 3 categories, which leaves 21.33 hours per category.

Weekly: Self-Management= 21.33 hours, Music = 21.33 hours, Business = 21.33 hours.

Here's a rough idea of what falls into each of the 3 categories:

Self-Management: Skills and Soul (from the Fame Formula)

Planning/Goal Setting, Scheduling, Brainstorming (or Brain-dumping), Visualization (critical if you can't see it, it won't happen), Reading (researching-reading other musician autobiographies an artist is a perpetual student & poetry inspiration for your lyrics), Visualizations/Affirmations (every morning & night), Meditation (this is your clarity folks!), Plus: Shopping (got to be fashion-forward), Exercising/Yoga/Working Out, Walking Exploring, Extra Curricular Activities/Classes, Nutrition/Food (life source) and  Down-time (movies, dinners out, friend-family time, Eating/preparing food/dining, Grooming, Errands, and You-time (doing exactly what you want to do at least once a week.) etc. 

Music: Skills & Soul (from the Fame Formula)

Practicing, technique, studying music, lessons, working with your coach/mentor, group class, accountability partner, songwriting, co-writing, making music, recording your songs, recording your record, making videos, band or show rehearsal, performing, going to shows checking out other musicians, researching new music, etc.

Business: Savvy (from the Fame Formula)

Social media, research, blogging, newsletter, promotion, marketing, networking, strategizing, business planning, business meetings, meetings with team, hiring-firing, administration, systems, website, graphic design, booking gigs/tours, songwriting conferences, music/film conferences, music conferences, festivals etc.

Start with:

  1. Keep a journal to keep track of your time so you know exactly what you are spending your time on. And for gosh sake  use a timer when you're on Facebook, gasp!
  2. Now, get out your calendar and start scheduling it in. Play with it until you can figure out how to make it work! When you get out of balance or fall behind, all you do is schedule make-ups and momentarily sacrifice in some other area.

Try it for one month  see what happens! And hey, don't beat yourself up about it, it takes more than a few tries to get things in place and running smoothly. Just don't give up  you will make a huge difference in your progress when you keep trying to slice the pie. Of course every now and then when you decide to do a big project, you may put aside the other pieces, but can make them up later. I do it all the time.

Obviously, there's more to making this work than a quick peek but it's a head-start. Hope it helps. Let me know what you think.

P.S. Ready to press the Fast Forward button on your Career and get the ENTIRE Self-Management System to boot?

©2011 Cari Cole, Vocal Mag, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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