Red Bike Leader

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Archive for the ‘resources’ Category

1 Life, 3 Words, 6 Steps

by Ryan Russell | March 8th, 2010 | Posted in basics, resources

Overwhelmed and stressed out by all of the crap that keeps stacking up?

Try this —> I give you my “Money Back Guarantee” on the start of a kick-ass, productive work life! It is centered around those 3 words that sometimes rule our lives “NEED TO DO”. You are about to experience one of the best investments of 30 minutes of your work week.

step 1BE ALONE; singular, by yourself, only 1. Tune everything out. Turn off your computer & your phone – close your door – be alone & free from distraction.

step 2 – GET 2 ITEMS, a piece of paper & a pencil. We are going old school.

step 3 - Write down everything you NEED TO DO (the key 3 words) – include everything that comes into your head or that is stressing you out.

step 4 - Write “Today”, “This Week”, “Next Week”, or “Future” (1, 2, 3, or 4) next to every item for priority indicators

step 5Select 5 or fewer TODAY ITEMS; be VERY realistic erring on the side of conservative.

step 6Take 6 DEEP BREATHS; enjoy your life and the moment

NOW you can go get started. Work really hard. Eliminate distractions, time killers and losers. Quite no later than 5pm. Have a nice beverage. Enjoy your family.

Grad School Alternatives

by Ryan Russell | February 18th, 2010 | Posted in basics, resources

Here are my alternatives to graduate school for those who are thinking about going BUT have no idea about how it will get you forward towards actual life goals.

1. Go get an internship in the field in which you think you want to work —- you can do this for 5 hours every week volunteering. EVERY INDUSTRY takes free labor. You just have to seek out the right person. Be committed. Do it forĀ  a minimum of 3 months.

2. Start reading the best books in your new field and listening to lectures online. Buy the books used or go to the library. Audit classes at your largest & nearest university. Just sit in and see how long it takes to get kicked out. OR just show up the first day of every class in the degree program and get the course syllabuses. Here is one excellent example.

3. Find a mentor; pick someone who is doing GREAT at the job you want to do. Buy them lunch or coffee EVERY TIME you can. Mow their lawn if you have to. Ask them for direction and insights.

4. Take an entry level job and work your way up. This can still be done and happens all of the time for people who are motivated. At the very least it gets you closer to finding a mentor and gives you an up close view of what you think you want to do but aren’t very sure about. Plus you are getting paid rather than acquiring bills.

5. Create your own opportunity. The hardest path possibly, but well worth the sweat and probably a better use of your dollars. If you are going to spend $60k-ish on school, why not invest that capital in your very own brand new endeavor. Build the thing that you want to do from the ground up. Do it on the side after you have done steps 1-4. Take the leap when momentum gets going. Get a loan if necessary. At least you have a better upside possibility.

DonorTools.com

by Ryan Russell | February 10th, 2010 | Posted in resources

donor toolsDonorTools.com has been an incredible find within the last year. I use this tool personally managing donations, empowering volunteers and engaging donors. I recommend it for anyone leading a non-profit organization. Finding simple, powerful and clean software tools that are priced right is hard to come by. Add to it that it is specifically geared for the non-profit sector. Incredible. Ryan & Chris are personable and responsive. Check it out for yourself… share it with others. (This is not a paid advertisement; this product is just that good and so are the people.)

“The E-myth Revisited”

by Ryan Russell | February 3rd, 2010 | Posted in leadership, resources

screen-shot-2010-01-30-at-110115-am“The E-Myth Revisited” by Micheal Gerber is hands down one of my favorite essential reads for every young and developing leader. In fact, I read this book every year just to remind myself of the foundational items related to building healthy businesses & organizations. You will be challenged in leadership, developing systems for greater participation by others and healthy practices for growth and communication. Along the way you will certainly learn more about yourself and your leadership style.

“What Matters Now”

by Ryan Russell | January 27th, 2010 | Posted in resources

what matter now

Reading this with our team.

Quick.

Insightful.

Challenging.

FREE! —-> Thanks to Seth Godin and all the contributors.