How Briana Scurry and Other Olympians Win The Day
Today we’re going to talk about how Briana Scurry and other Olympians win the day and how to focus on your MIT. What you’re going to learn: The MIT Principle (What you should be focused on and how to get it done) What Briana Scurry and other Olympians do to win the day How to break down your yearly goal into daily MITs Key Quotes: “About six months before an Olympics, I would relate all the decisions I made to the ultimate vision of winning gold. The simple question I would ask several times a day was, ‘Will this activity help me perform better and therefore help us win gold?’” – Briana Scurry “I always start with the most important thing on my priority list. If you didn’t spend your week working on the most important thing, it was a week wasted.” – Randy Gage “I work more on time alignment. Is this part of my mission?.” – Chris Brogan “If you chase two rabbits, you will catch neither one.” –Russian proverb “To do two things at once is to do neither.” –Publius Syrus Read Full Transcript Welcome back to the Extreme Productivity podcast, I’m Kevin Kruse and I interviewed over 200 billionaires, self-made millionaires, successful entrepreneurs, and even Olympic athletes and straight A students to learn how THEY 10x their productivity. In the previous episode we discussed how the number 1440 can change your life and I shared the advice of Shark Tank’s Kevin Harrington. TODAY we’re talking about how Briana Scurry and other Olympians win the day. But first, if you want to achieve your goals faster than ever before, just grab your smartphone and text the word ACHIEVE to 44222 and I’ll send you The 1-Page Planning Tool That Millionaire’s Use To Schedule Their Day. Just text ACHIEVE to 44222 or you can visit the website productivity-podcast.com to download the 1-Page Planning Tool that Millionaire’s Use To Schedule Their Day and other bonuses. Do you remember the movie City Slickers? Hilarious. Got to watch it. In one scene, an old cowboy Curly (played by Jack Palance) gives a secret to life to Mitch (played by Billy Crystal). Holding up his index finger, Curly explains that you need to figure out your one thing and stick to it. But the “one thing” concept goes back a lot further than a Billy Crystal comedy. Consider this advice from the ages: • “To do two things at once is to do neither.” –Publius Syrus • “If you chase two rabbits, you will catch neither one.” –Russian proverb • Wise old Buddha once said, “Put down your freaking smartphone and focus would you?!” We can take this wisdom and boil it down to a single principle. The MIT Principle – The Most Important Task Therese Macan, a professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, conducted groundbreaking research into time management, productivity, and stress, discovering that the two most important keys are priorities and mechanics (i.e., the mechanics of implementing time management techniques and tactics). Put simply, the most important things are to know what to focus on and how you are going to get it done. I call this always knowing your MIT: the most important task. The key to your productivity all comes down to understanding what is most important to you—and what activity will provide the greatest leverage to getting there—right now. Additionally, research that we’ve conducted at the Kruse Group in 2015 on over 4,000 working professionals indicates that having a daily MIT correlates to higher levels of happiness and energy. Briana Scurry, who won two gold medals as the starting goalkeeper for the United States women’s soccer team in 1996 and 2004, tod me: “About six months before an Olympics, I would relate all the decisions I made to the ultimate vision of winning gold. The simple question I would ask several times a day was, ‘Will this activity help me perform better and therefore help us win gold?’” Randy Gage is author of nine books including the New York Times...