
For inspection, timing is everything. Go too early in the month, and all the people who didn’t make the last month are lining up, in a panic. Go too late in the month, and you have to wait behind 20 other people who left it too late.
Findingย the right time might be aย little tricky. It’s a balancing act.
It’s the same kind of balancing act in much of our lives. If we are entrepreneurial, we might act too early. If we’re risk-averse, we might act too late.
I often try to get my car inspected during the second or third weeks of the month. I miss the long lines at the start and at the end of the month. Very few things in my life lend themselves to that precise a measurement.
For those of you who wonder about “between the second and third week” as being precise, here’s the question: Does it matter when, as long as it’s sometimeย in that time period? My estimate is accurate, and more precision is unnecessary.ย I write a lot about project, program, and roadmap planning on my other blog. I won’t repeat that here.
Here’s what I’ve noticed about trying to time things to a specific minute, day, week, month, whenever. We often have more flexibility than we think.
I don’t bother trying to time “right” these kinds of projects or work:
- When to write and release a book. I write the books I want to write and worry about the “rightness” of the market later. Sometimes, I’m smart. Sometimes, I’m not. I don’t worry about it.
- When to clean my office. I just don’t. Okay, I do when I can’t stand it. (You longtime readers know this is a constant refrain.)
- When I announce a new workshop. I work on it until it’s ready and then I release.
Notice these deliverables are forย me. I often have deliverables for other people, and I offer a range of the “right” time.
The way I can manage my deliverables for everyone is to maintain a cadence of work. I maintain a cadence of my various writing.ย These question of the week posts are supposed to arrive on a Wednesday. Some weeks, like this week, it’s a Thursday. Some weeks like last week, it was Friday. That’s because I was writing other pieces. I needed time to clear my brain.
I maintain a cadence of finishing small pieces on workshops, on coaching, on everything until I complete my work. For me, small pieces, consistently add up to a deliverable at the “right” time. I don’t need a balancing act for my work. I need a balancing act for what I’ll call an “atomic” piece of work—I can’t divide it up to smaller deliverables.
The only formula I use to keep going, to persevere, finishing a little something every day. Then, it’s the “right” time to release.
That’s the question this week: When is the right time?