Where to start and how to keep going
Make success as easy as possible for you
Now that you’ve chosen to try out my Bullet Journaling inspired guided-freestyle Business Journaling approach, you already have all the material you need in front of you:
your folded 20-pages DIY booklet or even a fully-fledged blank book from a store
and a pen, of course.
“How to actually get going?” might now be the next question on your mind.
Common Whys for Journaling
There are two main approaches to journal:
to reflect on experiences, on work, on life
to organise yourself, your work, your life
Either way (or: why :)) requires you to add an index page on the very first page and write small page numbers on every single page. This is something that you can and should do right now.
I’ll wait here for you until you’re done with numbering your first 10 pages and putting the headline “Index” on the first two ones.
Why Nr. 1: Get organised
Let’s say you want to use guided-freestyle journaling to organise yourself better.
Then start with monthly and weekly logging plus leverage daily logs in your blank book in front of you.
You will use your journal most likely for planning ahead, e.g. a couple of minutes in the morning. Some people even do that in the evening and look briefly at the next day ahead.
Why Nr. 2: Start reflecting
In case you would like to start your guided-freestyle journal with a focus on reflection first, then you write every evening (or end of your day).
You will heavily use daily logging to start walking your self-development path.
In the next piece I will briefly explain those terms borrowed from the Bullet Journal method (i.e. monthly, weekly & daily logging). Knowing these main building blocks will make it easier for you to start.
Knowing your why makes building your new habit easier. That’s what we focus on today.
Make succeeding easy for you
You already have a big part of your most important reason to (re)start Business Journaling. Either you want to:
reflect more
organise better
or even both.
Now take your pen and go to the middle of your DIY 20-pages-booklet or to page 10 of your blank book.
Write down your why
On this page 10, take a moment to complete (one of) these sentences for you:
I want to reflect more on … so that I …
I want to organise … better so that I …
For some folks this just works that straightforward.
However other people find it easier to first “freestyle” for about 10 min and then boil the learnings down to one or two sentences.
Proceed like this, if you want to try the freestyle journaling technique:
make sure you have distraction-free 10 minutes
write this prompt on top of the page: What *I* want from journaling is…
start a timer, put the pen on paper and write…
…keep writing!
only stop once the timer is over
You might be surprised what appears on paper within as little as 10 mins.
Celebrate your steps
You just set-up your first milestone for retrospection in your journal. Good job!
Once you’ll arrive at page 10 you’ll be reminded WHY you started all this.
This will be a great occasion:
to pause and reflect for a moment,
to celebrate how far you’ve already come
and see where you want to go next.
You eased your path into success with Business Journaling already today.
In the next piece of this introduction, you’ll see some pictures from my own Business Journaling practice to explain the basic concepts borrowed from Bullet Journaling (and: my tweaks to it).
( This article is also part of my book Kickstart your Reflection@Work - The Business Journaling Starter. See https://leanpub.com/businessjournaling-starter/ on LeanPub. )
Found something valuable? Want to work together?
Get in touch to find our more!
cosima AT respectAndAdapt.rocks or book a discovery call right here