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Product Creation Tips – 7 Ways to Get Your Product Out of Your Head Right Now

  1. Schedule a free live event on your topic.

Invite people to your event, record the entire thing, hand out feedback forms to get testimonials for future use and to improve your training.

    1. Become a “Recovering Perfectionist”.

If you try to have the perfect conditions, perfect time, perfect budget, perfect anything you will most likely never create a product. Perfect never comes. When you begin to engage in perfectionism, think of a painter. A painter never gets to “perfect” because it’s all relative. Learn to drop the paintbrush or you could just keep painting forever.

    1. Use lost opportunities to move you to action.

We’ve all had the experience of seeing a product or service we thought of but didn’t take action on. Use the hidden costs of that lost opportunity and use the loss to move into action now.

    1. Turn your tragedy into someone else’s triumph.

What failures have you overcome? How can your experience help other people? Share what you did to help other people avoid or recover from the same thing.

    1. Recruit your best friend.

Ask your best friend to interview you to get your valuable information out of your head. It’s always easier to share information with a real person rather than do a monologue. If no one’s available, paste a photo of your friend on your monitor, begin recording and pretend you’re explaining the information to him/her.

    1. Announce it.

Announce when your product will be ready. Ask customers what they’d like it to include. If you don’t have customers and clients yet, announce your intention to someone you care about to help keep you accountable.

    1. Interview people.

Find experts you’d like to learn from and ask them for an interview. Make sure you clearly communicate the purpose of the interview and let them know how it can benefit them. Just ask… the worst that can happen is a “No” and if that occurs just move on.
“Life begins at the end of your comfort zone.” –Neale Donald Walsch

 

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HEARTWORK JOURNALING LESSONS

HEARTWORK JOURNALING LESSONS