In this week's Baking it Down Podcast - Episode 256 - Nextcuses, we wanted to talk about somethin' that crops up every month there's a Cookie Collab (Pipe a Park Collab is this Friday btw - oh, you won't be able to participate? Hold onto that thought.).
We get it - π₯Ί life is lifing, the kids are screaming, the clients are screaming louder than the kids, the spouse is upset, the in-laws are coming over, and you're about .002 seconds from crying in a Target aisle. π
Your excuses = valid. None of those things is a lie. But all of those things are costing you business. πͺ But you can re-pattern your excuses to be more honest, and thus, more useful in understanding how you and your business work together.
β¨ The "Five-Minute Rule"Β
Most excuses are born from the fear of how long or difficult a task will be.Β
ποΈ Tell yourself you will do the task for only five minutes. So it's not, "I'll take the twins 8-hour bootcamp on in-person cookie classes," but instead it's, "I'll start watching the Bootcamp for just 5 minutes."
ππ½π₯πͺπΌπ§ I do this with the gym (my most hated place on earth). "I'm allowed to just drive to the gym, walk in, and leave" becomes, "Okay, find - I'll do a few exercises." We're literally tricking our brains into being productive-ish. And productive-ish is better than production-less.
β¨ Practice "If-Then" PlanningΒ
Excuses thrive with obstacles. The minute that gym parking lot is too packed? ποΈπ¨ Ya girl hitting the gas right back home. And while it feels good in that minute (trust me - there is no higher high), I still didn't get my exercise in, and it'll cost me my cortisol, good sleep, and a healthy body.
The solution - if-then approach to obstacles. "If the gym is packed, I'll go for a long walk." πΈ And "If I run out of time to record a Reel for Instagram, I'll post a photo instead."
β¨ Rephrase Your Language
This is my favorite one (probably because I'm most guilty of it). Excuses are masked as "can't." "I can't do the collab, "I can't record that Reel," "I can't make a website because..."
This takes the power from you and puts it on the reason (whatever comes after the "because). It makes things appear out of your control. Switch to "don't" or "choose not to" to take that power.
Why this works: Taking ownership of the choice you make helps you realize you are in control. If you don't like the way the "choice" feels, you are more likely to change the behavior. π€ You may think, "Well, I am recovering, but going for a walk might be a nice experience, and I have a frozen cookie I could thaw."Β
In this podcast, we cover 2 more approaches to turn your excuses into next-cuses. Tune in to learn about "frictionless starts" and "pay-off audits."Β
π Snag this podcast on any major podcast player (Spotify, Apple Music, Audible, Amazon Music, or watch it on YouTube) by searching for Baking it Down Podcast - Episode 256 - N