5 Steps to Manage Your Blogging with Trello

If you are just tuning into our Trello series, check out the last week’s post, where we talked about how Trello can help you tame your email overwhelm.

At the end of the post I asked you to share with me the areas of your life and business that you’d want to be able to manage with Trello.

The two areas that received most votes were Managing Content for a Blog and Managing Client work. So, as promised, those are my next two articles.

Unconventional Business Uses for Trello

Are you making the most of Trello?

If you’ve been using it to manage your daily to-do list, great!

While it’s an effective tool for organizing tasks, it can be used for so much more than that – which could help you be a more strategic, organized, and productive business owner.

Curious?

Here are four unconventional ways to use Trello for your business.

Creativity Running Low? Change Things Around By Doing This

Creativity Running Low? Change Things Around By Doing This

Twyla Tharp, renowned choreographer of over 160 works and winner of two Emmy awards, does not wake up every day hoping that inspiration knocks on her door.

How does she consistently create art that resonates?

She wakes up at 5 AM, goes to the gym, and then to her studio as if on autopilot.

Twyla, like many people who have become experts in their chosen fields, follows a routine and has reframed creativity from being an ethereal entity into a habit.

Willpower Is Overrated

Willpower Is Overrated

You have big, audacious goals, and you know what you *could* and *should* be doing to reach them.

Despite having both the motivation and the know-how to get things done, you’re confused as to why you can’t seem to accomplish your goals.

At the end of each week, each month, or each year you look back and feel guilty about all that you didn’t check off your to-do list, and you wonder if it’s because something is wrong with you, or that maybe you don’t have enough willpower to reach the huge goals you set for yourself.

I’m here to tell you that nothing is wrong with you, and that willpower is overrated.