Have fun tracking your long-term projects
One day I was sitting at my desk and I got an idea for this thing I’d been thinking about. It was HUGE and I got really excited. I just had to write it down somewhere.
Even though I’m pretty savvy with computers, I needed to get this idea on paper. BIG paper. I wanted to scribble and draw and use my whole body in the creative idea-generating process. I was so jazzed.
Then I looked around my office and crud! - there was nothing to write on!
Lemons into lemonade
So, I got out an old roll of wrapping paper and taped it to the wall, white-side out. Tentative at first, I scratched out the basic idea and then excitedly filled in the gaps with broad, colorful strokes. It was great! It was huge!
This was the first step I took in getting my business, Inspired Home Office, off the ground. That wrapping paper stayed up for the first 6 months of my business’ life, serving as a guide. A visual reminder. A map.
When I stopped needing it, I took it down, rolled it back up and used it for holiday presents (talk about recycling!).
If you can see it, you can do it.
Have you ever had the urge to plan a big project, but got stuck?
Anytime you’re planning something big and involved, you need three things:
- A clear, invigorating idea of where you want to go
- Specific steps to get you there
- A way of reminding yourself what’s next and tracking what you’ve completed
Personalizing what you need
With these 3 things as your guide, you can plan and execute a project any way you like. How would you like to track your big projects?
Here are 3 tracking variations I’ve seen – and the basic elements that each one entails. Which one sounds most like you?
Neat and tidy
- Big picture plans turned into into specific, measurable goals
- Breaking goals down into steps
- Put all of the steps in your system with timelines
- Follow up at the end and evaluate
Big and messy
- Huge wall charts on butcher paper with markers
- Dry erase boards, cork boards, and lots of stickies
- Ideas represented by colors, symbols, and shapes
- Oversize calendars with important dates circled
A combination of both
- A map or mindmap that’s broken down into smaller steps
- Aspects of the neat and the messy, tidy and big mixed together
- Systems that blend your creative mind and your planning mind
Reflect and listen
Do any of these 3 descriptions sound like you – or how you’d like to be? Have you attempted some of these, but feel disappointed with either the lack of clarity or results?
If your projects feel haphazard at best or remain incomplete for long periods of time, ask yourself:
What do I need that would help me love staying on track?
Listen deeply and you’ll be surprised by the ideas that come to you.




