What do highly successful people have in common?
They Read. A Lot.New Book Available Now!
Making Writing Work for You
A contemporary guide to making income while writing in a digital world.
Harold Taylor is a testament to the power of writing. Writing has been his key to building confidence as an author, financing his education, and establishing a thriving speaking and training business. Even in semi-retirement, writing continues to sustain his lifestyle, mirroring the success he enjoyed during his professional career.
In Making Writing Work for You, Harold shares the secrets behind his success, offering insights and strategies that anyone who is passionate about writing can apply. Whether you’re a seasoned writer or just starting, you’ll discover that rejection isn’t failure, patience is invaluable, and it’s perfectly fine to explore various genres to find the one that satisfies your creative aspirations. This book is a guide for anyone looking to make writing work for them, just as it has for Harold.
Management eBooks
Management ebooks by Harold L Taylor
Develop a Goal-Setting Mindset
Project Management for Entrepreneurs
Procrastinate Less & Get More Done
Browse All Harold Taylor's Management eBooks Here!
Time Management Articles:
Time management: where do we start?
The first step in managing time is to get organized. The three major resources that are essential to a successful business are time, money and people. If you lose money, you can always earn or borrow more. If you lose people, you can re-hire. But if you lose time,...
Why 70% of New Year’s resolutions are abandoned within one month.
Don’t wait until New Year’s – set goals now. People who make New Year’s resolutions are usually those who are least motivated to follow through with their plans. They have already procrastinated by saying they will leave any changing until the New Year. If they were...
Sleep is a new time management strategy for the digital age of speed
An old handheld device for managing time – a pillow. An older strategy was to sleep one hour less and get more done. The newer strategy is the exact opposite: sleep one hour more and get more done. In the years that intervened, as Daniel Levinson expresses in his...
Gaining control of your time can impact health and longevity
Organization is an indication of control According to Daniel Gilbert, in his book, Stumbling on Happiness (Random House, NY, 2007) at the root of most stress is the feeling of being out of control. I’m sure you know the feeling if you have ever been stuck in traffic,...
Increasing the efficiency of meetings
The 60-minute modular meeting & rule of seven Deadlines make us more efficient without detracting from the effectiveness of our meetings. To minimize the impact of Parkinson's Law (activities expanding to fill the time allowed for them) try breaking all your...
Batching as a time management strategy.
Grouping similar tasks together increases efficiency Batching refers to scheduling blocks of time in your planner for tasks that are similar in nature and require similar resources. The length of time could vary, but I frequently tie it in with my practice of...
Work: not a place to go to, but a state of mind
Are we witnessing the end of personal time? We have become a mobile society with fewer people working in 9 to 5 offices, and many people working at home, on the road or sharing a desk with others. One of my past clients consisted of case managers who seldom visited a...
Be mindful of people
Spend more time with your "real" friends, not the ones online There is a common expression concerning mindfulness that suggests “wherever you are, be there.” In this age of technology, we should add, “And whomever you are with, be with them.” It’s interesting to...
We are overwhelming our brain
Does technology really make us more effective? Getting more things done faster is no longer limited by technology, but by our brain. Our brain has a limited capacity for processing information, and this limit is being approached and frequently passed by the...