So much of being a highly productive person is using judgment. Anytime you're creating a new product, a new service, you're going to do some due diligence, you're going to do some research. But at some point, you have to say enough is enough. If you're writing a new electronic book on a subject, and you've read 10 or 20 books, and you've thought about it, and you have a couple hundred pages of notes, you could read another hundred bucks another 300 bucks on a subject I've written books on public speaking. There are more than 20,000 books on public speaking on Amazon alone. I've read a lot of books on public speaking I've read hundreds of books, but I'm not going to read 20,000 books I would never ever be able to start the first page of my own book if I did that.
So highly productive people know when to say enough is enough. Perfect might be having read everything ever written on a subject Before you ever write about it, but perfectionism, as we'll talk about, in other places on this course, is the curse of highly productive people. You don't ever want to try to be perfect at anything, it is not possible and it creates paralysis. So you've got to use judgment. Anytime you're creating a new product, creating a new service. At some point, you have to have enough that you need to know enough where you really can add value to the world and then you have to start creating