The Tools of Excellence

Number 24: The Personal Compass Review

All of us seek direction, and that needs a compass.

My Personal Compass considers six life dimensions: career, health, money, relationships, fun, and contribution to assess whether you are heading in the direction and enjoying the balance you seek.

Each month, rate each dimension on a scale of 1-10. Imbalances become at once obvious. This prevents the common mistake of excelling in one area while neglecting others. Brilliant career but deteriorating health? The compass shows it. Strong relationships but financial chaos? Visible at once. Excellent money and career, but zero fun? Your analysis does not lie.

The six dimensions are comprehensive:

Career: work satisfaction, progress and purpose. Health: physical fitness, nutrition, sleep and mental well-being. Money: income adequacy, savings, debt management and financial security. Relationships: family, friends, romantic partner and community. Fun: hobbies, play, adventure and enjoyment. Contribution: helping others, meaningful impact and legacy.

Rate yourself honestly as any discomfort is the point; it forces acknowledgement of a neglected area before it becomes a crisis. Review monthly and adjust your focus as necessary.

I’ve been running my own personal compass personally now for a couple of decades; you will see the results within a couple of weeks.

Six dimensions. Monthly check. Complete life overview.

The other sixty-nine are right here. Instant. Kindle. Budget. Worldwide.

The Tools of Excellence

Number 18: The Playlist

Music changes brain chemistry: a well-crafted playlist puts mood management in your pocket.

Feeling down? Queue up your “Energy Boost” playlist, a choice of upbeat tracks. Anxious before a presentation? Your “Calm Focus” playlist settles your nervous system. Need creative inspiration? Your “Flow State” playlist has the wordless soundscapes that let ideas appear. Celebrating? Your “Dance Like Nobody’s Watching” playlist demands movement.

The magic is having pre-built mood tools ready when you need them. Building playlists when you’re already in a bad mood usually doesn’t work; your brain wants to wallow. Build them in advance, during neutral moments, deliberately curating the tracks that reliably shift your state.

Over the years, I’ve have built many useful playlists, and in the car, I’m often old-school, with five reliable CDs that make any journey, any jam, easier.

And be willing to get up and dance. Moving to music compounds the effect. Three minutes of dancing to the right song can reset an entire afternoon’s mood. It feels ridiculous until it works, and then it feels essential.

One playlist. Three minutes. Transformed mood. Mood management made effortless.

The other sixty-nine Tools of Excellence.

Dario Amodei

is an American AI researcher and entrepreneur best known as the co-founder and CEO of Anthropic. He previously worked at OpenAI, where he played a significant role in the development of large language models. I am following him closely as he is particularly known for his focus on AI safety and alignment, attempting to ensure advanced AI systems behave in ways that are beneficial and predictable for humans. At Anthropic, he has championed ideas such as “constitutional AI,” which aims to embed ethical principles directly into AI training; the latter is well worth a read. His work places long-term responsibility and risk reduction at the centre of AI progress.

This is his latest essay which-might I suggest-is essential reading.

Go read. Go study.

And here is my contribution to the topic.

How to Beat ChatGPT.

Release it Clean

Regular readers of this blog will know that I am a fan of self-publishing (for two main reasons: control over your MS and short time to market). Such readers will also know that I believe your book needs to be delivered with perfect text i.e. error free. Many readers have written to ask about my approach to ensuring errors are close to zero. Tomorrow we’ll look at that but first it’s useful to understand a little terminology as there are different levels of editing or preparation.

There is line editing Aide-mémoire: “How does it sound?” → Improves flow, voice, rhythm, style (sentence by sentence)

There is copy editing Aide-mémoire: “Does it make sense?” → Fixes clarity, grammar, consistency, logic

There is Proofreading Aide-mémoire: “Is it clean?” → Catches typos, spelling, punctuation, formatting

And the order is Line edit → Copy edit → Proofread or Sound → Sense → Spots

TBC

The Tools of Excellence

Number 13: Blackboard Paint

This paint will transform any wall into a canvas for thought. Two coats of blackboard paint-matte black, slightly textured-and suddenly you have unlimited space for ideas, lists, diagrams, quotes, and calculations.

Quality chalk on that black density feels satisfying in a way that dry-erase markers never do. The slight resistance as you write, the clean lines, it’s visceral. And unlike those whiteboard pens that dry out, squeak annoyingly, or leave ghost images, chalk is simple: it writes, or it doesn’t. When it’s done, you grab another piece.

The blackboard wall becomes your external brain. Priorities are captured, executed, and erased. Project timelines span a metre of wall space. Brainstorming sessions are filled with possibilities. Inspirational quotes stay up for weeks. Shopping lists can be started. I love a blackboard wall. Most surfaces will take the paint, and the ability to think big is liberating. I can list, mind-map, sketch, timeline or create a matrix. All my writing starts here.

Unlike small whiteboards, a painted wall gives you room to think big. Ideas spread out, connect, breathe. You can step back and see the whole picture.

Productivity made visible. Creativity given space. Immediate overview.

The other sixty-nine tools of excellence are here.

The Trilogy is FREE this weekend.

We were a couple of days into the first UK lockdown. I’d just done a glorious long hike in Wales and I’d cleared my diary as it was clear my kind of trainings were not going to be possible for a while. And I thought-no excuses, let’s get that book written. For a long time I’d had an idea so I sat down to write.

In the end I wrote a very different book but it was well received and I did a follow up and then completed the trilogy. They are all free this weekend.

Meet Molly Molly and The Isle of Kasta Molly and Ben

Go read.