Transcript of "I Have Too Many Ideas and Analysis Paralysis. Help!"
Money Rehab with Nicole LapinI love hosting on Airbnb. It's a great way to bring in some extra cash, but I totally get it that it might sound overwhelming to start or even too complicated if, say, you want to put your summer home in Maine on Airbnb, but you live full-time in San Francisco and you can't go to Maine every time you need to change sheets for your guests or something like that. If thoughts like these have been holding you back, I have great news for you. Airbnb has launched a co-host network, which is a network of high-quality local co-hosts with Airbnb experience that can take care of your home and your guests. Co-hosts. Co-hosts can do what you don't have time for, like managing your reservations, messaging your guests, giving support at the property, or even create your listing for you. I always want to line up a reservation for my house when I'm traveling for work, but sometimes I just don't get around to it because getting ready to travel always feels like a scramble, so I don't end up making time to make my house look guest friendly. I guess that's the best way to put it.
But I'm matching with a co-host so I can still make that extra cash while also making it easy on myself. Find a co-host at airbnb. Com/host. You know, there was this one time before I did my own money rehab, when I checked my credit score and I realized I had no idea what it actually meant for my financial future. That's when it hit me. It was time to get serious about my money. We've all had that moment, right? Whether it's saving for something big or finally paying off debt, we all get to a point where we need to make some real money moves. That's where Chime comes in. Chime offers a checking account designed to help you take control of your finances with no monthly fees, no maintenance fees, and fee-free overdraft up to $200 with SpotMe. Imagine overdrafter and not having to worry about fees piling up. Chime's got you covered. Plus, Chime isn't just a financial tool, it's a community. You can get boosts from friends to temporarily increase your SpotMe limit, and when you help someone out with their own boost, they can return the favor. Friends helping friends make progress. It's that simple.
So why not make your fall finances a little greener? Open your Chime account in just two minutes at chime. Com/mnen. That's chime. Com/mnen, as in Money News Network. Chime. Feels like progress. Banking services and debit card provided by the Bancorp NA or Stride Bank NA. Members FDIC. Spotme eligibility requirements and overdraft limits apply. Boots are available to eligible Chime members enrolled in SpotMe and are subject to monthly limits. Terms and conditions apply. Go to chime. Com/disclosures for details. I'm Nicole Lappin, the only financial expert you don't need a dictionary to understand. It's time for some money rehab. As you might know by now, I co-host a Career Advice podcast with the Editor-in-Chief of Entrepreneur magazine, Jason Pfeiffer, called Help Wanted. And if you haven't If you haven't missed an episode this week, you know that all week I'm sharing some episodes of Help Wanted that I think are specifically valuable for many rehabbers. Today, you're going to hear one of my favorite episodes of Help Wanted, and I'm actually not even in this. In this episode, Jason talks to a collar who wants a change at work and maybe even a new side hustle, but she has way too many ideas.
So Jason gives her an awesome formula to help her determine which parts of her work should change. Plus, he shares how to fail proof her pivot by making it into an experiment. This is one of my favorites because analysis paralysis is something I totally relate to and struggle with myself. So I am actually stealing some of these strategies. Thank you, guys. And you should, too.
This is Help Wanted, the show that tackles all the big work questions you cannot ask anyone else. I'm Jason Pfeiffer, Editor and Chief of Entreprene magazine.
And I'm New York Times bestselling author and money expert, Nicole Lappin.
The helpline is open. Feeling unfulfilled at work sucks because you don't even know where the problem is or how to fix it. And suddenly you start thinking, maybe I just have to throw everything away. Maybe my whole life has to change. And that is probably what drove this seven-minute long voice memo that we got from a listener who is in this exact spot. You can hear it for yourself. We will not play all seven minutes for you, but here is just a sampling.
Hi.
I'm feeling underemployed and stuck in my work situation, and I wanted some advice. I did wilderness therapy with teens for a short while. I worked with a mobile mechanic. My main goal is to start my own farm. And to do that, I need a plant. I am dipping my toe in, I guess, to a side hustle where I'm selling candy out of ingredients I forage. So it's like mountain mint, marshmallows. Is it more important to be happy with what I'm doing Or should I just take a job paying higher wages? That's fine. But I could also be mowing lawns in the city, which would be farther. I could ask for a raise. That's a possibility. I'm a smart, skilled, I'm a extremely hardworking person who I don't want to make it sound like I'm so put out, but I just am grateful for what I have, but I just want more, and I want to find a path.
You can hear it there, right? It's the panic. It's the analysis paralysis. It is the, I need to do something, so maybe I just do everything. So I invited her on the show to help her choose a path forward. Here's how it went. Melissa, welcome to Help Wanted.
Hi. Thank you.
So you sent in a lot of thoughts in a lot of different directions, and we will unpack them in a bit. But I feel like it would be helpful to have some context on you. But even before that, I want to ask you something now, and then I'm going to ask it to you at the end of this conversation, and we're going to see if the answer changes. So ready? It's this. In your voice memo, you said a lot of things that you want. But if I forced you to answer the question, What do you want? In a single sentence, what is the answer?
I guess I just want my work life to be as fulfilling as the rest of my life.
That's a great answer. I love that. What are you doing right now?
Right now, I'm working at a Farm and Nature Center, and it's owned by a university, an estate extension system. That's about 30 hours per week. I'm working as a coordinator for a nonprofit part-time, too. It's like a farming-related nonprofit.
The way that you answered the question a moment ago was that you wanted work to be as fulfilling as the other parts of your life. Tell me about those more fulfilling other parts of your life.
Oh, yeah. I'm crushing it in that respect. Awesome. Tell me. Yeah, it's great. I moved up to Northern Alabama for a job on farm, which has since closed down and also have a bunch of problems. But in looking for a place to live, I found this awesome cabin in the middle of a wildlife preserve. I live in this wildlife preserve, and I go walking and foraging every day, and I hang out with my dogs, and have my little garden, work in my car, just living my best red neck life right now.
Wait, but Why is work, which also sounds like it's very outdoorsy and work in the land and all that stuff, why is that not as fulfilling as what you just described?
Because I think I have so much experience in farming that I want to be in control. First of all, what I'm doing is not really even farming at this point. It's more of a maintenance thing, and it's for the government. My Libertarian sensibilities make me freaking crazy when money is wasted or just things go very slowly. But yeah, there's not enough to do, and what there is to do isn't the direction that I like to do. I like that higher level juggling a lot of balls, because if you're truly running a farm, you're an entrepreneur and you're doing so many other things.
Right. If I can break that answer down into a couple of component parts, It's like one of the things that you really want is autonomy.
Absolutely.
Then another thing that you really want is to feel like you are fully utilized.
Yes.
If you just took your answer and broke it up into concept parts, what else is there?
Yeah, I guess feeling like what I do actually matters in some way.
Meaningful work?
Absolutely.
Now, let's just use these three component parts, autonomy, feeling fully utilized, and having meaning in the work that you're doing. On a scale from 1-10, for each of these, how would you say they rank with your current work situation. So like, autonomy, scale from 1 to 10, what do you get?
Well, everyone basically leaves me alone to do what I want, but I don't have the freedom to start projects. So I'm going to go with a six.
That's pretty interesting because it depends on... You've just defined autonomy for yourself, because some people would just be very happy with being left alone. But what you want is actual influence. You want autonomy to shape an organization, not just to be left alone inside of an organization, right?
Yes. And I guess maybe more than autonomy, it's just that challenge part of it where the wheels are turning. If I were to take on something new that I don't really have have the skills for, that that could keep me satisfied just learning and trying to dive into that. It's more of an upper-level thinking that I need to do on a daily basis and problem solving.
Yeah. That overlaps with the next one, which is feeling fully utilized because they're utilizing some skills of yours, but there's a lot that isn't being utilized. So what would you say, scale from one to 10, how much are you as a whole talented person with a body of knowledge being utilized?
Yeah, like a or five.
And then meaning sounds pretty low. Yes.
We'll give it a four.
The reason I wanted to do that was because I have a theory of work and change called the 1% problem. And the 1% problem is that sometimes we're 99% there towards what we want. And then there's 1% that's missing. And that 1% nags us so much that it feels like the entire thing is actually broken. It's Princess and the Pea problem. And I wanted to put this to you, and this might not apply to you at all, but I'm voicing it so that you think about it, which is, is this situation, it's not good for you. It's not perfect. You shouldn't stay there for ever or maybe even much longer. But I'm curious about when you step back and you look at all the things that it does provide you, and then whether or not there's a way to leverage what you're doing there or the connections that you've made there to fill in the one %. Do you need to hit reset and try some totally different random thing, or is a lot of the structure of this environment actually working? It's just that it's the wrong farm, it's the wrong challenges, it's the wrong people, but it's almost there.
Or do you need to say, You know what? Screw it. I just cannot work on somebody else's farm. This is a hundred % problem, and I have to start my own thing. It's the only way in which I will have these things?
Oh, there's absolutely somewhere on somebody else's place I would be happy, but I would have to dive really hard to find it and I would have to move. And that's been my whole thing throughout my 20s is just moving around to different places, and I'm over that. I want to be here. Also, this is just a general problem. One, with farming, it's like if you have managerial skills, there are not a lot of small farms that need that because either people run their own farm or if they don't, they don't know what they're doing, but they want to have input. I guess my thing is I think that there could be somewhere I could be happy, but also just the money isn't there. Farming, there's no benefits, really. It's just there's so many trade offs and everything I consider, I'm just bogged down in trade offs right now. I think that's great because I'm realistic, but I don't want to just stay where I'm at because I'm scared of... Not even scared, but just because I'm analyzing and having analysis, paralysis on all these other things. So I think that they're probably could be a good situation out there.
In my area, I'm not sure.
As you're talking, there's an interesting little ecosystem of challenges that you're grappling with. And one of the big ones that I think we need to address before we address anything else is what in your world actually needs to stay the same? Because you just told me, for example, that you don't want to move again, which is fine. Moving sucks. And you have found, when I asked you the things in your life that are going really well, the thing that you described was your living situation. You really love it. And so giving that up would be a huge bummer. But you have to know in any situation, what is fixed and what is variable, because that's going to impact not just the next decisions, but also maybe how you come to think about those next decisions. So is that fixed? Should we proceed And should you proceed as you're thinking about what's next with that your living situation, or at least where you are, is a fixed thing? We're not going to change that, or is that changeable?
I would like it to be fixed. I think what's changeable is like, I'm willing to reskill, I'm willing to do lots of different work. So yeah, I think I'm super flexible on a work end at this point, but rigid on where I'm at.
And the things that you want in your work are that you're going to want some autonomy, you're going to want to feel challenged, fully utilized, although you're saying you are up for some reskilling, so that could be a different utilization, and you want to find some meaning. Can you go through a little exercise with me, which is, can you come up with a sentence? It starts with I, and it should be really short. Every word in the sentence should be carefully chosen because it is not subject to change, but that this describes the thing that you want to be or the thing that is your mission statement of sorts. I'll give you an example for me. So throughout my career, I have been a magazine editor, I've been a newspaper reporter, podcaster, but I have found that the challenge with creating identities around any of those descriptions is that all that stuff is really changeable. I could get fired from a magazine, and then I am not a magazine editor. And so if my identity is I'm a magazine editor, then I don't know what to do. So I came up with this sentence for myself.
And the sentence is, I tell stories in my own voice. The reason I like that is because stories gives me incredibly broad latitude. It's anything. What is the thing for you? What is the mission statement? The sentence that starts with I, that has words that are really specific about you but also aren't easily changeable?
I guess I'm a creative problem solver who wants to use my hands and my head to make something better every day.
I love that. Tell me about the area that you're in and what you think is possible that would achieve that sentence that you just said.
Sure. I applied to a forestry position, and they don't tell you upfront that you have to live within 45 minutes of where you are. It was actually a position further away. But they said, Hey, we're going to shop your resume out to a bunch of folks near you when people retire, maybe you have a shot at that. We think you might be a good fit. That was a really great boost. But it's government agency. I don't know how much sitting around there is. I I'm really stuck on that. But I cannot stress how slow moving some of these things start to feel for me.
I totally get that, but let's challenge that for a second because I think it's important. Of the jobs available where you are, how many of them are government?
Not a great deal. I think if you are in forestry or something like that, there are private companies, but I would have to invest a little time for somebody to want to hire me just because I don't have those specific skills quite yet.
I'm asking that because it's just like, what are the realistic expectations here? Because if where you are right now is tied to government and the forestry thing is tied to government, maybe Maybe that's something that you have to just accept and then say, You know what? Even though government is a very slow moving organism, I'm going to figure out how to do my best work inside of it because it is the work that's available. Also, frankly, libertarian or not, everyone can agree, we're better when we have a government full of people who want to do good work. That would be you, if you so choose.
Right. Then I guess I was thinking maybe of learning a skill trade, like ironworking. There's a lot of jobs that I'd have to drive an hour or something, but that's not undoable either. That doesn't call them out. Then I guess also just the entrepreneurial side of maybe I can start something. I do have those unique skills, so I forage, I do other things that I think there a market for it. But it's just the opportunity cost of doing those things and just having them not work out. I'm like, Man, do I really have time to waste if I have the goal of eventually having my own farm? I don't want to just bounce from thing to thing that I'm like, this is my get-rich-quick scheme. But I do think those are ways to use my skills from here.
But wait, you just said the goal of having my own farm. Is Is everything that you're doing leading to that? Because you're telling me contradictory things, and I get it because this question of yours is tied up in so many other things. It's tied up in your past, in your present, in your future. But I just want to point out to you the contradictions of, one, telling me you'd be open to reskilling as an ironworker, and then also my goal is to have my own farm. You're probably not going to have your own farm as an ironworker. Maybe you can, but that would be a unique farm. So pick these things apart for me. What is the most important? What's not? Is having your own farm a fixed thing? That's what we're working towards, or is that just an idea, one of many?
No, it's always been a fixed thing. But if I thought that I could take out a loan and just crush it and go do my thing, I would do it. But I've seen so many people who are skilled farmers who just can't make it work that I'm like, I don't know. They say, Don't quit your day job when you're starting a farm. I'm like, I don't even really have a day job that pays well. I'm like, I need to get a day job so I cannot quit it.
Stick around. Help Wanted will be right back. Welcome back to Help Wanted. Let's get to it. Okay. It feels like the foundational decision that needs to be made before anything else is, do you quit farming or anything like farming? Do you quit being the person who utilizes the skills that you have developed to work on a farm or anything that resembles farming? Is that the first question that you need to face?
I think it's a big question, or at least saying quit makes it seem super final, but at least At least putting it off the table in terms of what I'm looking for in employment, I'm open to it. In that work doesn't have to be all things, and I get a great daily dose of being out here. I guess my parameter in my head that's also super fixed, which makes some of this even more unrealistic, now I'm realizing, is the wanting to work outside. It's like I could be in a city working outside doing some of That's why the iron working... It feels like you're working on buildings, the rough in of stuff. You are outside a lot, and it's good money, but it's just the outside piece seems to throw a wrench in it. Then I'm also like, Hey, I speak French and Spanish, and I can communicate with folks, and I'm a good graphic designer, and it's like, none of that matters if I want to work outside. I think it's just where my focus is.
But you don't just to work outside is the thing, because I call you back to autonomy, feeling challenged, feeling fully utilized, and finding meaning at work.
Right, because I'm already working outside. Yeah. So obviously, that's not it. Yeah, you're already working outside. Yeah.
So that's not it. And spending years and years or whatever it takes to master ironworking and then working on buildings in the city, that doesn't sound to me at all like it's going to fulfill these really core things that you laid out before. If you're working with an iron working team on a building, you don't have a whole lot of autonomy. You can't change the structure of the building. You're probably not even going to feel all that challenged, to be honest with you, because once you reach a certain level of mastery, you're going to be repeating that skill instead of constantly reinventing something. You may feel fully utilized, or you may not, because what would be nagging at you is going to be all this time that you spent learning farming that is not being utilized at all. And you may or may not find meaning, or you may tell me that in the way that working for the government bothers you, that also just building this next bank building is also not going to be incredibly meaningful for you. I think that it's helpful to pick some things that you can stay with for a little bit and then figure out if there's a way to achieve greater happiness inside of them before saying, and I think it's great that you are willing to say, I'm open to anything.
But the problem with saying that I'm open to anything is that you're giving yourself infinite directions to go in, which means that you're not going to do any of them. So let's narrow. So the reason why I asked you, is it time to quit farming, which I know quit is a harsh word there, but was because I wanted to see what you're willing to utilize as the starting point of a series of decisions decisions. And your answer was, you're willing to consider leaving it. Yeah. Okay, that's interesting. But what you didn't say is, yes, I have to. So let's start with this. I'm not telling you what to do, but for the purposes of the thought experiment, you will stay in farming, unless it turns out to be a really bad decision. You will stay. Next, you want to do something with this skill set that you have in the geographic area that you live in. Next, what are those jobs? And we need to start looking at those. The forestry one is great. You're talking to them about that. You've identified something that you might not like about it, but there are going to be other things that you do.
Maybe you could take that job and autonomy goes up to seven and fully utilize goes from a 4:00 to 5:00 to a six or 7:00, and that's progress. Tell me, now that I have made some decisions for you, which you can dispose of at any time, but tell me other things that you could do that you haven't done yet or people to talk to that you haven't talked to yet.
There are more conventional farms. There is actually a watercrest farm, which I didn't really know that was a thing, but it's a little ways away. I saw had an ad for a foreman, and it pays decently in the range that I want. But I guess I'm just nervous. There's things about it that I'm Oh, what if? But I should just explore it, and then I will know the answer to the what ifs, at least more after talking to someone.
You need to start experimenting. I would start with what feel like pretty reasoned experiments, incremental experiments. Testing out the watercrest farm, which also is not a thing I've ever heard of, is a much smaller experiment than reskilling as an ironworker. The reason I'm using the word experiment is because experimentation is a liberating concept, or it should be, because one of the great things that drives analysis paralysis that you've been experiencing as you're sitting here looking down infinite highways in infinite directions is that every decision that you're considering feels like some large commitment, or it feels like a major shift, or it feels like it's going to set your path in some totally different direction. Because you don't know which one to commit to, you feel like you don't know which direction to go in at all. So what happens if you just treat it like an experiment? What experiments can you run that don't require years of new work to see if you can find situations that you move you a little closer to that goal? And maybe taking a forestry job and saying, you know what? I'm going to give this six months. I'm going to see if I feel better about it.
Maybe even set a goal and see if in six months, you have achieved it. Here could be a goal. I've given you these four things that you want: autonomy, feeling challenged, feeling fully utilized, and finding meaning. And you have given numbers to these things for your current situation. Take the forestry job six months later, fill out that chart, 1-10. Did everything move up at least one or two notches? If so, I would say good experiment, right? Good experiment. If they moved down two notches, then the experiment was a failure, and it's time to do something else. But maybe that was progress. And maybe that means that you stay in forestry for another six months or whatever, or Or maybe it means that it's time to go try the watercrest farm or whatever. But I think that once you have some sense of exactly what you're working towards and a way to measure it in some way, Then making changes that don't feel crazy but feel logical are really just going to start to expand your understanding of what you want and the many different ways you can get it.
That definitely helps. I think the premise that we started from that I'm just going to try and do what I am good at and want to do, but in a better setting, I I think that feels a lot better than just throwing it all away. I guess if I do set a limit on it and say, Hey, I'm going to try three or four different things, and if none of them come to fruition, then maybe it's the industry or my relationship to that. There's certain things that just not meeting, so maybe I'll consider completely reskilling after that. But it's like, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Yeah.
Yeah. Or you change one factor. The problem that you have, I think, after hearing you for a while, is that you have conceptually, at least, opened yourself up to changing every single factor in your life. And as a result, everything seems crazy. It's impossible to figure out what to do. And if you think about trying to fix a computer, which I know very little about trying to fix a computer, and you probably do, too, considering your line of work. But one thing that we We can imagine here is that if you want to try to fix your computer, what you don't do is get your hands in and just change every damn thing every single time and see what happens. No, you change one thing at a time, right? You're like, is it plugged in? Yes, it's plugged in? Okay, let's try the next thing. The next thing is, is it on? Okay, let's try that. Now, the next thing, you do one thing at a time. I would say that right now, it's really useful to say, okay, here are the things that are fixed. What's fixed is that I'm staying in the industry that I'm in and that I'm staying in the geography feed that I'm in.
So the next thing is, what is the variable? The variable can be where I work. All right, so let's try that. And let's say that you go around and you try a couple of those, and it's not quite solving the problem for you. Let's pick changing one other variable. What is the next variable to change? The next variable to change maybe is where I live. Maybe it's you've tapped out everything in that area and it's time to try farming somewhere else. Or maybe it's I'm going to stay here and the variable that's going to change is the industry that I'm in. But one thing at a time, because when you start changing every variable, you give yourself too many options. And there's a study I love. The study is this. These students from some university, I can't remember, they're working with some professor. They set up a stand inside of a supermarket, and they pose as is people who work for a jelly company, and they are doing samples. You walk into a supermarket, you see somebody's given out samples at a table, and they're sampling jellies. Every hour, they change the number of options of the jellies.
They go back and forth between four jellies on the table and 20 jellies on the table. It's like one hour, there's four jellies that people can sample. The next hour, there's 20 jellies, and then they go back to four, and then they go back to 20. The result of this is fascinating. The result of this is that when there are more jellies on the table, When there are more, more people come by and sample. But when there are fewer jellies on the table, more people buy. I think you are putting too many jellies on your table. No, absolutely.
I'm walking around just craming them all in my mouth seeing what's going on. But if I look today, I'm like, Oh, I don't like great. Let's just not... Yeah, for sure.
Right, exactly. Thank you for rolling with my metaphor here. It's like, you need fewer jellies. I love a good jelly metaphor. Who doesn't? There's not enough jelly metaphors in the day. So you need fewer jellies. And I think that we are, just for the purposes of thinking about what's next, we are taking some things off the table. It doesn't mean that they can't come back on the table at some point. But for right now, you got to figure out the singular change that you're going to make, and it means reducing choice. And once you've done that, I think you will see some other options that are worth taking seriously or considering, and you should try them. And you will learn something. And whatever that something is will leave you more informed about what's next than you are now.
Yeah, that's great. It really breaks it down and makes it not so intimidating.
Great. All right. So at the very beginning, I asked you, what do you want in a single sentence? And your answer was, I want work to be as fulfilling as other parts of my life. And that's, I'm sure, still true. But after thinking about what you're going to try to do next, what's another answer to that question?
Become a jelly salesman. No, I want to explore possibilities that make my work life more fulfilling, I guess. Just ramp up the fulfillment that I already do have.
Yeah, I love that. And that's what I was hoping you would do, which is basically go from At the beginning, you were like, your answer was actually pretty passive, right? You're like, Here are the things that work, and then there's a part that doesn't work. And now your answer is, here's what I'm going to do to try to make this part work. It's more active. And that, I think, is a good start.
Heck, yeah. That's awesome.
Help Wanted is a production of Money News Network. Help Wanted is hosted by me, Jason Pfeiffer.
And me, Nicole Lappen. Our executive producer is Morgan Lavoie. If you want some help, email our helpline at helpwanted@moneynewsnetwork. Com for the chance to have some of your questions answered on the show. And follow us on Instagram @moneynews and TikTok @moneynewsnetwork for exclusive content and to see our beautiful faces. Maybe a little dance?
Oh, I didn't sign up for that.
All right. Well, talk to you soon.
This week, the Money Rehab feed will be taken over by Nicole's favorite episodes of Help Wanted, the podcast she cohosts with Jason Feifer. In this episode, listener Melissa calls the Help Line today because she's experiencing some analysis paralysis (haven't we all). Jason gives her a formula to help her determine which parts of her work she should change; plus, he shares how to failure-proof her pivot by making it into an experiment.
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