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I use this technique for productivity focus (it is called Pomodoro Technique) : I work in 10 to 20 minute intervalls with breaks of multiple minutes in between. After every break I can reevaluate what I did and where my focus should remain on (or try to get back to one specific task if I lost focus and drop surrounding thoughts/information) and I take deep breathes, close my eyes and try to relax all my muscles with complete body awareness. It works great for me, I can be very productive in a small amount of time just by being aware of my focus, myself and my body feelings.
I don't get how there can be "good" or "bad" customers? I won't get into too much details here, but it's not that easy as you might think. Customers are just also people, and all people have their goals, habits and traits. This is why you have a target audience, because you could never ever satisfy all your potential customers who arrive at your site. The difference between "good" or "bad" is for example that there are also customers who will always complain, never really say what they want, or want to dump prices all day long. I get your point about the feeling that also matters, but people in my audience do know that for example problems with legacy code can be a serious problem. Other people might not of course, but then it is not my target audience. I am only looking for customers who are really interested in their own products and want me to help them or build them, you know?
Hey @maruru , many thanks to you :) I agree with most of your points, except for example the traveling point and legacy. I mean that's is just what I am doing, if customers can't understand that, then they are the wrong customers anyway. It's always better to have less more good customers, then to have many 'bad' customers. Also I should have said that my target audience is more the techie ones from a B2B standpoint, not the opposite. p.s: The code is fine, don't mind that ;-)