Batman has Robin.
The Fresh Prince has Carlton.
In the movie Stepbrothers, Brennan has Dale.
… and …
… drum roll, please.
A Team has…
Forms!
Wait, what? Forms? Seriously?
Yes, Forms.
As in, the things people dread having to fill out by hand at the doctor’s office?
Yes, that.
But way better.
If you need something in your business or life, it should start with a form.
You’re used to that already:
Want to get your car fixed? Fill out a form.
Want to book air travel? Fill out a form.
Want to renew your driver’s license? Fill out a form.
In your business:
Need a blog post written from marketing? Fill out a form.
Want to book time off? Fill out a form.
Need access to a piece of software? Fill out a form.
Forms are not new.
They are a more structured way to flesh out what I want.
People dread forms because they are usually too long.
And most people don't understand how what they fill out will be used.
But they’re necessary to get the right inputs into the system to fulfill the request.
And get you what you want.
Other than being too long, the other sucky part of forms is that they are usually disconnected from the work to actually execute on the form request.
For example, if I fill out a form to get my car worked on, where do I see the exact step-by-step process of how you will receive me and my car and do all of the work?
When will the appointment be?
How long will it take?
Do I wait or will you drop me off somewhere?
If I wait, where do I wait? What’s the WifI code? Is there coffee?
How much should it cost?
Is there anything I need to bring with me?
All of this stuff is a black hole.
But that’s changing.
With tech like Asana or Notion, we can connect forms to step-by-step instructions (really automated workflows) to produce a final product.
Almost like an automated marketing department in a box.
This step-by-step, automated, 1-2-3 workflow ultimately saves the team time and increases quality because it tells me exactly who is doing what by when.
For example, if you need a blog post written, in Asana you can:
Do you see it?
Want —> Request Form —> Step-by-Step Process with Who is Doing What by When (optimized and automated) —> Final Product
I can do the same thing in Notion
A form to request a blog post or time off is something we all are familiar with.
But, what if my requests are a little different?
Like…
Some personal examples:
I hope you see it.
Want —> Request Form —> Step by Step Process with Who is Doing What by When —> End Product
Keys to think about:
By the way, this also explains why Email is terrible for getting tasks done:
It also explains why even projects in a good tool like Asana fail or slowly die:
On a personal level, the lack of a request form or process can explain why I’m not getting results in my life or why my team is not performing.
For example:
If at home, I am upset that my kids don’t keep their rooms clean. Have I formulated my request into something my kids would understand plus helped them develop a 1-2-3 system for keeping their room clean?
If I can never stick to a diet: have I thought through what I am actually requesting (a form helps clarify this) and created a 1-2-3 process for my diet? Or, am I just hoping I will be good and beat myself up the moment I fail?
I hope you learn to love forms as much as I do. They are the key to clarify what we want and connect our want to a 1-2-3 process to take the request from vision to reality.
Think of where you, your team, and your family can use forms for all the things you want both big and small and connect those forms to a step-by-step process.
Last thing: if you’re saying, I don’t know what the process should be… good!
The first step is to acknowledge that there should be a process.
Now, make one up as a starting point (ie. if there was a process, it would probably look like this)…
OR…
Ask someone else for help in determining your process.
Because there is a process to achieving everything - even if you don't see it.