What is single word for Strategic Action?
I want to use one single word to describe my strategic actions. I want only one term to describe what I do. Chose actions that could be performed multiple times a week at a minimum, at best multiple times a day.
How come I don’t really like “Lead” but people have used it. For example, “Have you completed your leads this week “?
I will use the word “dailies”. Have you completed your Dailies this week? But our dailies are too strict since not all strategic actions are required daily. Did the daily concept loose its meaning when you understand daily actions as strategic actions, or anything not?
Example Learn
-
and use a customer name 5 times daily. It is normal.
-
Develop a call plan prior to making a customer call twice daily
-
Eat an apple before dinner and lunch 10 times weekly
-
Complete 4 micro-walks (250 steps) during work hours daily
Thanks 🙂
Circuit: a regular tour around an assigned district
or territory. MW
I completing my four micro-walk circuits today.
I’ve completed my weekly sales circuit.
I would suggest imperatives and punctuations. What are the best habits and skills for becoming an effective person? An imperative is something you believe in (e.g., a strong belief in something) and something that you are not confident in. Moral imperative) that it needs to motivate you
to act for the sake of others.
I have this problem on my commute, but I guess I have thought on it for a while and no idea
- everything would be well with
- a good single-word
- answer
which incorporates all the following: regular / daily / routine strategic / Important Fun Depending on quite what the role of this word is like, you might want to consider using an acronym. What are the three I came up
with: Star
- Jump
- Strategic
- Task
- At
- Regular
- Junctures Undertaken
- to
- Maximize
Performance Usage: Have you done your star jump today?
“Star” is good, since it has obvious connotations of quality, both the task and of the person performing it. Thus its proper usage.
Adventure
- Awesome
- Daily
- Virtue
- Ever
- Need
- To
- Undertake,
- Realising
- Excellence
Usage: Have you completed/gone on your adventures?
Do
- you
- take
- care
- of
- your
- parrot?
I should post this answer for people who saw my first one as distinct from my
answer for them.
I have this problem on my commute, but I guess I have thought on it for a while and no idea
- everything would be well with
- a good single-word
- answer
which incorporates all the following: regular / daily / routine strategic / Important Fun Depending on quite what the role of this word is like, you might want to consider using an acronym. What are the three I came up
with: Star
- Jump
- Strategic
- Task
- At
- Regular
- Junctures Undertaken
- to
- Maximize
Performance Usage: Have you done your star jump today?
“Star” is good, since it has obvious connotations of quality, both the task and of the person performing it. Thus its proper usage.
Adventure
- Awesome
- Daily
- Virtue
- Ever
- Need
- To
- Undertake,
- Realising
- Excellence
Usage: Have you completed/gone on your adventures?
Do
- you
- take
- care
- of
- your
- parrot?
I should post this answer for people who saw my first one as distinct from my
answer for them.
As suggested by others, given your description strategics seems a natural choice. Technically that doesn’t seem to exist (yet) in a noun (although see this NGRAM ), but the meaning should be obvious Assuming you’ve considered and rejected… Routine noun
a special
- course of procedure, a customary noun.
- typical tasks, chores, or duties which must be done regularly or at specified intervals; typical or everyday activity: the routine of an office.
Source: Dictionary. What’s
the issue? Of course you could combine them into strategic routines, but that may be a bit long.
Another possibility similar to strategics would be programmatics, which again doesn’t exist as a noun, but is pleasing in implying the item forms part of a wider plan, and so suggests both importance and occuring as part of a schedule.
Programmatic adjective
- of, having, advocating, resembling or following a plan, policy or program
Source: Dictionary. In
my earlier comments, I suggested ritual which might work if you can see past the secular connotations, and stratagem, which is unfortunately similar to ploy in suggesting trickery.
As suggested by others, given your description strategics seems a natural choice. Technically that doesn’t seem to exist (yet) in a noun (although see this NGRAM ), but the meaning should be obvious Assuming you’ve considered and rejected… Routine noun
a special
- course of procedure, a customary noun.
- typical tasks, chores, or duties which must be done regularly or at specified intervals; typical or everyday activity: the routine of an office.
Source: Dictionary. What’s
the issue? Of course you could combine them into strategic routines, but that may be a bit long.
Another possibility similar to strategics would be programmatics, which again doesn’t exist as a noun, but is pleasing in implying the item forms part of a wider plan, and so suggests both importance and occuring as part of a schedule.
Programmatic adjective
- of, having, advocating, resembling or following a plan, policy or program
Source: Dictionary. In
my earlier comments, I suggested ritual which might work if you can see past the secular connotations, and stratagem, which is unfortunately similar to ploy in suggesting trickery.
As suggested by others, given your description strategics seems a natural choice. Technically that doesn’t seem to exist (yet) in a noun (although see this NGRAM ), but the meaning should be obvious Assuming you’ve considered and rejected… Routine noun
a special
- course of procedure, a customary noun.
- typical tasks, chores, or duties which must be done regularly or at specified intervals; typical or everyday activity: the routine of an office.
Source: Dictionary. What’s
the issue? Of course you could combine them into strategic routines, but that may be a bit long.
Another possibility similar to strategics would be programmatics, which again doesn’t exist as a noun, but is pleasing in implying the item forms part of a wider plan, and so suggests both importance and occuring as part of a schedule.
Programmatic adjective
- of, having, advocating, resembling or following a plan, policy or program
Source: Dictionary. In
my earlier comments, I suggested ritual which might work if you can see past the secular connotations, and stratagem, which is unfortunately similar to ploy in suggesting trickery.
I have this problem on my commute, but I guess I have thought on it for a while and no idea
- everything would be well with
- a good single-word
- answer
which incorporates all the following: regular / daily / routine strategic / Important Fun Depending on quite what the role of this word is like, you might want to consider using an acronym. What are the three I came up
with: Star
- Jump
- Strategic
- Task
- At
- Regular
- Junctures Undertaken
- to
- Maximize
Performance Usage: Have you done your star jump today?
“Star” is good, since it has obvious connotations of quality, both the task and of the person performing it. Thus its proper usage.
Adventure
- Awesome
- Daily
- Virtue
- Ever
- Need
- To
- Undertake,
- Realising
- Excellence
Usage: Have you completed/gone on your adventures?
Do
- you
- take
- care
- of
- your
- parrot?
I should post this answer for people who saw my first one as distinct from my
answer for them.
Circuit: a regular tour around an assigned district
or territory. MW
I completing my four micro-walk circuits today.
I’ve completed my weekly sales circuit.
As suggested by others, given your description strategics seems a natural choice. Technically that doesn’t seem to exist (yet) in a noun (although see this NGRAM ), but the meaning should be obvious Assuming you’ve considered and rejected… Routine noun
a special
- course of procedure, a customary noun.
- typical tasks, chores, or duties which must be done regularly or at specified intervals; typical or everyday activity: the routine of an office.
Source: Dictionary. What’s
the issue? Of course you could combine them into strategic routines, but that may be a bit long.
Another possibility similar to strategics would be programmatics, which again doesn’t exist as a noun, but is pleasing in implying the item forms part of a wider plan, and so suggests both importance and occuring as part of a schedule.
Programmatic adjective
- of, having, advocating, resembling or following a plan, policy or program
Source: Dictionary. In
my earlier comments, I suggested ritual which might work if you can see past the secular connotations, and stratagem, which is unfortunately similar to ploy in suggesting trickery.