8 Steps To Develop A Highly Efficient Practice Schedule
By Tom Hess
If you are like most guitar players you sometimes feel
frustrated with your guitar playing. You know mastering guitar playing takes
a LOT of time, energy and effort. It seems like a huge mountain to climb in
order to reach the highly advanced levels of guitar playing. You know that
few people who attempt to climb that mountain will actually achieve it… but
if you are truly determined to reach these goals you certainly can!
Fact is one of the biggest reasons why so few people
become great guitarists is not because they lack talent, but rather due to
not knowing all of the things they need to do or practice in order to reach
their goal. People usually have more than enough things to practice (licks,
techniques, exercises, scales etc.) but struggle most with creating an
overall plan to get them the result they want.
Taking your guitar playing ability from wherever it is
right now to exactly where you always dreamed it could be in the shortest
amount of time can be done. Having a well-structured (yet flexible) guitar
practice regimen is a key first step to do this.
I know… I know… You’ve heard this before, it seems
‘obvious’, so why talk about it again here? …
… Well, unfortunately, many guitarists have
misconceptions about having an efficient and effective practice schedule.
Others have tried it for a while but either didn’t stick with it or had an
ineffective practice plan to start with.
Have you ever believed any of the following myths?
- Effective guitar practicing routines are boring; it takes all the fun out of playing guitar.
- I started putting myself on a practice schedule for guitar, but it was hard to stick to it.
- Practice schedules are too rigid and they restrict, or put limitations on my creativity.
- A guitar practice regimen is too structured for me, I want the freedom to allow myself to drift random things when playing guitar.
- Practice routines for guitar just don’t work. I can make more progress without one.
- I can’t stand to practice the same things in the same way each day.
Now think about this:
The truth is, ‘bad’ practice routines DO SUCK! However,
efficient, effective and flexible ones have the power to totally transform
your guitar playing, musicianship and your creativity in a shorter period of
time. Imagine how much better your guitar playing life will be like after
you fully reached all of your musical goals!
Good practice regimens won’t hurt your creativity; the
opposite is true because you are gaining the tools to become more creative…
AND your schedule can include ‘creative time’ to work on writing new songs,
improvising, etc.
It’s not boring to practice that which directly relates
to the very things you want to achieve as a guitar player and musician. Yes
practicing the same exercise for 30 minutes ‘is’ boring, which is why you
shouldn’t design a guitar practice schedule in such a way. We want to create
a structure that works, not one that will drive you crazy.
You do NOT need to spend all your guitar practice time
with a fixed schedule. If you have 90 minutes to practice, invest 45-60
minutes working from your planned guitar practicing regimen. Use the rest of
time to freely do whatever you feel like playing that day.
The best routines are NOT the same each day. A good
guitar practice workout schedule should be effective, efficient and
flexible.
A practice schedule is a roadmap to freedom of being
able to play whatever you want! But this doesn’t mean that you don’t have
any room to have fun, be creative, and enjoy playing guitar in the
process. The only difference is that now you will be enjoying the process
more WHILE you get better, and avoid mindlessly playing around on the guitar
with no direction or sense of purpose. As a result, it will take you much
less time to become the exact kind of excellent guitar player you want to
be.
The best way to think about an efficient practice
schedule is with an analogy of a map. When you prepare to travel somewhere,
you first analyze where you are (Point A), and then prepare the most direct
and time efficient route of arriving to your destination (Point B).
8 Steps to Creating Your Own Guitar Practice Routine
- Get very clear on
what your LONG TERM guitar playing / musical goals are. Beware of
distractions… there is a big difference between ‘short term goals’ and
‘distractions’. True short-term goals should be consistent with your
long-term goals. If they aren’t, then you might be simply distracting
yourself from what you really want to achieve as a guitar player and
musician. When creating your practice routine, focus mainly on long-term
goals.
- Balance your existing
strengths and RELEVANT weaknesses. Seek to turn your strengths into
super strengths and ‘only’ work on weaknesses that are truly ‘relevant’
to your goals (see step 4 below).
- Be realistic about
how much time you can practice each day. As mentioned above, you can and
should allow ‘free time’ in your schedule to learn, practice, or do
other things with your guitar outside of your written guitar practice
regimen.
- You must be 100% sure
you really know all the musical elements which are needed to reach your
long term goals, AND you need to be clear about which of these elements
are the ‘primary’ and ‘secondary’ priorities for you to focus on right
now in order to reach your specific goals. To get help, I have created a
totally free resource for you to use about reaching your
musical goals.
- Contrary to popular
belief, creativity CAN be taught, learned and practiced. Always include
creativity development into your practice schedule (or work on it at
least in your free time).
- Application is key!
Be sure to add time each day to work on applying your skills even if you
have not mastered them yet! It's a big mistake to work only on mastering
something before seeking to apply it.
- Don’t create the same
schedule for each day of the week, your schedule should be based on
larger period of time (I use an 8-day practice and learning schedule for
my students – works much better compared to a routine that repeats
itself each day). Maybe 2, or 3 of the days are the same, but the other
days are a little different (yet still based on the above steps
mentioned).
- Create 3-5 different
8-day practice regimens. Use each one twice (16 days) before working
with the next one. Be sure that when you create them that each are based
on the first 7 steps above.
What’s next?
1. Get committed!
2. Stay committed! Follow through with your plan and
watch your guitar playing get better and easier. If you find it hard to stay
committed, focus on the ‘reasons’ behind the goals you have set for
yourself, in other words, keep in mind “why” you want to reach those goals.
How you will feel after you achieve them and are able to be/do/have what you
want as a musician.
Tom Hess is a professional touring guitarist and
recording artist. He teaches guitar players around the world via
online guitar lessons, Visit
http://www.tomhess.net to get free
guitar playing tips, assessments, surveys, mini courses and more.