Originally posted by: Flyback
Some people have strong motivation and can stay focused. That's great for them.
For the rest of us we need some "tricks".
The most important thing I suggest is that you treat it like a real job. Plan out your schedule so you assign it a certain amount of your time each week--not just in terms of the number of hours, but WHEN.
Make it so that you can work from an area with few, if any, distractions. Instead of your main computer room or bedroom, assign a different part of the house to it. Maybe you need an extra computer for it--I keep my business comps separate from my regular desktop machine. It sounds stupid to pay for another machine, but if you're lacking the ability to stay focused--maybe a $300 comp would do it.
Perhaps even get a laptop instead and go somewhere like a library, or if you're in college, go to the workspaces there. It sucks to commute when you don't need to, but it pays off, trust me, when you spend some time commuting but do 4,6 or 8 hours of work instead of staying home and doing that much TV surfing.
Some people are more easily distracted, which sucks, but if you acknowledge that and work with it instead of ignoring it (trying the same thing over and over) then you will get somewhere. Instead of lame "man up" talks, you need to know your weakness and how to counter it. You've already identified it to us, so you can choose to go around it (instead of trying to get rid of it) or not.
Again, sounds dumb, but it's worth it. You get much more done. Unlikely to get distracted in a library cause there is only one thing you can do--the task you went there for
Remove all distractions, assign some time, plan ahead. Keep the vision of the money on your mind at all times and you can stay motivated.