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Time Management Top TipsTime Management Top
Tips
I) When is your most productive time of the day? Do you know?
Are you an early morning person, getting your best work done
before the office fills up? Do you work up to a peak by mid
morning after you've settled in and got the junk of the way. Or
are you a night bird, burning the mid-night oil to produce your
best results? If you don't know it will benefit you immensely
to find out. You can then exploit your most productive time to
the hilt. Plan to do the most demanding tasks when you are at
your best. Schedule those important but routine tasks when you
are at your worst - the things that can be done on autopilot.
I discovered the hard way. I eventually found (to my surprise)
that my best time was between 7am and 9am. For a long time I
would be sat virtuously at my desk in the office often well
before 7am. What did I use the time for?
Catch up, clearing backlogs, emails, reviews, answering
correspondence. The most boring but the least demanding tasks
which could easily be pushed into my own personal graveyard
slot. Eventually, I caught on and started to do the most
important and urgent stuff at the start of the day. It got to
the point almost that if it didn't get done before 9am then
there was a massive chance it won't get done at all.
I've just introduced this as a homeworker too. I get up at 6am
when the house is asleep and do my best work then. I'm no work
alcoholic though - I will more than likely reward myself with
an hour off in my graveyard slot - late afternoon - a walk, a
read, even a nap!.
Time Management Top Tips
II)The 80/20 rule - make it work for you. The Pareto principle
or the 80/20 rule simply says: 80% of consequences stem from
20% of the causes. For time management this can be viewed as
getting 80% of your results from 20% of your work. But you know
this don't you? Think about a typical day and how much time you
spend on unproductive jobs, tasks that have nothing to show for
them. Of course you do the valuable stuff too but I'll bet
there's a good chance that this valuable stuff takes up a much
smaller proportion of your time. And the very fact that it is
valuable implies that it will probably produce results worth a
lot more than the rest of the unproductive stuff put together.
Imagine how life would be if you could turn on its head the
80/20 rule and spend 80% of your time on the things that really
matter, that bear fruit, that are highly valued by you and your
organisation.
The secret? Prioritise! Ask yourself constantly: Why am I doing
this? What is the value? Challenge yourself: Am I doing this
just because I enjoy it more than something else? Am I doing it
because it is easy and I can't face the next big job? Always
check out the alternatives: Can this be done by someone else?
Does this need to be done at all? And remember, just because
you can do something doesn't mean you should do it.
Time Management Top Tips
III) Say NO! Close cousin to the Pareto principle is the art of
simply saying no. I don't just mean saying no to extra
assignments, I mean saying no to telephone calls, emails,
unscheduled meetings and quite simply interruptions full stop.
OK, so you've decided to rotate the Pareto principle,
prioritise assertively and spend 80% of your time doing stuff
that really makes a difference. But what actually happens is
the telephone rings, you answer it and suddenly you've agreed
to sort out something that very afternoon (Did you ask yourself
is it valuable, delegatable, easy, enjoyable?). And how
valuable is it compared with the task you started to do? Same
goes for those blinking (literally!) emails. How often do you
check them? Every 15 minutes or so? And even if you don't act
upon them, you may well feel obliged to answer them or at the
very least as you turn back to the job in hand, your head is
still buzzing with their distracting aftermath. The art of
saying no is a whole workshop in itself, but for now the best
tips I can give you are as follows:
Time Management Top Tips
• Plan your day to give you some decent chunks of uninterrupted
time. Say a number of one-two hour slots
• Switch off the computer and put the phone on voicemail during
these precious slots.
• Physically take yourself away from potential interruptions.
Shut the door, work in a meeting room, work at home even
• Schedule in some slots for interruption time as part of your
daily routine. Catch up on emails and voicemails, take phone
calls, operate an open door policy for visitors
• Communicate your new regime. If your colleagues build in
discipline to their access to you it might help them in
regulating their own regimes
Time Management Top Tips
Please try out just one of these time management top tips for
the next month let me know how you get on! Want more? Then try
some coaching (time management, work life balance are
specialisms of mine). Email me on info@theaccountantscoach.com.
Or would you like to try a bespoke time management workshop for
yourself or staff. Introduction workshops can be run at no
charge at your place of work. Just email me at
info@theaccountantscoach.com.
Time Management Top Tips
Carol McLachlan is a chartered accountant, professional and
personal development coach and NLP practitioner. Working with
accountants and other professionals, she helps individuals and
groups to set and achieve their goals at work and at home in
order to attain the results to which they aspire. Carol’s
unique coaching philosophy has been developed from her long
experience working in a blue chip corporate enviroment and her
firm belief that coaching is not necessarily about turning your
personal or professional life upside down but about making the
best of opportunities you already have and creating small
changes that can really make a big difference to achieving your
potential and maximising your success. Read more at
http://www.theaccountantscoach.com
Article Source:
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