Five Keys to Controlling Time
Simple yet challenging Time Management
Yep, its 11pm and your still working on the
stuff you brought home. The kids are in bed and so is the
spouse. By
the way, the spouse is not happy about this
either.
This is not an isolated situation, rather it is
happening more often than not to more people. With company downsizing
and the need for getting more from less the pressure is
on. The
forty-hour week now is stretched to 50-60-70 hours. If
you’re an owner, you already know about the 60 hours, but
90 plus hour weeks!
The sad thing about all this is how it affects
our quality of life, family and personal esteem. When
these areas of life become negative, work performance is
also declining!
So how do you stop this runaway train that
consumes our time!
Here are five simple, yet challenging keys that
can change your life!
Either these core issues put people in control
of their lives or lack of these put them out of
control!
1.
Focus: It has been proven time and
again that we are most efficient when we focus on one task or
item at a time. I do not care what they say about
"multi-tasking", its BS! Our brain works like a car. If all
four wheels are turning in the same direction, we reach our
destination in the most efficient way and on
time.
Now consider that same car with each of its four
wheels going in different directions! Is this going to be
a fun drive? A productive drive? How about
efficient?
In the second example we use up a tremendous
amount of energy and time with very little
results!
Thus, more hours and exhaustion are the real
results.
Dave Lakhani in his book "Power of an Hour"
talks about power hours. We can apply "fearsome focus" on
a given project for an hour and accomplish more than
multi-tasking all day!
2.
Priorities: This ties into Focus but
many will say, "I have so many priorities and demands!" Yes, we
all do, the difference is not all are top priorities, they only
seem to be.
Gene was a mentor of mine in the 80's and had a
unique way of prioritizing things. He had three locations
in his office where he put things.
a.
A do it today place for those items he needed to
do today and they had importance and impact on the
outcomes he needed.
b.
A do it this week place for those items he
needed to do but had time or needed to get information or
input on. Again, these had an impact on his required
outcomes.
c.
A drawer that was very large where he put things
that were interesting or he thought might have value but
did not have an immediate impact on his
outcomes.
Each day he first grabbed the A location and put
them in order of importance and then went to work. When
he was done with that pile, he went to the B group,
prioritized them, and got to work until the day ended or
he completed all the tasks. As to the large drawer, on
the 30th of the month he pulled the drawer out
and dumped it in the garbage without looking through it.
Whatever was in the drawer had not become important and
had no immediate value.
The results of Gene's system, he had time to be
creative, always seem to have time for his employees and
friends and attended most of his children's activities.
By the way, he was running six companies at this same
time.
Can you set up some type of system to help you
prioritize what is the most important in accomplishing
your outcomes! Of course, you have to define those
outcomes or goals and give them focus.
3.
Clutter: This is one of the deadliest
of time management sins. It is distracting, overwhelming and
self-defeating!
An old saying goes; "If a cluttered desk is the
sign of a cluttered mind, then what does a clean desk
indicate? An empty mind? NO a clear mind!"
Test; if you have
stuff on your desk or your brief case or car is cluttered
up, simply remove everything. I don't care what you do
with it; just get it out of the way! Now take the most
important priority and have only that in front of you!
Work on it for 55 minutes. How did it feel? How
productive were you? What about
distractions?
I'll bet it felt different and once you got past
the different feeling, your productivity went
up.
My friend Vince Harris has a unique way of
approaching this. He walks in to a client's office with a
large garbage bag and anything that is not of immediate
importance is put in the bag. The client now is never
allowed to have anything that is not a priority visible
at any time. As they gain time, they take one item out of
the bag in the closet and complete it. Vince gets nothing
but very positive feedback on this approach!
4.
Do It Now: in the Time Management
field, these are the most powerful three words. Yes, you and I
are tired, have others demands right now and just do not feel
like it.
The ability to focus for that extra 30 minutes
and get it dealt with now is the single biggest factor
between people who control their time and those that have
no time.
This includes those nasty things we all have to
do. Deal with that negative person or situation, that
issue or task you just hate to do. By doing it now you
have eliminated an internal distraction and cleared your
mind to focus on the next priority.
The old saying of "Start everyday by swallowing
a frog" is really about the do it now aspect. When those
challenges come up, take a deep breath, smile broadly and
go after it. You are now in control rather than the fear
being in control.
5.
Schedule Dates: If there is one thing
I hear from almost everyone, it is more time for family or
self. The guilt associated with not being with family or having
self-time is a strong internal distraction. So how do you combat this
distraction and guilt?
A psychologist I knew took a
calendar and put all the family activities on including
dates with her spouse and friends. Then she put in all
the projects and business appointments she had to do in
the open spaces. There were some compromises and yes, she
did some evening and weekend work.
What she found out is she easily got her 40-50
hours of work in and the majority of her family events as
well. She also found she was far more productive during
her work time and far more relaxed during family
events. When
asked what changed, the response was "no guilt"! She had
eliminated the internal guilt and distraction.
Now you may not have the flexibility the
psychologist has, but setting "dates" with those
important to you can go a long way to eliminating the
guilt feelings that can occur and distract us.
There you are, five key areas that can help you
take control of your time and effectiveness. Be creative
and apply them to your work and life. See what
happens!
Harlan Goerger
© Harlan Goerger 4-09
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