Archive for March, 2010

The End of Time Management Month

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

I hope you have enjoyed this month’s focus on time management and hopefully you have gotten some useful tips and tricks that you can use in your life to help you be more effective with your time. Time management month may be coming to an end, but it is important to remember that our time management practices are only as good as our ability to maintain them. So if you have found anything useful this month from this blog, I encourage you to continue to use it and make a point of maintaining your time management techniques.

If you liked the topics we discussed this month here on the blog and are interested to find out more about time management ideas the people over at www.lifehack.org have a ton of resources on time management and how to be more efficient in life. They also have an E-mail list that you can sign up for that sends out several E-mails a week on different topics related to being more efficient and effective in your day to day life. Their focus isn’t strictly on time management but everything they do at lifehack is about increasing personal efficiency and they have some great advice that I have found particularly useful in my attempts to be more efficient and effective both at work and at home.

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Time Management & Work Spaces

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

We all know that a person’s work space says a lot about them, but did you also know that how you maintain your workspace can have a huge impact on your productivity. If you take a minute and think about it makes sense, if you have a well organized space with all the thing you need near by and very little clutter then whenever you are looking for something you can find it right away. On the other hand if you have a bunch of clutter in your workspace then its going to be a lot harder to find what you are looking for and therefore needing to find something is going to cause more of a brake in your concentration then it has to.

Beyond this very simple explanation of why having a well organized work space leads to higher productivity there are a lot of more subtle reasons that may not be so obvious. For example, maybe someone you know keeps a lot of stuff on their desk, some of it in process projects, some of it is mail that needs to be sorted, some of it is just stuff they meant to take care of but never got around to. Now this person needs to find something for an important project and they start sorting through their stuff, not only is it taking additional time to find what they need, but they also keep finding little things that need to take care of. If this person is prone to procrastination each one of these little unimportant tasks, like responding to a letter, or filing something, will serve as a great distraction from the real work they should be doing and they will spend time taking care of a dozen little less important things that they should be using to find what they need to finish the important project.

It is like I always said in high school; “if my room is clean it must mean I have a test or paper coming up that I don’t want to work on.” Just like a dirty room provides a great excuse to not study for a test, a dirty work area provides a great excuse not to work on a daunting project. By making sure that we always maintain a well organized workspace we can avoid these little distractions.

Some good tips for keeping your work area clean are:

  1. Set aside time each day or every other day to handle the little things that come up like sorting mail, paying bills, etc. These are the types of things that can tend to linger in our inbox and provide great distractions from doing important things that we don’t want to do.
  2. Keep well organized files. Good files can be a huge time saver when you need to reference older things and they also are a great way to keep from having to dig through things. If you need something and can just go straight to it in your files you won’t encounter all the little distractions that can through you off course.
  3. Once every two weeks or once a month go through the stuff on your desk and get rid of everything that you haven’t used sense the last time you did it. We tend to keep things on our desk because we don’t know where else to put them, but if you can be judicious about only keeping the things you actually use on your desk you will find that you are much more productive in the long run.

I am sure that there are many more great tips and tricks you use to help keep your work area clean, but these are the ones that I have found help me. Let us know what you do to maintain your work area so we can continue to improve!

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Meetings and You, a time management story

Friday, March 19th, 2010

There are several things in life that are almost universally true. One of these universal truths is that, if you work at a company that has more then two employees, you are going to have meetings. Meetings can be a huge time sink for your day, not to mention totally throw your time management plan out of whack if you were not told about the meeting in advance. I know plenty of people who feel like they spend half of the time they are at work in one meeting or another, so it’s understandable how meetings could seriously cripple your ability to be efficient at work. Here are some tips to help you time manage your meetings so you can spend more time doing your actual work.

1. Avoid meetings that don’t have a specific goal or problem to address. This is a very simple place to start, if someone asks you to be at a meeting, your first question should be what is the meeting about? If they can’t give you a firm answer to the purpose of the meeting, chances are you don’t really need to be there.

2. Ask for an agenda, or if none exists create one. Assuming that the person who requests your presence at the meeting does have a real issue that the meeting is addressing our next thought you be organization, and this is where the agenda comes in. Without and agenda the meeting will probably take at  least an extra thirty minutes because it will take time for everyone to get on the same page and make the transitions as you  move through the topics of the meeting. Also, having an agenda will set a definite end time for the meeting, this way you know how much time you are committing and if the meeting starts to run over you can simply excuse yourself by saying you made another commitment for after the meeting assuming it would end on time.

3. Do as much pre-meeting prep as you can for yourself and the other people at the meeting. An agenda is a great place to start but beyond that, if you can prepare discussion questions, or anything else that will help guide the meeting towards reaching a conclusion on the issue at hand your meetings will run more efficiently and smoothly.

4. Make sure everyone coming to the meeting is up to speed BEFORE they come to the meeting. Remember the agenda and questions you created for the meeting? By sending the questions and agenda out in advance to all the participants in the meeting and asking them to come with to the meeting with their responses ready you can minimize catch up time and get right down to business at the start of the meeting.

5. Identify time wasters and avoid going to meetings with them. Time wasters is a term I use to refer to those people in an office who either don’t have enough to do or don’t want to do the work they have, and instead invent creative ways to fill their time while appearing to be busy. Many of these people have realized that holding meetings and/or prolonging meetings they attend is a great way to avoid doing real work. If you can identify who these people are in your office and be especially careful to avoid getting sucked into their meetings you can hopefully avoid the dreaded two hour status update from last week when nothing happened.

These five tips will hopefully help you cut down on wasted time away from your desk and increase your productivity at work. One final thought on meetings, is that I have rarely encountered a meeting that needed to be longer then an hour. This is not to say that many meeting don’t run longer then an hour, but it is rare that they need to. Typically most any topic needing to be covered in a meeting, if well defined upfront, can be covered in an hour or less. If someone is trying to schedule you for a three hour meeting, it had better be a really important meeting and cover a whole lot of material.

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Maintaining Time Management

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Time management is one of those things that we all know we should be doing yet for some reason, we aren’t, kind of like eating healthy. At the end of the day it boils down to this, time is what it is and there is nothing we can do to change it, what we can change though, is how we interact with the time we have, in other words, how we use it. This is the heart of time management, controlling how we use our time in pursuit of increased efficiency. We learned some of the basics of time management earlier this month, this week I want to explore some interesting ideas and topics in time management.

To me, one of the interesting things about time management is that, at one point in time or another, we have all done it. Everyone goes through periods where they are so busy they have to budget their time down to the minute to make sure that everything gets done, and this is time management. However, we often lose this sense of urgency when the task list dwindles and we aren’t so overwhelmed. We no longer feel the need to schedule everything and our time management practices get left behind.

Have you ever found yourself wondering what happened to the time? If so you are probably a victim of failed time management maintenance. When we have a lot to do we don’t wonder what happened to the time, we know what happened to it, it was used accomplishing one of the many things we needed to get done. However, when we don’t have a lot to do, we open ourselves up to procrastinating. When we open our task list in the morning and add up the hours only to realize that we don’t have to spend every minute of the day going 100% in order to get everything done, the tendency is to relax a little bit. When we feel like we can relax we don’t feel this need to schedule our time in order to get everything done, so our time management falls to the side. We simply think that we don’t have that much to do so it will certainly get done.

The risk here is obvious and we have probably all experienced. We start doing something not task related and all of a sudden it’s the middle of the afternoon and we haven’t gotten anything done. Where did the time go? This is why maintaining our time management habits is so important. If we manage our time outside of crunch time like we do when we are busy we won’t leave ourselves open to these afternoon panic attacks, instead we would have everything done before the middle of the afternoon and have time to relax.

The biggest complaint about using time management techniques when we don’t have to is that people want to feel like they can relax and not have to stress about their work all the time. When things are slow we like to rest and recoup a little bit so that we are ready to go next time things pick up. This is incredibly valuable and we all need this down time so we don’t burn out, this is certainly true. However, you can use time management techniques and stay relaxed during the downtimes, in fact, time management can make your slow times even more relaxing.

Think about it this way. What would be more relaxing, taking some time for yourself in the morning only to realize that you let too much time slide by and now have to scramble to get the few things done that you had to do today, or managing your time, so that you get everything on your list done by two in the afternoon and can spend the last part of the afternoon relaxing and taking care of personal items. It is easy to see, that, while it may seem like managing our time forces us to stress about our work, it really can allow us more freedom to truly relax and enjoy those rare times when things are running smoothly and we don’t have to spend our whole day putting out fires and keeping the ball rolling.

So I encourage you to think about maintaining those great time management habits we use to get through crunch times. Keep them going and not only will you be rewarded with better personal time, but next time you get busy it won’t be such a struggle to schedule your time because you will already be in the habit.

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Funny Friday Time Management

Friday, March 5th, 2010

I feel like we could all use a good laugh to get us through to the weekend, so I found some good time management cartoons. This one is my favorite:
Managing Time Management

I think this is a problem we would all love to have, but it does bring up a very important topic in time management, which is time management for internet resources. It is very easy to get sucked into blogging, commenting on blogs, and social networks for hours, and while these can be useful activities they can also completely cripple your ability to do your other work. One thing I see a lot of people doing is throughout their day spending short amounts of time on blogs and social networks. While this doesn’t seem like a big deal if you add it up and can amount to a couple hours, and every time we stop what we are doing we break concentration and takes more time for us to get going again.

One solution to this is to schedule in blocks of time for blogs and social media. Try setting aside a one or two hour window at some point during your day to take care of the blog and social media tasks you need to accomplish. What I found when I did this is that it both limited the amount of time I was spending on these almost never ending tasks, and allowed me to accomplish my other work more efficiently because I wasn’t being distracted by social media and blogs pulling me away from my work.

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