Time management
techniques
Learn about The Time Management Techniques based on the horse sense
Every horse race
has a first place winner and a runner-up, second place contender. It is not
uncommon for the first place horse to earn twice the prize as the second
place finisher. Curiously, the number one horse did not have to run twice as
fast or go twice as far as the competition to get twice the money. It only
had to be a nose ahead of the competition to reap twice the rewards.
Time management, personal productivity, and success in life are a lot like
the horse race metaphor. To get twice as much in life, in any of our many
dimensions, health, family, financial, intellectual, professional, social,
and spiritual, we do not have to double our effort and input.
We only need
to get a nose ahead of where we are now to realize significant increases in
our results.
Five Time Management Techniques, when applied, can help us to get a "nose
ahead." The first Time Management Technique - Plan
your day, every day, preferably, the night before. Then, when arriving at
work, there is a plan of action to direct us forward. Without a plan,
temptations may draw us into unproductive avenues where we may serve the
loudest voice that demands our time rather than dealing with the most
productive opportunity.
A simple plan consists of a list of all the items we ideally might want to
accomplish during the next day. Prioritize those items in order of their
importance. (#1 for most important, #2 for next most important, etc.) Begin
the most important item first, then go to the next most important item, etc.
Typically, it is unlikely that all items on the list will be completed, but
that is fine. Success has little to do with how much was left undone at the
end of the day but, rather, what was actually accomplished. We will always
leave undone more than we do get done simply because we all have more to do
than time permits which says a lot of good things about how good we really
are, to have so much entrusted to us by so many!
The
Second Time Management Technique - Overplan your day to take advantage of "Parkinson's Law" which
teaches that, "a project tends to take the time allocated for it." If you
give yourself one thing to do during the day, it will likely take all day to
complete it. If you give yourself two things to do during the day, you will
likely accomplish both. If you give yourself twelve things to do during the
day, you may not get all twelve done, but you may complete seven or eight
items. Having a lot to do creates a healthy sense of pressure on us to
naturally become better time managers. With a lot on our plate, we tend to
be more focused, we tend to suffer interruptions less so, and we delegate
better.
The third Time Management Technique - Work with a clean desk and work environment. There is truth in the
saying, "Out of sight; out of mind." Equally true is the reverse, "In sight;
in mind." When items are in our field of vision, we cannot help but be
distracted and pulled in the wrong direction where we may major in the
minors, busy all day long, but accomplishing little of significance.
The fourth Time Management Technique - Restrict meetings. During any typical business day, there are
reportedly 17 million meetings being conducted in the United States. A
meeting is two or more people getting together to exchange common
information. Simple enough, but probably one of the top institutional time
wasters. Always ask, "Do I contribute anything to this meeting?" and "Do I
get anything of value from this meeting?" If the answer to both questions is
"no," try to find a way out of attending the meeting.
The final Time Management Technique - Handle paper just once. Get out of the "shuffling blues" when paper
is looked at and relooked at again and again while deadlines slip through
the cracks as we get buried under a blizzard of paperwork. As you encounter
each new piece of paper, if it can be responded to quickly, in a minute or
less, respond then and there. If it will require a longer effort, schedule
it for a time when you will get to it and then put it away.
Common sense ideas. That's what horse sense is, yes? Enjoy the race and do
not forget to use the Time Management Techniques
If this
article has been useful to you, we have prepared an additional article
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