|
In my Time Management seminars which I have conducted
for more than 100,000 people from around the globe,
I show people how to get more done in less time, with
less stress; to help them have more time for the things
they want to do in their work and business lives.
If you can recapture a wasted hour here and there and
redirect it to a more productive use, you can make great
increases in your daily productivity.
Here are five of the techniques I share in our Time
Management seminars, each one of which will help you
to get at least one more hour out of your day of additional
productive time.
1. Maintain Balance. Your life consists of Seven Vital
Areas: Health, Family, Financial, Intellectual, Social,
Professional, and Spiritual. You will not spend equal
amounts of time in each area or time every day in each
area. But, if in the long run, you are spending a sufficient
quantity and quality of time in each area, then your
life will be balanced. But ignore any one of your areas,
(never mind two or three!) and you will get out of balance
and potentially sabotage your success. Fail to take
time now for your health and you will have to take time
for illness later on. Ignore your family and then may
leave you and cost you a lot of time to re-establish
relationships.
2. Get the Power of the Pen. A faint pen has more power
than the keenest mind. Get into the habit of writing
things to do down using one tool (a Day-Timer, pad of
paper, Palm Pilot, etc.) Your mind is best used for
the big picture rather than all the details. The details
are important, but manage them with the pen. If you
want to manage it you have to measure it first. Writing
things down helps you to more easily remember all that
you need to accomplish.
3. Do Daily Planning. It is said that people do not
plan to fail but a lot of people fail to plan. Take
the time each night to take control of the most precious
resource at your command, the next twenty-four hours.
Plan your work and then work your plan each day. Write
up a To Do list with all you have to's and all of your
want to's for your next day. Without a plan for the
day, you can easily get distracted, spending your time
serving the loudest voice rather than attending to the
most important things for your day that will enhance
your productivity.
4. Prioritize It. Your To Do list will have crucial
and not crucial items on it. Despite the fact most people
want to be productive, when given the choice between
crucial and not crucial items, we will most often end
up doing the not crucial items. They are generally easier
and quicker than crucial items. Prioritize your To Do
list each night. Put the #1 next to the most important
item on your list. Place the #2 next to the second most
important item on your list, etc. Then tackle the items
on your list in order of their importance. You may not
get everything done on your list, but you will get the
most important things done. This is working smarter,
not harder, and getting more done in less time.
5. Control Procrastination. The most effective planning
in the world does not substitute for doing what needs
to be done. We procrastinate and put off important things
because we don't sense enough pain for not doing it
or enough pleasure to do it. To get going on something
you have been putting off, create in your mind enough
pain for not doing it or enough pleasure to do it. I
prefer the pleasure approach. Take a procrastinated
project and turn it into to a game. Work with one thing
in front of you at a time so other things won't distract
you. ("Out of sight, out of mind.") Break
it down to little bite-sized, manageable pieces. Get
it started, take the first step and you will likely
continue it to completion.
Dr. Donald E. Wetmore-Professional Speaker
Productivity Institute-Time Management Seminars
127 Jefferson Street
Stratford, CT 06615
(800) 969-3773
(203) 386-8062
fax: (203) 386-8064
Email: ctsem@msn.com
website: http://www.balancetime.com
Back
To Top
|