Gain Control of your Time
by Janet Attard
How many times have you gotten to the end of the day and thought to
yourself, "Where did the time go? I didn't accomplish a single thing!"
Everyone has days like that now and then. But if you find that projects
are piling up and most of your time is spent putting our fires instead of
completing important tasks, it's time to make some changes in the way you
use your time.
Each of us has the same 24 hours a day to accomplish whatever we want to
get done. The key difference between people who achieve one goal after
another in their lives and those who never seem to get anywhere is that
the achievers have learned to control the way they use their time. You can
too. Here are nine simple steps you can use to make time work for you.
Calculate the cost of your time
What's your time really worth? How much money are you wasting when you
surf to that cool web site a friend told you about? Or what about the time
gabbing with your friend on the phone? How about the time you spend
looking for files on your computer or your desk? The easiest way to
motivate yourself to make better use of your time is to calculate the cost
of your time.
If you run your own business or if you are an executive or manager who
controls the use of other people's time, calculate the cost of their time,
too. Add up all the cost figures before you schedule that next meeting or
ask someone to do a task that doesn't accomplish your department's goals.
Record your activities and interruptions
How is it that you can be busy all day without finishing any of the tasks
you wanted to get done? The best way to find out just what is keeping you
from accomplishing tasks is to keep a time log for a week. Make a notation
each time you start and stop any task, even for what you think will be a
brief moment.
Be sure you actually print out the time log and fill it in each time you
start and stop any activity. If you wait until the end of the morning or
end of the day to record the information on a computer, you won't remember
everything and won't have an accurate record of how you use your time.
Analyze the time sheet
At the end of the week analyze your time sheet. Identify what actions and
activities wasted time and interfered with accomplishing your goals during
the week. What was the longest you spent working on any one task? What
things interrupted you most often? What tasks did you spend the most time
on? Are they the things that help accomplish your goals? Were they all
necessary? Did you have to do all of those tasks yourself? Write down your
answers. Then plan to eliminate time wasting activities one by one.
Create an action plan
You wouldn't leave on a vacation without knowing where you are going and
what roads you'll take to get there. You need to create a similar road map
to help you accomplish your business and personal goals. If you don't plan
your days, you will spend your time putting out fires, wasting time on
non-important tasks and meeting everyone's objectives except your own. To
avoid that problem, take 15 minutes at the end of each day for planning.
Plan your schedule so that you allow time to work on both the immediate
tasks you need to accomplish and the long-range projects.
Before you add any task to your daily schedule, consider how it
contributes to your short range and longer-range goals. Consider how time
consuming the task will be, if it really needs to be done, and if it
really needs to be done by you. Schedule the most important task for your
most productive time of the day. Work at the task until you complete it,
then move on to the next most important task. If you don't finish
everything by the end of the day, move the task to the next day's
schedule.
End procrastination
If you have a project you are putting off, break it down into small steps.
Schedule a time to start the first small step and DO it. You'll be amazed
how much easier it is to get the whole job done if you break it down into
manageable pieces.
Don't sweat the small stuff
Don't spend an inordinate amount of time making decisions about minor
issues. Balance how much time goes into the decision-making process
against the potential cost or consequences involved.
Establish a quiet hour
That's a time of the day that no one is allowed to disturb you. Use your
quiet hour to tackle the top priority items on your schedule. Don't answer
phones, read E-mail, surf the Web or let coworkers interrupt you. If
necessary arrive at work an hour early or leave an hour late or work
through lunch. But don't pick up the phones during those hours.
Salespeople know that's often the best time to catch a decision maker
without getting stopped by their gatekeeper.
Screen incoming calls
Pick up only those calls from people you want to talk to. Let everyone
else leave a message.
Tame the E-mail monster
Reading and answering electronic mail has become one of the leading time
drains of the electronic age. It's not unusual -- especially for Internet
workers -- to log on and find 10 or 20 or even 100 E-mail messages
waiting. How can you cope?
Start by removing yourself from any E-mail lists that aren't essential.
Then, set up an extra E-mail address or two. Give out one email address
only to people who are important and whose mail you must read. Give out
the other email address to everyone else. If you are fortunate enough to
have an administrative assistant who serves as a gatekeeper, assign the
assistant to answer all mail coming into the non-important E-mail box. Let
them weed out the things you must see from the routine matters they or
someone else can handle.
Reduce the number of times a day you check your E-mail. Although most
people expect prompt replies to E-mail, prompt doesn't have to be
immediate. If necessary, turn off the sounds or messages that alert you
every time new E-mail arrives. Check the mail only at set times each day
-- times you determine based on your schedule.
When you do answer or send E-mail, make your messages complete. E-mail
that doesn't clearly communicate your message and/or what you need done
will lead to misunderstandings or confusion and may generate a slew of
additional E-mail.
Forward E-mail to your staff only if they have the full authority to
handle it.
If they in turn will have to forward the mail to someone else, who will
then forward it back to you, handle the issue yourself right from the
start. You'll save multiple E-mails for yourself and for all the people on
the food chain below you.
Be selective which mail you open. Use the "From" heading and the subject
heading to decide whether or not to open email. Need still more ideas for
curbing the E-mail monster? Click here.
About the author
Janet Attard is the owner of Attard Communications, Inc., which provides
editorial content, online community and web development services. She is
the founder of the award-winning Business Know-How small business web site
and information resource. Janet is also the author of The Home Office And
Small Business Answer Book and of Business Know-How: An Operational Guide
For Home-Based and Micro-Sized Businesses with Limited Budgets. She can be
reached at (631) 467-6826 or by email at attard@businessknowhow.com.
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