| The End of Time Management
Do you want the good news or the bad news first?
I'm not sure of what you prefer, but let me give you the bad news
first.
Consider this, completed days, where everything on your to-do list
is done at the end of the day are about as realistic as Santa Claus
and the Easter Bunny. So lets not try and achieve them, because
it's futile and you'll go nuts trying.
This is the problem with time management. Time management seems
to focus on getting more and more done each day.
The problem is, if we keep filling our days with more and more
work, we fill our minds and time to such an extent that we begin
to function less effectively. We also do a bunch of things at a
level we know is below our best and that becomes frustrating.
For the business owner, time is the scarcest commodity, but time
management will never solve the problem. Success is not about doing
more, it's about achieving more.
Here’s the good news! We have to stop the blind quest for doing
more and more, because it actually results in less and less.
If you remember nothing else, remember this:
The key to getting control of our time is actually doing
the opposite. Getting control of our time requires you to continually
give up stuff.
Joseph Juran, did some research that showed that for the average
executive only 20% of our activities create 80% of our results.
So it stands to reason that if we cut the 80% that contributes the
20%, we could be way more effective, less pressured and less stressed.
The problem however is in figuring out what items really contribute.
If we examine most of what we do, it's not difficult to convince
yourself that nearly everything is important.
We have to be ruthlessly honest with ourselves and continuously
work at getting rid of stuff.
We need to start with our goals. For every task, you should ask
yourself before doing it; "Is this going to get me closer to
my goals?" If the answer is no; either stop doing it or delegate
it.
The best is to eliminate it altogether if you can.
Tim Ferriss author of the 4-Hour Work Week says:
"Slow down and remember this: Most things make no difference.
Being busy is a form of laziness – lazy thinking and indiscriminate
action."
By the way if you haven't read this book, get yourself a copy as
quickly as possible. I think it will change your life.
Here's one way you can begin to figure out what you need to start
getting rid of. Before starting a thought, conversation or action,
"What are the consequences of not doing this?" Make sure
you link back to your goals otherwise you might try to fool yourself
into thinking it's important.
A lack of time is actually a lack of priorities, so until your
priorities are clear you'll find it difficult to prioritize effectively.
Once you begin this thought process, you'll quickly find things
that occupy your time, that you think are important, are often just
busy work. If they are, eliminate them. Be ruthless it's just like
cleaning out a closet. It easy to fool yourself into thinking that
you should keep on doing it, "just in case", don't let that happen
to you.
What would happen if only checked e-mail once a day? What would
happen if you never read another newspaper? What would happen if
you let all your calls go to voice mail and only responded once
or twice a day?
In most cases, unless doing so provides you with a strategic advantage,
the answer is nothing. So why no do that. You’ll find it liberating
and your productivity will improve as you spend more time on the
things that produce results.
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