Time Management Information


Whats Keeping You At The Office (9 Tips To Get Home Quicker)


"Work smarter, not harder" is a cliché that has darted in and out of the workplace for years. But it's still as true as ever. And it's often overlooked advice that truly works. "Working smarter" means think strategically about how to improve your productivity. For starters, think about how you spend a typical day. Then eliminate the time robbers. How? Like this...

1. Discourage excessive visitors. Move the candy dish. Put it far away from your desk. Why? Because food is a friend when you're trying to attract or meet your peers but it's also a foe that cuts into your time. If 12 people stop by your desk for sweets and initiate a five minute chat each, you've lost an hour of your day.

2. Train your family. Set limits on personal calls. I once worked beside an executive assistant who received at least ten calls daily from her teenage daughter. Use the three or five rule for family members who like instant input: Wait until you have at least three (or five) items to discuss with me before calling my workplace, unless your request is an emergency or timely. ('Mom, the sale ends today' falls under neither of these categories).

3. Don't wait for the mail carrier. Do you read every e-mail as it arrives? Stop! "Instead of keeping your email program open and reading messages as they come in, check it only once in the morning and once in the afternoon," advises Janet Barclay, a professional organizer, time management consultant and president of Organized Assistant (www.OrganizedAssistant.com). Shut off the sound too triggered by incoming e-mail so you're not tempted to check it "just this once."

4. Re-deliver your mail. If you must check your e-mail constantly because your boss likes to e-mail you requests and expects you to do so (I've had some do that), immediately sort the excess into electronic categorized folders such as "newsletters" or "invoices due."(Go ahead and create some electronic folders now if you don't have any.) That way every time you check your e-mail for your boss' messages, other e-mails don't continue to attract your curiosity. Then browse the filed e-mails at once later in the day when it's convenient for you, not the sender.

5. Be less than perfect. You can't stop your boss' perfectionist behavior. But you can literally set limits to control your perfectionism. For instance, set short time spans for drafting basic correspondence. Or make it a rule that you'll proofread correspondence just twice before sending it (often best done with a bit of a delay between the two proofreading sessions).

6. Improve your performance. The way to really save time on tasks such as writing and proofreading is to become better at them. Use the 30 minutes you save daily while reducing your perfectionism to read chapters in a grammar book, expand your vocabulary with useful words (forget most of the five syllable ones) or take an online business writing course. Nobody should spend an hour drafting a thank you letter; yet I've seen it happen multiple times in corporate environments at all staff levels.

7. Call while they're out. "When phoning someone to give information, call when you are likely to reach their voicemail," says Barclay. "That way you can quickly leave a message and not get caught up in chitchat."

8. Think realistically. "Don't focus on 'catching up,'" says Laura Stack, president of "The Productivity Pro"® and author of "Leave the Office Earlier." "You will never catch up. There will always be more things to do than there is time to do them. People have a tendency to create work to fill up any amount of time they have. They'll accomplish the same amount of work in a 45-minute meeting as a 90-minute meeting. When working late is a habit, you tend to slack off a little. But by being more productive during the day, you'll get the same amount of work done...and leave earlier," explains Stack.

9. Get ready to go. "Make preparations to leave," says Stack, who teaches seminars about time management, information overload, and personal productivity (Laura@TheProductivityPro.com). "Gather up your coat and put it in a visible spot so others can see you're closing shop. Close your door a few minutes before quitting time so people will think you're busy or already gone."

Now leave! Get home earlier today (or at least on time). Then perhaps you'll start the work day tomorrow feeling more refreshed, enabling you to be even more productive utilizing the same amount of hours.

© 2004 Karen Fritscher-Porter

About The Author

Karen Fritscher-Porter is the publisher and editor of The Effective Admin, a FREE monthly e-zine for administrative support professionals who want practical tips to advance their career and simplify their daily job duties. Learn more about The Effective Admin and sign up today to receive your FREE issues full of helpful career and workplace tips at http://www.admin-ezine.com.

Note: Want to use this article in your print publication, e-zine or website? You can do so for *free* as long as you use it in its complete and unaltered form followed by the credit line above. I'd love to know about its usage too if you'd like to send me a link or copy at karen@admin-ezine.com.


MORE RESOURCES:

Time management workshop on Tuesday (5 pm)
Las Cruces Sun-News
LAS CRUCES — Time Management: Making Minutes Matter, a workshop sponsored by the Student Success Center Hardman, will be at 2 pm Tuesday, in Room 151 at O'Donnell Hall, at New Mexico State University. Participants will learn how to meet deadlines, ...



The East Edition: Time Management for the Working Student
my.hsj.org
Some ways employed students can practice effective time management are to keep a record or calendar of activities, and work schedule, plan ahead, and prioritize. If one keeps a calendar of when they work, and the dates that your other activities fall ...



February is Time Management Month
Walton Tribune
February has been designated “Time Management Month.” It's an opportunity for experts to compound the guilt over your resolution failure. You can, they claim, gain a few extra hours each day by becoming more efficient in your tasks.



Buttoned Up: Nine immutable laws of time management
Wicked Local
Time-management masters take the time to identify which tasks on their list are critical and focus there. 2. Delegating is the only way to get more done in less time. By enabling others to take on some of the workload, you'll not only have more time to ...

and more »


Buttoned Up: Nine immutable laws of time management
The Seattle Times
Time-management masters take the time to identify which tasks on their list are critical and focus there. 2. Delegating is the only way to get more done in less time. By enabling others to take on some of the workload, you'll not only have more time to ...

and more »


9 laws of time management
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Time-management masters take the time to identify which tasks on their list are critical and focus there. 2. Delegating is the only way to get more done in less time. 3. Inertia is a powerful force. Fortunately, overcoming project or task inertia is ...



Quantum3D to Demonstrate Award-Winning Virtual Simulation Training Solutions ...
MarketWatch (press release)
Quantum3D will be showcasing its ExpeditionDI®, the industry's first self-contained, wearable and fully-immersive close combat infantry simulator training platform, Mantis Real-Time Management Scene Management software platform for flight simulation, ...

and more »


Council looks at efficiency
The Daily Tar Heel
By Elizabeth Straub | The Daily Tar Heel Recent Chapel Hill Town Council meetings have kept officials and attendees up past their bedtimes — but officials hope a regulation on public petitions could improve time management.



The secret to office time management
Chicago Tribune
Is there any trick to time management in the workplace? A. Yes, there are actually two tricks; identify priorities and train people around you at work. Daneen Skube Bio | Recent columns Often, when we make a to-do list, we simply write a list of duties ...



Time management: execute with excellence
Civil Society Media (blog)
In my last blog I said I'd share some of my experiences of running businesses, and I'm going to kick off with time management. So, how much time should you spend on strategic, as opposed to operational, activity? I subscribe to the view that up to 90 ...


Google News

home | site map
© 2007