Top Five Time Management Mistakes
Time management is not necessarily working
"harder", but rather, "smarter." And to accomplish significantly more in our
days, we need not increase our efforts. As an example, in a horse race, the
first horse may earn a $50,000 purse and the second horse may earn a $25,000
purse. The first horse gets twice as much money as the second horse, not
because it ran twice as far or twice as fast. It was only a "nose
ahead" of the competition.
So it is with our daily results. We need not run twice as
fast or put in twice the effort to significantly increase our daily success. We
only need to be a "nose ahead" of where we already are. We are all
productive in our days. We would not survive the demands of this world if we
were not. The real challenge is how much more productive can we become?
And, a lot of our time management has to do with more of
what we are not doing rather than what we are doing. Sometimes our mistakes and
omissions will keep us from running at a full pace. Here are the Top Five Time
Management Mistakes we should all avoid to help us to increase our daily
success both on and off the job, in less time and with less stress.
1. Start your day
without a plan of action. You will begin your day by responding to the
loudest voice (the squeaky wheel gets the grease) and spend it in a defensive
mode, responding to other people's and events' demands. The tail will wag the
dog. If there is a void of leadership in your time management life, someone
will fill that void, not that others are bad people, but others will take all
of your time if you let them. You will have worked hard but may not have done
enough of right things. Time Management is not doing the wrong things quicker.
That just gets us nowhere faster. Time Management is doing the right things.
2. Get out of balance
in your life. Our lives are made up of Seven Vital Areas: Health, Family,
Financial, Intellectual, Social, Professional, and Spiritual. We will not
necessarily spend time every day in each area or equal amounts of time in each
area. But if in the long run, we spend a sufficient quantity and quality of
time in each area, our lives will be in balance. But if we neglect any one
area, never mind two or three, we will eventually sabotage our success. Much
like a table, if one leg is longer than the rest, it will make the entire table
wobbly. If we don't take time for health, our family life and social life are
hurt. If our financial area is out of balance, we will not be able to focus
adequately on our professional goals, etc.
3. Work with a messy
desk or work area. Studies have shown that the person who works with a
messy desk spends, on average, one and a half hours per day looking for things
or being distracted by things. That's seven and a half hours per week.
("Out of sight-out of mind." And the reverse of that is true too,
"In sight, in mind"). And, it's not a solid block of an hour and a
half, but a minute here and a minute there, and like a leaky hot water faucet,
drip, drip, drip, it doesn't seem like a major loss, but at the end the day,
we're dumping gallons of hot water down the drain that we are paying to heat.
If you have ever visited the office of a top manager, typically, that person is
working with a clean desk environment. Many would attribute this practice to
that person's access to other staff members. While there may be some truth in
that conclusion, in most cases, if we went back some years in that person's
career, they probably were working with a clean desk back then which gave them
the focus they needed to become promoted to where they are today.
4. Don't get enough
sleep. Studies show that nearly 75% of us complain on a regular basis, all
throughout our days, that we are flat-out tired. For most people, they get the
quantity of sleep, but they lack the quality of sleep. Their days are filled
with so much stress, they are out of control, working harder but maybe not
smarter, that it's difficult to get a full night's sleep. (For some, they
simply do not allow for a sufficient quantity of sleep.) If you will plan your
day, then work your plan, you will get more done, feel a higher sense of
accomplishment, and experience less stress and enjoy a more restful night's
sleep.
5. Don't take a lunch
break. Many do not take a lunch break, working through that time period in
the hopes that it will give them more time to produce results. Studies have
shown it may work just the opposite. After doing what we do for several hours,
we start to "dull out." Sure, we can work through lunch and be
productive, but that is not the issue. The issue is "how much more"
productive we can be. A lunch break, even a short fifteen minute break, gives
us a chance to get our batteries all charged up again to more effectively handle
the afternoon's challenges. We are then less likely to procrastinate a few of
those difficult tasks that, in the long run, will make a positive difference in
our personal productivity.
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