I took a long break from my blogs due to shifting of my residence to a new place. Among so many problems faced by me in shifting to the new place( I will post my experience in shifting and problems separately in a different post), I have also no BSNL broad band connection till date and I have to depend on a very very slow wireless broadband connection. As a result, I could not spend much time online and nearly 350 mails are pending in my mail inbox(Normally I used to read/reply and forward the mails on the same date of receipt of the mails) and I was unable to go through the postings of my friends and unable to promote the postings and give my comments also )
Now coming to the current topic of Time Management, I want to share the following tips which I received by email from one of my friends:
Now coming to the current topic of Time Management, I want to share the following tips which I received by email from one of my friends:
Are there a hundred different things you wish you could do with your
life someday — anything from exercising to meditation or yoga to writing that
novel you always wished you could write to reading more to relaxing and watching
the sunrise? But perhaps you never have the time, like most people.
The truth is, we all have the same amount of time, and it’s finite and
in great demand. But some of us have made the time for doing the things we love
doing, and others have allowed the constant demands and pressures and
responsibilities of life to dictate their days.
It’s time to move from the second group back into the first. Reclaim
your time. Create the life you want and make the most of the free time you lay
claim to. It’s not hard, though it does take a little bit of effort and
diligence.
Not all of these will be applicable to your life — choose the ones you
can apply and give them a try:
1. Take a time out. Freeing up your time starts with
taking a step back to take a good look at your life. You need to block off at
least an hour. Several hours or half a day is better. A whole day would be
awesome. A weekend would be even more ideal, though not necessary practical for
many folks. With this block of time, take a look at your life with some
perspective. Is it what you’ve always wanted? How would you get to where you’ve
always wanted to be? What do you enjoy doing, but don’t have enough time to do?
What things actually fill up your day? Are there things you could drop or
minimize to make more time? We’ll look at some of these things in the following
items, but it starts with taking a time out to think and plan.
2. Find your essentials. What is it that you love to do?
Make a short list of 4-5 things. These are the things you want to make room
for.
3. Find your time-wasters. What do you spend a lot of your
time on that isn’t on your essential list? Take a close look at these things
and really think about whether they’re necessary, or if there are ways to
reduce, minimize or eliminate these things. Sometimes you do things because you
assume they’re necessary, but if you give it some thought you can find ways to
drop them from your life. Figure out what you do simply to waste time — maybe
surfing certain sites, watching TV, talking a lot at the water cooler, etc.
You’re going to want to minimize these time-wasters to make room for the more
important stuff, the stuff that makes you happy and that you love to do.
4. Schedule the time. As you sit down and think about
your life and what you want to do, versus what you actually do, you will be
looking at ways to free up time. It’s crucial that you take a blank weekly
schedule (you can just write it out on a piece of paper, or use your calendar)
and assign blocks for the things you love — the stuff on your essentials list.
If you want to exercise, for example, when will you do it? Put the blocks of
time on your schedule, and make these blocks the most important appointments of
your week. Schedule the rest of your life around these blocks.
5. Consolidate. There are many things you do,
scattered throughout your day or your week, that you might be able to
consolidate in order to save time. A good example is errands — instead of
running one or two a day, do them all in one day to save time and gas. Another
example is email, or any kind of communication — batch process your email
instead of checking and reading and responding throughout the day. Same thing
with meetings, paperwork, anything that you do regularly.
6. Cut out meetings. As much as you can, minimize the number of meetings you hold and attend. In
some cases this might mean talking to your boss and telling her that you have
other priorities, and asking to be excused. In other cases this might mean
asking the people holding the meeting if you can get the info in other ways. If
so, you’ve saved yourself an hour or so per meeting (sometimes more).
7. De clutter your schedule. If you have a heavily packed
schedule, full of meetings and errands and tasks and projects and appointments,
you’re going to want to weed it out so that it’s not so jam-packed. Find the
stuff that’s not so essential and cancel them. Postpone other stuff. Leave big
blank spaces in your schedule.
8. Re-think your routine. Often we get stuck
in a routine that’s anything but what we really want our days to be like. Is
there a better way of doing things? You’re the creator of your life — make a
new routine that’s more pleasant, more optimal, more filled with things you
love.
9. Cut back on email. How much time do you spend composing emails? If you spend a major part
of your work day on email, as many people do , you can free
up a lot of time by reducing the time you spend in email. Now, this won’t work
for everyone, but it can work for many people: choose 2-3 key times during the
day to process your inbox to empty, and keep your responses to 5 sentences.
10. Learn to say no. If you say “yes” to every request,
you will never have any free time. Get super protective about your time, and
say “no” to everything but the essential requests.
11. Keep your list to 3. When you make out your daily to-do
list, just list the three Most Important Tasks you want to accomplish today.
Don’t make a laundry list of tasks, or you’ll fill up all your free time. By
keeping your task list small, but populated only by important tasks, you ensure
that you are getting the important stuff done but not overloading yourself.
12. Do your Biggest Rock first. Of the three Most Important Tasks
you choose for the day, pick the biggest one, or the one you’re dreading most,
and do that first. Otherwise you’ll put that off as much as possible and fill
your day with less important things. Don’t allow yourself to check email until that
Big Rock is taken care of. It starts your day with a sense of major
accomplishment, and leaves you with a lot of free time the rest of the day,
because the most important thing is already done.
13. Delegate. If you have subordinates or coworkers who can do
a task or project, try to delegate it. Don’t feel like you need to do
everything yourself. If necessary, spend a little time training the person to
whom you’re delegating the task, but that little time spent training will pay
off in a lot of time saved later. Delegating allows you to focus on the core
tasks and projects you should be focusing on.
14. Cut out distractions. What is there around your workspace
that distracts you from the task at hand? Sometimes it’s visual clutter, or
papers lying around that call for your attention and action, or email or IM
notifiers on your computer that pop up at the wrong time, or the phone, or
coworkers. See if you can eliminate as many of these as possible — the more you
can focus, the more effective you’ll be and the less time you’ll waste. That
equals time saved for the good stuff.
15. Disconnect. The biggest of distractions, for
most people, is the Internet. Now, I’m not saying you need to be disconnected all
the time, but if you really want to be able to effectively complete tasks,
disconnect your Internet so you can really focus. Set certain times of the day
for connectivity, and only connect during those periods.
16. Outsource. If you can’t delegate, see if you can outsource.
With the Internet, we can connect with people from all over the world. . That allows me to focus on the things we are best at, the things we love doing, and saves us a lot of time.
17. Make use of your mornings. Mornings are the
absolute best times to schedule the things I really want to do. Three of the four things on my Essentials List (spending
time with family is the other thing on the list). Mornings are great because
your day hasn’t been filled with a bunch of unscheduled, demanding, last-minute
tasks that will push back those Essentials. For example, if you schedule
something for late afternoon, by the time late afternoon rolls around, you
might have a dozen other things newly added to your to-do list, and you’ll put
off that late-afternoon Essential. Instead, schedule it for the morning, and
it’ll rarely (if ever) get pushed
back.
18. The Golden Right-after-work Time. Other than
mornings, find the time just after work to be an incredible time for doing
Essential things. Exercise, for example, is great in the 5-o’clock hour, as is
spending time with family, or doing anything else relaxing.
19. Your evenings. The time before you go to bed is
also golden, as it exists every single day, and it’s usually completely yours
to schedule. What do you want to do with this time? Read? Spend time with your
kids? Work on a hobby you’re passionate about? Take advantage of this time.
20. Lunch breaks. If the three golden times mentioned
above don’t work for you, lunch breaks are another good opportunity to schedule
things. Some people like to exercise, or to take quiet times, during their
lunch breaks. Others use this time to work on an important personal goal or
project.