Time Management Articles
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How Busy Are You?
- A Great Tip For Effective
Time Management
By
Robert Selden
You receive a phone call from the CEO who asks whether
you’d be interested in taking on a special assignment. In this
assignment you would report directly to the CEO and
participate in making some of the important strategic
decisions facing the company. This assignment would provide
you personally with major growth and career opportunities. The
offer has only one catch; because the assignment is only part
time requiring about one day per week, you would have to do
your present job in the remaining four days. Would you take
the assignment?
Before reading any further please answer “”Yes” or “No” –
Would you take the assignment?
HBR (October 2002) reports that this question has been
posed to hundreds of managers, most of whom believed that they
already lacked the time to do their jobs properly. Yet, ninety
nine percent of them take the assignment. Why?
Are these managers (and perhaps we could include
ourselves): Admitting that if the motivation were powerful
enough, they could eliminate or do in much less time eight to
ten hours worth of current activities each week without
negative consequences? Currently spending time performing
unproductive, time wasting activities (that they could easily
drop) to avoid or escape job related anxiety?
Like the other 99% of managers, did you answer “Yes”?. If
so, what activities that you currently do, could you eliminate
or do less of to free up some of your time for the more
important things you need to do?
As the HBR article points out, almost all managers escape
some job-induced anxiety through a variety of unproductive,
often unconscious, psychological mechanisms – rationalization,
denial, blaming and so forth. One of the most costly is
busyness; the escape into time consuming activities that
managers find less threatening to perform (though much less
productive) than the tough aspects of their jobs. I call these
“comfort tasks” – comfort because they are generally mindless
and easy to do. However, having done them, have we progressed
any of the major tasks we need to achieve? The answer is
almost certainly “No”. And like good food, “comfort tasks”
make us feel good, but if we have too much, we feel bloated.
The trick is to keep the comfort tasks to an enjoyable minimum
and thus not become “time management obese”.
So, how do you reduce the amount of time spent on “comfort
tasks”?
The first step is to become aware of how much time each of
us spends on these comfort tasks. Remember, for most of us,
these comfort tasks are done unconsciously, so we need to find
out what they are.
For the next week:
• Place a very bright post-it note somewhere visible with a
large question: “Is this a comfort task?” (You will quickly
learn to identify them because they are the things that you
start to do when your mind wanders AND you find yourself not
working on the required major goals, tasks or activities)
• Take a note of the things you do that are comfort tasks
(i.e. they are not progressing your major goals or activities)
During the following week:
• Make a conscious effort to reduce the amount of time you
spend on identified comfort tasks.
• Keep in mind, that some time spent is ok (and healthy),
but overdoing it is overdosing!
In the future, should you find your mind wandering,
remember the “comfort task” trick and get back on track. This
simple technique is bound to free up some of your time to
focus on the really important things either within your job or
private life.
Copyright 2006 The National Learning Institute
Bob Selden, of the National Learning Institute, has
previously taught time management techniques to managers with
varying degrees of success. Over the years, he has found this
one simple technique outperforms all others. If you have
another time management idea that you’d like to share with
Bob, or pose him a question regarding time management, he can
be contacted via
http://www.nationallearning.com.au.
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