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Time Management
More Time, Less Stress
Time Management
INTRODUCTION:.................................................................................................................................................................... 3 TIME:............................................................................................................................................................................................ 3 HOW AND WHY WE WASTE OUR TIME:.................................................................................................................... 3 HOW TO DISCOVER YOUR TIME WASTERS:.......................................................................................................... 4 CONTROLLING DEMANDS ON YOUR TIME: ........................................................................................................... 5 DELEGATION..............................................................................................................................................................................5 What to Delegate:............................................................................................................................................................... 5 How to Delegate:................................................................................................................................................................ 6 INTERRUPTIONS IN YOUR WORKPLACE ..................................................................................................................................6 The Telephone:.................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Internal Visitors:................................................................................................................................................................. 7 External Visitors:................................................................................................................................................................ 7 EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATIONS AND MEETINGS:.............................................................................................. 8 COMMUNICATIONS:...................................................................................................................................................................8 M EETINGS:..................................................................................................................................................................................8 Steps to A Better Meeting:................................................................................................................................................. 9 GETTING STARTED ON YOUR PERSONAL PROGRAM:...................................................................................10
Time Management
Introduction:
This document contains a selection of time management tips for anyone interested in improving their productivity and lowering stress in their workplace and personal lives. This is particularly important for project managers who must be able to management their own time effectively if they hope to run successful projects. This document highlights common areas of failing and suggests a simple technique to help you improve your time management.
Time:
Let's start by thinking about time. Here are twelve important characteristics of time: 1. It is an economic resource 2. It cannot be expanded or contracted 3. It is irrecoverable and irreplaceable 4. It is expensive and precious 5. It is highly perishable 6. Most of what is called 'cost' is the cost of time 7. It is a flow from past to present to future in the context of experience 8. It is a flow from future to present to past in the context of planning 9. The flow is one way and irreversible 10. It is quantifiable (seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years) 11. All processes that we manage are time processes 12. Time is the dimension in which change takes place
Time Management
Why we waste our time, our personality orientation: Task/Achievement - personally doing (working) versus managing and delegating Leadership/Dominance/Decision - taking charge and doing (working) Impulsive/Physically Energetic - doing (working) and not planned Socially Warm/Gregarious - people not task oriented Theoretical/Detail/Structure - paralyses by analysis Change/New Experience/Feeling - bored with routine, unstable, not team worker Fellowship/Defensive/Aggressive - to please others, bureaucrat, performance for accolade, argue with others
Time Management
Preference for operating not managing Demand to know every detail Refusal to allow mistakes, know as perfection syndrome Disinclination to develop subordinates Lack of organisational skill
Extending results from what a person can do, to what a person can control Releases your time for more important work Develops subordinates initiative, skill, knowledge, and competence Maintains the decision level
What to Delegate: 1. Duties that can be assigned on a temporary basis 2. Fact-finding assignments 3. Preparation of rough drafts of written material, such as reports, resumes, policies, procedures 4. Problem analysis and possible solutions 5. Routine tasks 6. Collection of data for reports and/or presentations 7. Tasks that will challenge the subordinate 8. Tasks to test your subordinate's ability in specific areas of responsibility 9. Small units of work, assignments from your responsibilities and functions
Time Management
How to Delegate: 1. Consider gradually increasing authority and responsibility. 2. Set clear, realistic goals for the task to be delegated. 3. Communicate the assignment clearly. 4. Give your support person complete information on organisational policy and procedure as it relates to the assignment. 5. Define the limits of responsibility as it relates to the assignment. After the delegatee thoroughly understands the limits of authority, allow him/her to go ahead. 6. When a subordinate has the responsibility for a decision, allow him/her to make it. 7. Resist making decisions for your support staff 8. Take enough time to help a delegate solve an emergency problem, so when it comes up again he or she can go ahead without interrupting you. 9. When a support person comes to you with a question concerning a delegated task do not answer the question but help him or her to think it through. 10. Set up a system that requires interim reports or checkpoints so you can review progress. 11. Establish a realistic completion date. 12. Delegate to the lowest level that can do the task, within your jurisdiction. If the subordinate of your subordinate could do the task, then say so, but delegate to your own subordinate. Let your subordinate re-delegate the task if he or she so chooses. 13. If a subordinate's decision must be reversed, permit him or her to reverse it. Never openly countermand your subordinate's orders. Back up your support person in their relations with their subordinates. 14. Give the delegatee the authority needed for carrying out the assignment, and inform others that he or she has this authority. This will lessen the resistance of co-workers when the delegatee seeks information and/or help from them in carrying out the assignment.
By losing concentration Going to find out what's going on in the office Inbox curiosity
Time Management
To get results and relief you must control the telephone. Use your support person to buffer you. Return calls in batches when you plan to do so after initial preparation. Don't be a slave to the telephone. Regarding long distance calls. A long distance call is just another telephone call. Where is the priority in being in another city or country? There could be exceptions but most people are slaves to the apparent urgency of long distance calls. Learn the difference between the important and the urgent.
Internal Visitors:
To get results and relief you must control access to your office or workspace. Closed door technique; you can't manage anything with open access to your office or workspace. At certain periods close the door or close off the entrance area to your workspace. A chair with a sign hung on it or a plant into the entrance space with a partition mounted notice. Learn to say no nicely. You're busy, sorry, come back after a specified time. If you are interrupted and must meet with a person, go to their office or workspace, this will give you better control over when you can leave.
External Visitors:
Again, to get results and relief you must control access to your office or workspace. Don't meet unknown visitors who don't have an appointment. Get the receptionist or support person's perception of the individual if you're in doubt. If the person is known and no appointment, meet them in the reception area.. If they manage to get into your office/workspace, hold a stand-up meeting. Don't ever sit down.
Time Management
Behavioural and human resource specialists clearly state that the most important skill of these four is listening. Most of us are poor listeners. If a reasonable communication time distribution for one person in a two person typical conversation/discussion is 50% talking and 50% listening time, what percentage distribution would you estimate for yourself? How would your closest associates rate you as a listener? The ten rules for good listening are: 1. Stop talking 2. Put the talker at ease 3. Show you want to listen 4. Remove distractions 5. Empathise with the talker 6. Be patient 7. Hold your temper 8. Avoid interruptions and don't argue 9. Ask some questions as encouragement 10. Stop talking
Meetings:
Many of us spend up to 50% of our time in various kinds of meetings. Mastering knowledge of the function, structure and process of a meeting is essential to improving time management skills. There are three major elements:
How many are attending? What is the process? What is the content?
Time Management
This expands to: How many are attending? 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, etc. What is the process? Typically attendees do one or more of the following:
If you consider the above permutations and combinations that escalate with the number of meeting attendees, it is obvious that the meeting function and process must be well understood, planned and executed. Steps to A Better Meeting: 1. Plan the meeting carefully, who, what, when, where, why and how many. 2. Prepare and send out the standard agenda, fully completed, in advance. 3. Come early and checkout or set up the meeting room, as you want it organised. 4. Start on time. Begin the moment you have a quorum. 5. Get participants to introduce themselves, if they do not already know each other and state the expectations for the meeting. What are you there to accomplish? 6. Clearly define roles. 7. Review, revise, and order the agenda, if required. 8. Set clear time limits in the agenda, if necessary, revise. 9. Review action items only from previous meeting. 10. Focus on the same problem in the same way at the same time. Do not evaluate when you are brainstorming, or fall into further reporting information when you are decision-making. 11. Establish action items, who, what, when. 12. Review meeting notes to see if anything has been overlooked. 13. Set the date, place and time of next meeting, if required, and develop a preliminary agenda. 14. Evaluate progress of the meeting just completed. 15. Close the meeting on time crisply and positively. 16. Clean up and if required, rearrange the room. 17. Prepare the meeting minutes. Most meetings can be written up in a simple memo form, long detailed minutes are not required. What was the point considered, what was the outcome, ideas, information reviewed, decisions taken, what action by whom, required when.
18. Follow-up actions item before the next meeting, and begin to plan the next meeting agenda. Get
input from probable attendees on agenda items before the next meeting.
Time Management
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