Time Management
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Control Your Time"I bet I could have cut back on many of the seventy, eighty, and ninety-hour weeks that I've put in over the years, if I'd been more systematic and rigorous in managing time!"
Get Aggressive About Managing Time! Just as a well-run business should carefully develop a strategy to determine how to spend its money, an effective businessperson should carefully develop a strategy to determine how to use his or her time. Just as a well-run business follows a budget in spending money, an effective businessperson should also follow a budget (or schedule) in spending time.
Prioritize Your Time! You start by identifying the number one way you can most increase profits by use of your time; then the number two way; then the Number three way; etc. This short list of time priorities forms the foundation for your time planning for every week of the year. These time priorities may be identical to key parts of your company strategy or they may be different. For example, if your company strategy is based upon excellent customer service, spending lots of your time in customer service may not be the best use of your time if you have a terrific customer-service manager.
Narrow Your Focus! After you have your major time priorities for the year established, you should allocate them by week or by month. Like it or not, a lot of our time each week is going to be eaten up by nonstrategic items that we have no control over; hence it is important to limit the number of strategic time goals we have for each week. So even if you have ten strategic time goals for the year, you may want to focus on no more than one or two of them in any given week. For example, in a particular week you may plan on working on your number one time objective, let's say planning improvements for the company's major product line, and a secondary goal, let's say re-evaluating the dealer marketing program, but no time on other secondary time goals that you plan on tackling during other weeks.
Set Aside Uninterrupted Time Generally your major strategic time priorities will involve such activities as planning, thinking, and developing ideas. More so than day-to-day issues, such activities require big blocks of uninterrupted time. Constant interruption kills any hope of effective time management. One way to avoid interruption is to make it clear that when your door is closed you are not to be disturbed. Another is to have regular meetings, such as every week, with the people that you interact with the most and insist on saving nonpressing issues for these meetings.
Avoid My Time Traps!
* Source Streetwise Small Business Start-Up |
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