Arrest the Time Thieves
Effective Time Management
How often have you heard business people complaining about
their lack of time to get their work done? Of all complaints
we make, this is probably by far the most common. How often
do we wish that we could add extra hours to the working day
in order to get more work done and not cut into our leisure
time?
Whilst it is not possible to add these extra hours to the
day, there are certainly effective ways to maximise the existing
time we have by making our use of it as efficient as possible.
Without being aware of it, we often waste a great deal of
valuable time on needless tasks when we could be using that
time to do essential work.
Common ‘Time Thieves’:
• Paperwork
• Telephone calls
• Drop in visitors to the office
• Meetings
• Non-essential or less essential trivial tasks
To identify your own ‘Time Thieves’ try keeping
a diary for a week of what you do during your working day;
projects worked on, tasks carried out, conversations held
with colleagues, telephone calls etc. Identify the ones which
were needless, or that took longer than they should have.
Then calculate how much time you could have gained if they
were eliminated or reduced.
Surprised?
You should be – it is a common fact that we do spend
much of our working days engaged in tasks that we could shorten
or eliminate. If we shortened or eliminated them, we could
maximise the working day, meaning essential regained leisure
time to enjoy ourselves and spend time with our friends and
family.
So how do we do it?
Paperwork is one the greatest time consumers of all. Whilst
it is not a needless task, as it must be done, often it does
not need to be done by us ourselves. Try to delegate paperwork
as much as possible – even if you feel you could do
it yourself far quicker. If it is a task that can be done
by colleagues, then delegate it. Delegation is hard for some
business people to do, but the more you do it, the more used
to it you will get. Also, the better those you are delegating
tasks to will get at doing them, and they will appreciate
the added responsibility.
Telephone calls can clearly not be completely eliminated,
but the volume of calls you are taking certainly can be. With
a good receptionist, many calls can be dealt with at this
level without needing to be passed onto you. They should be
able to deal with the most basic enquiries, and take messages
for more complicated ones. You can then designate a specific
time in the day to return calls, allowing you to prepare an
answer to the query beforehand and substantially reduce the
call length. Unneeded interruptions from calls will allow
you to work uninterrupted on more essential work. If you find
yourself being kept by a caller on the phone, be firm and
clear that you do not have the time for chatter.
Whilst drop-in callers are a pleasant break from work, they
are most certainly a huge time thief. It is a difficult one
to overcome for some people, as they feel they are being anti-social
by refusing visits from their colleagues. However, reducing
such social calls does not necessarily mean removing them
altogether; instead, allocate a time in the day when you are
happy to receive visitors. Make this clear to your work colleagues:
they are sure to be understanding if you explain why. For
those times when you are not available, keep your office door
closed.
Meetings also cannot be removed for obvious reasons, but
they can be made far more efficient. Too many company meetings
drag on unnecessarily because of a lack of structure, discipline
and by having needless people there. To avoid this, make sure
that meetings start and end on time – if someone is
late, then they will have to cope with this themselves when
they arrive. They were late; it should not have to affect
you too. Make sure that the agenda is followed, and that those
in attendance are essential. Try to avoid unscheduled meetings
falling in the middle of you doing other work, but schedule
them for a more convenient time. If they really cannot wait,
keep them short.
The biggest time thief of all is without a doubt the trivial
tasks that we do in order to put off more essential work.
It is a natural inclination to put off the hardest and most
complicated work for as long as possible, by often doing other,
less essential tasks first. In order to overcome this, make
a list of the tasks that you need to get done, and determine
whether they are essential, desirable or non-essential. Determine
when your most productive period of the day is, and assign
the essential tasks to then. Do not try and put them off –
they need to be done, and rapidly. Intersperse those essential
tasks with the desirable tasks to break down the slog of doing
the essential tasks. Consider delegating the non-essential
tasks, or perhaps even removing them altogether.
By making these changes, you will find yourself gaining time
where you previously did not have it. Maximise this gained
time by having a weekly schedule of work that needs to be
done, and when you will do it. Whilst it does not need to
be totally inflexible, it will at least give your working
week a structure. Copy it down into your diary, so if something
else comes up you know that that time is already committed
to something else.
One of the best and easiest things you can do to save time
may seem the simplest – tidy your desk. A tidy desk
can save an endless amount of time, allowing you to gain access
to files and equipment much more rapidly than from under piles
of paperwork in a chaotic mess!
By making these alterations, and carefully planning your
time, you can create yourself extra time, by not even adding
hours to the day! By effectively using your time you can reserve
your leisure time for yourself, and hopefully banish those
nights of having to take unfinished work home.
Tops Tips for Effective Time Management:
• Get a good secretary
• Delegate non-essential tasks and paperwork to colleagues
• Designate a time in the day to phone people
• Designate a time in the day or week to see colleagues
• Keep your door closed
• Keep meetings short, focused and follow the agenda
• Do not put off essential but boring tasks
• Identify when you work best, and do your most complicated
work then
• Have a weekly schedule
• Tidy your desk!
West End Training runs a one day ‘Time Management’
course that tackles these issues, and trains you to maximise
your working time to gain maximum benefit.
Back
|