Time Management Tips For Everyone | ncorde

Whether you are a career-driven professional, a small business owner, or a busy single parent, every single individual is bound by the restriction of time. Time is a special resource. A lot of people say it is a scarce resource, but most people don’t recognize this. The fact that most of us have many years ahead of us, doesn’t give the feeling of scarcity now, does it?

When you want to improve your time-management skills, there are many areas to look at. You can begin by understanding how you use the time you have. Next, you can identify bad habits and then you can learn the tools to change these habits. Here are a few tips and techniques you can apply to get more done and feel more productive.

“Time is really the only capital that any human being has and the only and the only thing you can’t afford to lose” Thomas Edison,

Planning

There is a common expression that says ¨By failing to plan, you are planning to fail.¨ If you don´t plan, you won´t know everything you need to do to make a project successful. You might be inadequately prepared, face unexpected problems, miss deadlines and as a result, your reputation could be at stake. That can lead you to feel overwhelmed, unorganized, and stressed. You must understand the value in planning—it may not have immediate results but don´t forget what it is costing you to not plan.
At the end of the day, spend at least 15 minutes planning your next day. This way, you will wake up with a clear sense of what needs to be done and by the end of the day, you will feel like you have accomplished what you needed to. The first step is you have to write everything down and not to keep anything in your head. Put it all down onto a piece of paper, an Excel spreadsheet—whatever works best for you. Also, remember to include your routine tasks in your daily planning. Allocate a specific amount of time for a particular task and how long you think it will take, but be realistic. Also, remember to keep your actions bite-sized—limit actions to a single activity. Completing the entire newsletter is too broad; will you be working on the layout, design, or content? You need to write out each activity, not the outcome.
So now you have written down everything you need to do and you have allocated the time to it. What’s next? Which task do we complete first? There are only a certain amount of hours in the day and in order to be more productive, we need to do the tasks that will bring us the most value. That means you need to prioritize and understand which tasks require action and prioritize sensibly.

Prioritizing

Ask yourself: if I could choose one thing on the list, which would be the most important? Or which tasks would give me the most return on my investment of time?
After identifying the most important task, look for the second most important, third, and so on, taking into account time allocation for each. You can group your tasks into different categories and this can help you to prioritize, though most of your time should be spent on categories 1 & 2 below:

  1. Important and urgent: These tasks expect a response in a short period of time. You need to do these tasks because they are urgent, but remember if you keep putting out fires you are not making time for the other tasks that are important but not urgent.
  2. Important and not urgent: These require action, and while it does not need to be done today, it needs to be done eventually. This category is where you should be spending most of your time.
  3. Urgent but not important: These tasks require immediate action, but are not a high priority. These happen when you find yourself saying yes to too many things for other people, or you find yourself being interrupted.
  4. Neither urgent/nor important: These are probably worth doing at some point but are often instances of busywork, often diversionary such as cleaning your emails, cleaning your desk, and other distractions. These tasks give you the feeling of being busy.
  5. Wasted time: Is your time better spent somewhere else? Is it worth doing this task? Can it be delegated?

Performing

Once you have planned and prioritized, you have to perform! This means that you have to concentrate on one task until it is 100% complete! You have to complete it with no distraction or diversion at all. Turn off your mobile device and close your email; remove those distractions that you know you normally have. This will increase your productivity, and both the quality and the quantity of your work. If you focus on completing one task at a time, you will be surprised at how much you can get done! Also—don’t forget to follow your energy (how you feel) and do important tasks when you are most energetic and alert.
Remember that Planning, Prioritizing, and Performing are the keys to success. And remember if you can´t find more time, change the way you use the time you already have!

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