Time Management and the "to do" listLearn Management Articles on management-info.biz. Time Management and the "to do" list article will help answer your questions on Management Articles.We at management-info.biz specialize in Management Articles. Management Articles at management-info.biz provides the most up to date news and articles. If you have questions please do not hesitate to contact us.
How can you make time management work for you? Really that's the question, regardless of what system you choose to apply to your time management needs, it has to be something that can work for you. If your time management tool, choice or system doesn't work for you then it simply becomes another task that has to be accomplished in an already busy day. Most time management starts with something as useful as a 'to do' list. We all have tasks that must be accomplished within a certain period of time, whether that time frame is a single day or a plan for the next several months. Tasks are added to the list and crossed out as they are accomplished. Your 'to do' list can be as simple as a notebook page, a daily page in your planner, a function of MS Outlook or a task list on your PDA. In general a 'to do' list is a simple and effective way to see all the tasks that impact your day. Just follow a few simple guideline and your 'to do' list will work for you (and not the other way around). Creating and prioritizing a 'To Do' list: 1. First create a simple To-Do List. Using whichever tool you've chosen. 2. List all of the tasks for which you are responsible. 3. Don't worry about accomplishing everything right now. The key is to get the right things done by prioritizing. 4. A To-Do list will most likely be a living, never-ending document. New things appear as old ones are cleared away. For each item on the list, answer these questions: One Time or Reoccurring - Do you have to complete this task more than once? Often? Perhaps on a regular basis? Due Date - When must the task be completed by? Time Required For Completion - How long will the task take to complete? Is the task variable? Other Resources Required - What other resources will be needed to complete this task? Benefits and Consequences - What are the benefits of completing the task? The consequences on not completing it? Use the answers to these questions to decide which tasks must be completed first. Once you have prioritized your tasks you are ready to start scheduling them. Plan the completion of each task. Start with the givens. Block out those tasks with known times. Place the rest of your tasks into the schedule according to your priorities. Build in some flexibility so that you can handle life's little emergencies. Pay attention to the resources required. Remember that you yourself are a resource. Match tasks requiring the most mental effort to those portions of your day when you feel the most productive. Don't forget to include personal time. (if you have scheduled every minute of your day for work, when are you going to refresh, regroup, renew?) Most time management tools are really creative ways of completing a 'to do' list. If you choose to use something like a PDA or a computer program like MS Outlook you can easily manage reoccurring events and meetings by reserving blocks of time and creating reminders for those things that might get lost in the daily shuffle of work and paper. If you choose to use a planner, remember to carry reoccurring event through to the next day, week or month. Once your comfortable working with your 'to do' list you can expand it to include goal setting.
While 'to do' list may get you started on your time management endeavors there are all kinds of thoughts and theories out there about how to effectively manage our time. I would like to think that if I can complete all the tasks I have to accomplish today, and check them off my list, I might be able to schedule an extra hour of sleep. Maybe I can put it on my 'to do' list. ;-)
|
More Articles:1. Leading with Power and Authority: Energize Others with Deep Green Leadership One of the most significant aspects of leadership involves the stewardship of resources both collective and individual. People instinctively want to understand how their needs will be met in the present and in the future. When they are confident their needs will be cared for, they experience a sense of control and a feeling of power. Ironically, in the process they must acknowledge a dependence upon collective action for success. They internalize the collective agenda as their own—a deep s… 2. Situational Leadership as the Key to Effectively Managing People By Nick Larson For over 25 years, major corporations and organizations throughout the world have used the concepts of Situational Leadership to improve the effectiveness of their managers. Dr. Heresy and Dr. Blanshard at Ohio State University to provide managers with a practical and simple approach to achieve the best results from their people developed one of the most outstanding leadership models.There are many ways you can be an effective leader – there is no single “school solution” to the management pro… 3. How to Reject a Job Applicant By Michael Mercer A Nightmare That Really HappenedOver 10 years ago, when I worked as a manager at a major corporation, I received a call from a headhunter about a magnificent job opening. It sounded like the perfect job for me. So, I went and was interviewed by the vice-president I would report to, if hired. He told me I was one of two finalists for the position.A week later, I got on an elevator with a person who looked totally elated. I asked her why she felt so jubilant. She proudly told me she was off… 4. Executive Humor at Meetings By John Mackenzie I don't encourage managers to wear funny hats, appear in self-deprecating skits, or otherwise emulate Saturday Night Live in an attempt to manufacture an image as, "Look, folks! I'm just one a' the guys!" If clients insist, I do what I can to help. I want the money. But it's not usually such a hot idea.I know it's done. Frequently. And I read reports of the exhilarating effects created by executives who deliver call-to-action keynotes dressed as a gunfighter or sumo wrestler. I notice, also, t… |
||||