The author of this article has expertise in personalized gifts.
View all articles by David AndrewsAs entrepreneurs, we often think we can work miracles in the space of 24
hours. Looking at your long to-do list of critical items for this week, you
probably realize you are not going to achieve half of it. In other words you
have planned to fail.
I recently read that, in a given day, most people
only get two hours of actual work done! I’m starting to believe that could be
true. Time management appears to be a problem for almost the entire human
population. So I decided to break down the key characteristics of this
mysterious time thief:
Thief #1: Unrealistic Expectations
Look at
your daily list of things you want to achieve. Put the number of uninterrupted
hours needed to complete each one next to it. I’ll bet that for those of you
with long lists you’ve already gone past 10 hours.
Let’s be honest with
ourselves, this isn’t sustainable or useful so prioritize!
Outsource,
delegate or shift them to the following week.
Thief # 2: Social
Networking Addictions
If you have a smartphone you know how easy it is to
stay connected 24/7. Do you wake up in the morning and spend 30-60 minutes
reading your email, checking Facebook, responding on Twitter and reading some
blogs – from your bed?!
This is not time wasted but you do have to ask
yourself could it have been better spent focusing on completing items on your to
do list that are actually a priority? We all need to acknowledge our social
networking time as part of our working day – it’s educational and can be
incredibly valuable, like time you set aside to read a book, but it can be a
massive ineffective time suck too.
Account for time spent on Social
Networks as integral time to expand your business and connections, and work on
your sales, customer service and marketing goals. Schedule 2-3 sessions of it
into your day.
Thief # 3: Non-Critical Distractions
Oh yes we all
have these. “I must reply to that email to that person that has nothing to do
with my business and is not a good use of my time”. “I’ll just watch this
YouTube video that a friend sent”. “I’ll click on this website and then open up
links to all the other sites they suggest viewing”. Why?
Ask yourself: Is
this of benefit to my business? Will it make me money? Is this a key customer?
Can I help them in anyway that will benefit us both? If the answer is no, then
hit DELETE, don’t make that call or shut down that browser or don’t schedule
that meeting. Remember your time is precious.
Read more here: http://clubasteriaeducation.com/authors/how-to-catch-the-time-thief-and-get-more-done/
The
author of this article has expertise in Club Asteria Entrepreneur Education.
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The author of this article has expertise in personalized gifts.
View all articles by David Andrews