The Time Management Training Institute

TIME MANAGEMENT TRAINING

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Time Management Training Workshops:

We help the participants in our Time Management training workshops to accomplish their time management goals through the use of our Time Management Use Analysis Tools which include  case study analysis, time management skill analysis, group problem solving, priority analysis, time management games and exercises, and on line pre-work.

For free, no obligation information on how we can help you please contact us today.

Participants in our Time Management training workshops will learn:

  • How to devote more time to important activities every day
  • How to prevent those daily “fires” from undermining important goals
  • To identify and communicate goals that keep priorities straight
  • How to design an effective To-Do list
  • How to deal with interruptions
  • The art of delegating low-priority tasks
  • How to organize your “busy work,” errands, etc.
  • How to use Time Blocks to maintain effectiveness
  • How to eliminate most annoying paper work
  • To balance professional responsibilities with personal time
  • To choose and use time management tools
  • How to set goals and evaluate them so that they provide value
  • How to stop procrastinating NOW
  • How to say NO (in a nice way, of course)
  • Identify and arrest time bandits

Time Management:
Six Simple Time Management Workshop Tips That Could Gain You an Extra Sixty Minutes a Day

As you are reading I have to assume that you constantly run out of time before you run out of task. There are countless books and programs available on time management and getting things done but they all take time to read. A classic 'Catch 22'. What I hope to do, or rather will do, for you is give you a few simple tips that I personally use every day. These will not only give you an extra sixty minutes or more, a day but you will also get more done. There is only one catch. You have to actually implement the tips.

Tip.

You have email. Doubtless, every time the 'ping' goes or the duck pops up you stop what you are doing and check the email. Stop doing that. In the days before email the postman arrived once a day. Nothing is ever so urgent that it can't wait another hour. Mute or disable whatever 'you have mail' signal you use. Better still, disable the automatic check and do it manually at predetermined times. Say, four times a day. When you do open up; read, action, delegate, file or bin immediately, each email in turn. Aim to have no more than half a dozen emails sitting in your in box, un-actioned at any given time. Be strict - you can do this.

Tip.

Subscriptions to mailing lists, blogs, feeds etc., seem to multiply like rabbits. Unfortunately, they all take time to read. Reduce the numbers of these and you will immediately have more time. But do it this way. Un-subscribe from ALL of them and then re-subscribe only to the ones that you absolutely have to have. It sounds drastic. It is drastic but you might surprise yourself. I know I did. This action alone gave me back at between two and three hours a week.

Tip.

Turn off the TV. Turn it on only when you want to watch something. When you are done watching turn it off again. Be selective about what you want to watch and schedule that time just as you schedule everything else. You will be scheduling everything! - see Tip on scheduling below.

Tip.

The oldest piece of advice in the book - make a list. It still works. Make a list of everything that has to be done and that you would like to accomplish. Then sort the priorities. In business anything that is geared towards generating income naturally outranks everything else, no matter how important or urgent the other items may seem at the time. Next, schedule everything on the list as per Tip on scheduling below.

Tip.

To best schedule your day, break the whole day down, from start to finish, into approximately forty-five minute chunks with a fifteen minute break after every two or three chunks. Think school or college. They scheduled the days that way because it is proven to work. Drop tasks that need to be done or that you want to achieve, into the forty five minute chunks. Some tasks may need more than one chunk. Try not to allot more than two consecutive time chunks to any task. Try and finish each task within the allotted time. If you don't finish and need more than a literal two or three minutes, then stop working on it, close the file and move on. Re-schedule it for a later time chunk. Download a countdown timer and use it. Several things happen here. One, most importantly, you will find that you really strive to finish a given task within the allotted time. Two, you become aware of how long you may be spending on tasks which are non-productive. Three, you become aware of how and on what, your time is being spent in general.

Tip.

You've scheduled the task now stay focused on the task at hand. If you can turn off phones for while do so. Put your cell phone on silent and let it take messages. Every time you find yourself distracted and about to wander onto another task and it will happen, check yourself and focus again on the task at hand. Remember, you only have what is left of your forty five minutes or ninety minutes if you scheduled a double chunk. If you do think of something else that needs doing, simply make a note of it and attend to it when appropriate.

Bonus Tip.

This one may be a difficult to accept and little tricky to master but if you can, it pays enormous dividends. I am referring to power napping. If you can find a comfy chair away from your desk or workspace, sit, relax and close your eyes for ten minutes. You will awake enormously refreshed. Yes, you might need to splash your face with cold water but it is really worth it. After you have eaten lunch is a good time and maybe early evening if you are needing to stay awake and active for a while. Keep it down to ten to fifteen minutes maximum, no more. Practice will get you there and when you do you will feel energized and get a whole lot more done.

Final Word.

Get seven hours sleep each and every night.

Chris Betts: link

Category: Time Management Workshop

Archived Time Management Training Tips