Sunday, May 20, 2007
101 ways to organize your life
Project Management (and life) Wisdom straight from the mouths of the horses – oops, I mean project managers:
Leadership
1. Keep your approach friendly: People are not looking to make friends at work, but refraining from an aggressive approach towards your employees is a good idea. The whip - your - team - into - submission approach worked with the "Pyramids of Giza" project – but it is outdated now. The days when you could bully and scare the s*** out of your team are over. Be diplomatic and assertive, instead.
2. When taking on a new project/responsibility at work, convey to your management the extent of authority you need in order to effectively execute your project. Ensure that you have the authority that you need before you start work on your project.
3. Being people-oriented does not mean that you cannot be task-oriented (and vice-versa).
4. One-to-one: Meet regularly with your team members on a one-on-one basis. When you apply this principle to your kids, it makes each of them feel special.
5. Nobody appreciates a micro-manager: Don’t sit on the heads of your team members.
6. Giving autonomy does not mean not keeping track of progress.
7. Learn how to manage people (more difficult than it sounds, believe you me!), and the rest of your job will that much easier to execute.
8. As a leader, you should have the ability to bind the team together and give them a sense of “we’re in this together.” For instance, as the head of your family, you can promote bonding by setting aside time for family board games, story-telling sessions, family picnics, family prayers and the like.
9. Stay visible – As a leader, you need to be visible in good times, as well as when there are problems to address.
10. Your reputation depends on your perceived credibility and integrity: A very basic item for leaders is to ensure that promises made are promises kept. If action is committed, it must be performed.
11. Personality: As a leader, does your personality influence and inspire your team?
12. Leadership CAN be learned. Focus on these areas to improve your leadership skills:
Initiative Leverage your charisma to influence others Lead purposefully and with commitment Develop a result-oriented approach Cultivate an attitude of optimism Work on your self-confidence - especially for weakness areas (for instance, if you are particularly nervous around people with an intimidating body language, create a plan to tackle that, and come across as confident and in-control in their presence.) Cultivate empathy so that you can encourage and nurture your team Learn to identify winners – and nurture them Learn to read between the lines to understand the underlying concern that prompted the dialogue The ability to motivate people so that they stretch out of their "comfort zones" Improve your decision-making abilities by learning from past decisions Learn to see the big picture Polish your Goal Setting skills Develop Personal Goals and examine them at regular intervals Effective Time Management 13. Flexibility: While it is a good thing to be firm and stand by your decisions, It is important that you are flexible enough to realize when plans need to change. View planning as an ongoing process. That way, you can change course midway without too much damage, if the original plan is not working. Are you open to continuous planning and updating of the plan?
Effective personnel management (Managing your team / family unit)
14. Stand up for your team. When your employees are in the right, have the guts to take up their case.
15. Don’t let team members intimidate you with technical mumbo-jumbo. Don’t feel stupid when you ask them to explain what they are saying in layperson’s language.
16. Match assignments with skill sets: Is every team member equipped to handle his part of the assignment? If not, then you are in deep trouble!
17. Creative Solutions: A Japanese story – when a little girl kept wearing the wrong shoe on the wrong foot, her parents found a solution. There was half a smiley face on either shoe. The smiley face was complete only when she wore her shoes the correct way. Problem solved. It can be as simple as that if we use our creativity.
18. When you pressure your team to deliver faster than is humanly possible, don’t be surprised to see a poor quality, bug-laden product.
19. Agree on rules: In project management, once the design has been completed, the design and production staff create a style guide for future reference. Make the rules of the game clear to all players involved, and to any players who join in later on.
20. Building Trust: Build trust within the team by demonstrating to each team member that everyone is important and creating a sense of personal value and contribution.
21. According to the book "Retaining Your Best People" (Harvard Business School Press), retention should become a core strategy. A very significant and important piece of advice from the book and something that all leaders should do on a regular basis is to "let your best people know you treasure them, count on them, and want to reward them in as many ways as possible."
22. Look beyond money: There should be an effort by the manager, project manager, or business executive to determine what the non-monetary interests of the key players are. Translated to a family situation, don't sit smug thinking that you are doing your bit by bringing in the bacon. Your family needs more than that from you - your attention and interest, for instance.
23. Say thanks, offer words of support, and show appreciation for good work.
24. Reward your key players as often as possible. People generally won't work for people who just don't care for them.
25. Provide Challenges – Encourage your team to stretch beyond their comfort zone. This will help them see just how far they can go.
Recognition
26. Rewarding works better than nagging: A reward can be something as simple as a coin or a note of appreciation – as long as your employees perceive it as a symbol of recognition, it works.
The relationship between Accountability, Empowerment, Ownership and Motivation
27. The buck stops here: You are accountable for your task / project. However, this does not mean that you do not delegate. Delegate work to your team members, let them know that they are accountable for their assignment/s, and ensure that they have the resources so that they can deliver successfully. Decide the plan of action beforehand, and decide how follow-ups will happen.
28. Ownership: Have an attitude of owning your work.
29. Minimize your supervision - Provide a sense of autonomy. Freedom is a major motivator and builds trust on both sides. (Tip: But don’t tune out completely.)
30. To motivate, you have to empower. Motivation involves not only being enthusiastic and pumped up about approaching the task, but also involves being equipped with the tools and the ability to complete the assignment. When you delegate an assignment, convey to the team member that it is now THEIR exclusive responsibility that the job gets done. If it doesn't, they will be held accountable.
31. Accountability of Self: Take a couple of co-workers into confidence about your expectations from yourself. Besides making your goals clearer to yourself, this helps others keep track of your progress.
Communication
32. Clear, open communication is a prerequisite for a healthy, result-oriented work environment.
33. Keep them posted: A lack of information is a fertile ground for rumor, gossip and insecurity. Keep the team in the loop about information concerning and affecting them.
34. When in doubt, ask: Don’t refrain from asking “stupid” questions – they may save miscommunication and misunderstandings, resulting in saved time and money!
35. It is bad policy to wait till your team members find out important information concerning them from other sources. That information should come from you.
36. Ask questions and listen to suggestions.
37. Feedback: Provide it often and ask for it. Keep an open mind. (Tip: Don’t expect all feedback to be pleasant and positive.)
38. Listen: It’s always important to listen, but even more so in tough times. Listen for undertones.
39. Be Open: While you should not be a dumping ground for grievances, you SHOULD be accessible enough for team members to openly discuss concerns or delays. (Tip: If you are not open, you'll find out about the concern or delay later in the game when there is less time to fix it.)
40. Touch Base: One-on-one and in meetings, meet up with your team members (or family members). (Sitting in front of the television with the family does not count as touching base!)
Morale
41. Pride: Have you read the Japanese story about the janitor who described his work as “Contributing to the progress of his country?” His logic – if the executives did not have clean toilets to use, they couldn’t be very productive, could they? That is the kind of pride you need to have in your work / project.
42. Keep your sense of humor: It helps – especially in situations where no one feels like laughing. (Like the time a short executive stood on a chair so that she was at eye-level with her colleague, and she quipped, “Maybe now we can see eye-to eye?” The laughter that followed this lightened up the tension that everyone in the room had been feeling up to that point.)
43. Have fun @ work: It’s true that all work and no play makes Jack a dull b ec638dcoy. And fun, on the other hand, recharges your batteries and lets you approach work with a fresh mind.
44. Celebrate achievements – even mini-achievements: Celebrating at every landmark gives your team something to look forward to, and lets them remember that they are making steady progress towards their goal – project completion!
45. Give praise: When a team member does something great, let them know it! Make sure your praise is sincere. Also, your praise will be valued only if it is given when it's due.
46. Help Others Help Themselves: If a team member / family member has a mental block, you can guide this individual to tear it down. (Tip: Tackle such issues early on, because a negative frame of mind can be highly infectious.)
Self-Management
47. Use impatience to your advantage: Channel the energies generated by your impatience to propel the process faster.
48. Procrastinators don’t make good project managers. Find a way around your weakness (procrastination) if you want to achieve your targets.
49.24X7 availability for the project is not the way to effective achievement of targets. It will only end up overwhelming you. “The key is to schedule and set boundaries so you don't need to be accessible 24/7.” (webmonkey)
50. Do you like what you are doing? If not, why are you still doing it? Money is not compensation enough for being trapped in a role you do not like. Because for every hour you spend doing something you don’t enjoy, you are giving up doing something that you do.
51. Be Informed: Know not only what is happening in your organization, but also keep track of changes within other organizations that may impact your team members.
52. Analyze after the event: A postmortem offers valuable insights for future reference.
53. Ask yourself
(1) Do I know what is expected of me?
(2) Do I expect I can perform that which is expected of me?
(3) Do I expect a reward of value to me personally?
Stress
54. Use stress as an ally: Let stress work as the red flag that tells you to take action.
55. One key element in dealing with stress is taking control. A feeling of helplessness increases stress. So take some action that reflects that you do retain some amount of control over the situation – even if that little control is only over your reaction to the stressor.
Personal organization
56. Nothing beats being organized. Keep an organized filing system, for instance, even something as simple as storing documents chronologically will go a long way in saving you time and stress when you need to locate information.
57. Keep a daily journal where you jot down the day’s highlights. Then, set aside an hour on Saturday night/evening to analyze your week. What did you do wrong? What did you do right? What will you do differently the next time in a similar situation? This practice will help you grow professionally and personally in the long run.
58. Make daily lists and cross things off. Keep a personal scorecard and grade yourself weekly.
59. Buy a Daily Planner; now actually use it.
Planning
60. Plan ahead: Before you plunge headlong into work, spend some time planning your project.
61. Break down work into tasks: Breaking down the project into smaller tasks (and mini-tasks if required) ensures that you have a systematic approach.
62. Keep it visible and visual: Plotting a chart or graph about work progress and tacking it in a prominent place on your soft board (or keeping the softcopy on your desktop) ensures that your progress is visible to you.
63. Infrastructure: A reliable server lays the foundation for efficient work. Good infrastructure and equipment translate to smooth functioning for any task.
64. A step-by-step plan is the best way to ensure you know where you are going.
65. In project management, the bulk of the work happens after the planning phase. How well this implementation of the plan happens depends on how thorough and specific the planning and documentation was. Bad planning translates to bad implementation.
66. Good planning alone does not ensure good implementation. Follow-through becomes vital here. As the leader, the project manager ensures that the team sticks to the plan.
67. As a project manager, you need to check that everyone is following the functional spec and style guide, that they are using the proper naming conventions and version controls, and that backup files are being saved on the server. Rules are useful only insofar as they are implemented and followed.
68. Be prepared: Know your stuff front-wards, back-wards, and every way in between. This does not mean that you need to say everything you know. Being prepared helps you to quickly answer questions and convey that you know what you are talking about.
69. Understanding the goals: A project is truly successful only when you are meeting the need for which it was created. Identifying the scope and requirements at the outset and also acknowledging that in the real world, these can change is a good starting point.
70. Getting it right from the outset: The most important part of a project’s life cycle is the identification of its requirements.
Conflicts
71. Manage conflict (especially within the team) at an early stage – before it reaches crisis proportions.
72. The best way to side-step petty politics - nip conflicts in the bud.
73. Remember that no two people view the situation with the same pair of eyes – they actually see different things. This helps in understanding differences of viewpoints and eventually resolving conflict within your team.
74. Create the Team Charter; and keep it up-to-date: A team charter is a code of conduct developed by the project management team and later adopted or modified by the project team. It defines the mutual expectations of each team member of one another. As a project manager, hold yourself and others accountable to be consistent with this code.
Risk Management
75. There is no such thing as a zero-risk project: There is no such thing as a risk-free life.
76. If you want to understand a risk fully, identify its causes as well as its effects.
77. How do you respond to risks? There are four ways:
a) Aggressive responses: You can achieve avoidance by removing or changing a cause, or by breaking the cause-risk link so that the threat is no longer possible.
b) Third party: You involve a third party to manage the risk.
c) Size: You can change the size of a risk, thus reducing a threat.
d) Acceptance: You accept the possibility of the risk, and create a fallback plan to recover from negative impacts.
78. When a project is desperately troubled, first take action to contain the damage then worry about recovery, just the way a first aid or rescue teams first “contain the damage” and consider other options after the victim’s condition stabilizes.
79. Checklists for risks:
Trouble sometimes stems from omissions. It is easy to “forget” key components of a work package. A checklist reduces the potential of leaving out important considerations.
Work / Life Balance
Naps, Breaks and Vacations: The rejuvenation trio
80. Take a break: When you feel overwhelmed, take a break; get your mind off work for some time. Chances are, you will be able to handle the situation better after a break.
81. Get enough sleep: There is no substitute for sleep. All else being equal, a well-rested person is better equipped to meet the challenges that the day presents, as compared to a person who has not had enough rest.
82. When you plan a vacation and want to really enjoy it, ensure that all the work-oriented nitty gritty is taken care of, and out of the way.
83. Manage your vacation as a project (a lot of planning) if you enjoy doing a lot of things rather than just lying around idly all day (which is also an excellent way to recharge your batteries, by the way).
84. Remember GIGO? Garbage in, Garbage out:
Eat low-energy fast food and be prepared for irritability, mood swings, and blood sugar swings. Eat healthy, wholesome and nutritious meals to bring out the best in you.
Bonding and Loving
85. A healthy personal life translates to a well-balanced, healthy person. Make sure you are not succeeding at the workplace at the cost of your family and loved ones. Given enough time, they will learn to live without you around – without complaining about it. Tip: Pets are wonderful to shower you with (unconditional) love when nobody else will.
86. No job in the world is worth neglecting your kids for. Your kids will outgrow their strong dependence on you – the job will always be there (one or the other). If you are not there for them when they need you the most, don’t count on their unconditional acceptance and love for you later on.
Your clients and stakeholders
87. Keep the stakeholders updated: Keep the sponsors and stakeholders posted about the progress. This becomes more important when there are unforeseen problems or newer risks; like when there are delays.
88. Understand the need: When working on the project, it helps if you understand what need your project will fulfill. Sometimes (make that often) your client’s description the project will not match his need. Ensure that what you are doing will serve the purpose that it is meant to serve.
89. When to give in and when to hold your ground: Once a project has started, the client will almost always want you to incorporate changes and add tasks. Sometimes requests are legitimate, and it is possible to incorporate them without throwing the project off track. But when the client’s demands require significant changes, you need to take a call. Michelangelo Buonarroti’s ceiling of the Sistine chapel project is a classic case in point. The original project involved creating twelve paintings. By the time the project was completed, over 300 paintings had been created, costing the artist his health and youth.
90. When stakeholders do not respond to information or do not respond in an expected manner; create alternative, proactive communication mechanisms to avert trouble.
91. Don’t forget to ask, “What does my client want to be able to do as a result of this project?” Translated to real life situations, every time you work on something, ask yourself what you (or someone else) hope to accomplish from that activity. The answer can be as simple as “feeling refreshed and rejuvenated” to something as complex as “moving towards my dream of contributing to a cleaner and healthier planet”.
Across Borders - It's a global world!
92. Whether working with offshore teams or just a diverse group at home, today's project environment is multicultural. Be open to and aware of your project stakeholders' cultures. Not only should we respect our colleagues' cultures, but we should understand and EXPERIENCE them. Go out for Dim sum with the team or learn a new phrase in another language. (allpm.com)
93. Cross-cultural global relations:
(courtesy Elizabeth Larson, PMP and Richard Larson, PMP)
a) Plan extra time to model requirements when working cross-culturally.
While modeling is an excellent tool for overcoming some cross-cultural communication issues, multi-cultural project management may still take extra time to get the requirements and ensure that important facts are captured.
b) It is important to plann more time for capturing requirements when working in multi-cultural environments.
c) Meeting in Person to Develop Relationships Saves Time and Money in the Long Run. In some cultures tasks are completed based on established relationships and, ultimately, trust, rather than simply being driven by schedules. Attempting to forge ahead with tasks before spending social time with clients can well lead to incomplete requirements. While it may not be standard practice all over the world, when PMs are working in some other cultures taking the time to meet face-to-face can save time and money for your project and organization.
The Zen of Project Management - George Pitagorsky's tips
94. Zen is a form of self-investigation that has its roots in China and Japan.
It is a merging of Indian Buddhism and Taoism. The Zen approach is one that cuts through complexity to go straight to the heart of a matter. Zen promotes knowing through inner experience. It promotes discipline from within. In the Zen way, the individual comes to fully know his or her own nature by cutting through intellectualism, cultural barriers, conditioned responses, rules and any other “extras” that get in the way of seeing the essence. One who sees the essential nature of things has wisdom. Wisdom leads naturally to compassion. Wisdom and compassion are at the heart of our essential nature.
95. What is a wise approach?
It is an approach that gives us the ability to see things clearly and minimize the probability that we will be reactive and ineffective in achieving our goals and objectives. Wisdom is the synthesis of knowledge into active, practical use. A wise person moves through life with equanimity, un-phased by the chaos surrounding her. A wise person has choices. He is not unconsciously driven and reactive.
96. "Only the person who learns to relax is able to create, and for them, ideas reach the mind like lightning." Even in face of chaos, pressure and stress, relax! How? Relaxation is not the same as tuning out and turning off. It is not somnabulence. Learn to rest in the moment. Cultivate the ability to quickly focus on your breath and body just long enough to find your "center". Then engage.
97. Serve someone. Serve everyone.
That is the secret of wise leadership. There is a difference between a leader who serves and one who just leads. "The difference manifests itself in the care taken by the servant-first to make sure that other people's highest priority needs are being served." Such a leader asks if "those served grow as persons; do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants?" When the motivation is to serve, posturing, politics and self-serving gains are replaced by useful effective action.
98. Mental models are deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations … that influence how we understand the world and how we take action. ” They may be useful, or they may lead to habitual, reactive behavior. What paradigms condition your behavior? Do they help or hinder you? Do you have the courage to question them? Do they provide established basis for analyzing problems, or do they limit your ability to act in the way that is best for the current situation.
99. Desiring the impossible gives rise to suffering
It is also the root of many failed projects. When undertaking a project, you have the duty to question authority, to push back. Ask questions, rather than voice objections. Why is this the deadline? What if it isn't met? What do you really need, and by when? What assumptions are you making? What would you give up to get what what you really need? Will we have the right resources at the right time?
100. The Good, The Bad, The Continuous Improvement:
We learn at least as much from bad experience as we do from good. Yet, blaming, fear of punishment and models like “I’m so smart, how can I make mistakes” lead us to avoid looking at and learning from our mistakes. Continuous improvement begins with the candid acceptance of the existing situation, particularly its flaws. If you don’t accept what is, you can’t change it.
101. How to Push Back when Negotiating:
When pushing back to negotiate a rational schedule and budget you need solid footing. Come to the table with a well articulated plan, complete with assumptions. Use your communication, task definition, estimating, scheduling, and risk management skills and knowledge to offer realistic alternatives. Seek win-win solutions. What if you are forced to accept an irrational schedule or budget? Try to do your best to negotiate expectations that can be met given the project’s scope, resources, and risks. Do your best to work within the project’s real-world conditions.
61 Time Saving Tips
Want to know if you are a time saver or time killer? Answer these three questions:
Is your tight work schedule forcing you to forego your daily exercises? Do your clients complain about delayed deliveries? At tax-filing time, do you have to search for all the bills and important documents?
If you’ve answered yes to even one of the above questions, you probably aren’t managing your time wisely. The average person spends less than 7 hours of their day productively. The remaining time is typically wasted leaving us overwhelmed and stressed. So how do you squeeze an extra hour here and there? How do you achieve more in less time? Here are 61 time saving tips to help you get the most out of your day.
Time Saving Tips on the Job
1. You DO have enough time for everything.
This is the first thing you need to realize. You feel pressed for time because you misuse it. Do you surf the web or watch TV just because you are bored? When you’re stretched for time, these activities will only worsen the situation. Turn off the TV, shut down the computer, and complete whatever task you are delaying.
2. Prioritize your tasks.
Most people spend 80% of their time trying to complete 20% of their tasks. You could set aside ten minutes every day to plan your day’s activities.
3. Create and keep your "To Do List" handy.
Don’t skip over the difficult items when checking to see what needs completing next.
4. When you plan your schedule for the day, ensure that you leave 20% of your day free. This allows for emergencies and interruptions.
5. Do large, time-consuming tasks scare intimidate you?
Break them into smaller tasks and work on them one at a time.
6. Get it right the first time.
Take your time to do a quality job. It may take more time to complete the task, but there is a lesser chance of errors. This way, you can avoid making time-consuming corrections.
7. Reward yourself.
Whenever you complete important tasks within a stipulated period, give yourself a little treat. This will give you an incentive to complete work on time.
8. Avoid guilt.
If you didn’t do something at the time you assigned yourself, try to reschedule it instead of feeling guilty. Guilt pangs are a waste of time.
9. Avoid thinking of work on weekends.
10. Eat light, especially lunch.
This will ensure that you don't get sleepy in the afternoon.
11. Multitask.
Jobs that are not too critical and don’t require 100% concentration can be clubbed together – exercise while you catch up on your favorite program, or cut coupons while talking on the telephone. At the office, you can send routine emails while talking on the phone. Multitasking frees 30-60 minutes of time to be used later in the day.
12. Avoid perfection.
You are only setting yourself up for defeat. When you try to bring perfection to difficult tasks, you will only end up avoiding them.
13. Work now, play later.
It’s human nature to want to do the fun things first. Train yourself to complete the work at hand before you let your hair down.
14. Try and complete similar tasks in the same block of time.
Does your job have you making a high volume of sales calls everyday? Try to make all your phone calls in the same time period. Avoid having to retrace your steps to perform a redundant task you could have done more productively at an earlier time.
15. Prepare.
Have to reach office at 8 am? Doesn’t help if you get out of bed at 7:30 am. You must give yourself some buffer time to cover unexpected events – like a sudden traffic jam.
16. Get a good night’s sleep and plenty of exercise.
This regimen will improve your focus and concentration, which in turn, helps you be more efficient and productive.
17. Don't take work home and vice versa.
18. Track time.
Keep a diary detailing all the tasks you perform in a week. At the end of the week, check the diary to see how much time was spent doing what. See if you can employ your time in a better manner.
19. Once a month, schedule a few hours to pay bills make necessary phone calls.
20. Take a time management course.
Most of us could do with some professional guidance on how to optimize our time.
21. Take a break.
Stress is a fact of modern work life. If you feel your stress levels have risen too high, take time off to let off the steam. Too much stress can derail your attempts at getting organized. You could exercise a bit, or even take a day off.
22. Write notes to yourself.
This helps you stay on track and ensure that important work gets done.
23. Avoid nonessential tasks.
You must consider your goals and schedule before you accept additional work.
Working with your Colleagues
24. Play time games.
Games are fun and people love that element of competition. Set deadlines for tasks and see who delivers the best quality product/ service within the stipulated time.
25. Commend.
Every time somebody completes work on time ensure that you show your appreciation. You could have an employee of the week contest where the employee who completes all tasks on time for the entire week is accorded recognition and praise.
26. Create a work chart for an entire week.
This way everyone knows what they are doing tomorrow and don’t have to twiddle their thumbs and wait for instructions. Don’t bother with extremely detailed schedules – it’s a waste of time and can be confusing as well.
27. Discourage long telephone conversations.
The office is meant for working, not making social phone calls to family, friends and acquaintances.
28. Make your office techno-savvy.
Get the most up-to-date equipment to help you and your colleagues complete work faster. A small investment of $1,000-$1,500 in equipment can save you tens of thousands of dollars in staff time.
29. Get your colleagues to clean up and clear out the office on a monthly, quarterly or semi-annual basis. Go through and organize your papers, files and folders and throw away any unnecessary paperwork and correspondence.
30. Chatty colleagues not only disrupt their own schedules, but also prevent you from completing your task on time. Get them to correct their habit or red flag them when you are working on meeting deadlines.
31. Match tasks to capabilities.
Each employee in your organization has certain innate talents. Tap them by ensuring that each person performs task that he/she is good at. Research shows that employees perform better when they are assigned tasks they enjoy doing.
32. Avoid unnecessary meetings.
If something can be resolved without a meeting, do so. And where unavoidable, create a strict agenda for the meeting and stick to it.
33. Introduce the email culture.
Avoid phone calls between colleagues. Wherever possible, ask your colleagues to contact you via e-mail. Ensure that the e-mail communication is clear, crisp and concise.
34. Standardize.
Regular tasks like sales letter-writing can be standardized to avoid delay.
35. Encourage delegation.
If there is some job that can be done by someone else, pass it on.
36. Encourage exercise.
Ask your colleagues to take a 10 to 15-minute break during the day for some exercise. It’s best scheduled for the afternoon when people tend to get a bit drowsy. The exercise session will perk them up and keep them going for the rest of the day.
37. Ensure that your colleagues bring problems to you as soon as they detect them. The sooner the issue gets resolved, the faster the task gets completed.
Saving Time at Home
38. Start your day 15 to 30 minutes earlier.
It may be difficult initially, but you’ll be gaining that much extra time in your day.
39. Set out your work clothes and pack your lunch at night.
40. Have kids? Teach them to clean up after themselves.
Show your kids how to maintain their own rooms and reward them for doing so.
41. Share household responsibilities with your children and spouse.
This will save time, reduce your workload and help your children develop a sense of responsibility.
42. Create a routine for the children – especially sleep time.
This will give you free time at home to tie up all the loose ends.
43. Is your family just getting the hang of your time management schedule?
Set a timer to go off when it’s time to switch tasks. This will help them stick to their respective schedules. They will also get an idea of how long it takes to complete each task.
44. Keep phone numbers, and other emergency information in an easy to find place, like the on the refrigerator, or near the phone. In case of emergency you will not have to waste time running around for information.
45. Limit grocery shopping to once a week.
46. Plan your weekly menu.
Decide what to cook every day of the following week and shop accordingly. This can save a lot of time.
47. Cook big meals – stews, soups, roasts anything that can be had for more than a day.
48. Try not to compulsively clean.
It is far more important to relax a bit each day than to live in an immaculate house.
49. Avoid unnecessary trips to the bank.
You waste nearly 20 hours a year when you stop at the bank every two weeks to withdraw money. Save that time by withdrawing enough cash to last until you receive your next paycheck.
50. Get your own coffee.
You waste precious time by stopping at the convenience store for coffee on your way to work. Brew your own while you're getting dressed and save time and money.
51. Married or living in? Try doing things together.
This not only brings back the spark into your relationship, it also helps you save time by completing tasks faster.
52. Modernize your home.
Food processors, washing machines, dish washers, microwaves – use all of them to save time.
53. On the weekend, get your things ready for the next week.
Make sure you have five/ six clean, pressed outfits for the upcoming week.
54. Avoid a huge wardrobe – choosing your work wear becomes very tough and time consuming. Try to limit yourself to three or four colors and ensure that the everything goes together. Keep your colors for the weekend.
55. Get organized.
Create a place for everything and ensure that everyone in the family keeps things in their right places. This will save time that would otherwise be spent searching for something.
56. No emotional attachments to junk please.
If you don’t need something, just get rid of it. It clears the clutter in your home and reduces the time required to clean up.
57. When you’re done washing your clothes take them directly from the dryer and hang them up immediately to minimize the amount of time you’ll have to spend ironing.
58. Say no.
You don’t need to always be polite and politically correct. There are a lot of demands on your limited time, so avoid unnecessary wastes. For instance if an acquaintance wants you to attend a party with him/ her, and you don’t want to go, you must say no. You may hate having to turn down people – but realize that saying no frees up time for things that are more important.
59. Be organized.
Keep your receipts and bills together. This saves a lot of time and effort when it’s time to file taxes.
60. Stock up on supplies.
Keep certain basics such as stamps, envelopes, notepads and pens in your desk.
61. Don't get discouraged if your time management system doesn't work wonders immediately. It may require a little trial and error before you hit the right path.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
The Seven Habits - An Overview
Habit 1: Be Proactive
hange starts from within, and highly effective people make the decision to improve their lives through the things that they can influence rather than by simply reacting to external forces.
Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind
Develop a principle-centered personal mission statement. Extend the mission statement into long-term goals based on personal principles.
Habit 3: Put First Things First
Spend time doing what fits into your personal mission, observing the proper balance between production and building production capacity. Identify the key roles that you take on in life, and make time for each of them.
Habit 4: Think Win/Win
Seek agreements and relationships that are mutually beneficial. In cases where a "win/win" deal cannot be achieved, accept the fact that agreeing to make "no deal" may be the best alternative. In developing an organizational culture, be sure to reward win/win behavior among employees and avoid inadvertantly rewarding win/lose behavior.
Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood
First seek to understand the other person, and only then try to be understood. Stephen Covey presents this habit as the most important principle of interpersonal relations. Effective listening is not simply echoing what the other person has said through the lens of one's own experience. Rather, it is putting oneself in the perspective of the other person, listening empathically for both feeling and meaning.
Habit 6: Synergize
Through trustful communication, find ways to leverage individual differences to create a whole that is greater than the sum of the parts. Through mutual trust and understanding, one often can solve conflicts and find a better solution than would have been obtained through either person's own solution.
Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw
Take time out from production to build production capacity through personal renewal of the physical, mental, social/emotional, and spiritual dimensions. Maintain a balance among these dimensions.
the 7 habits of highly effective people
Dr Stephen Covey is a hugely influential management guru, whose book The Seven Habits Of Highly Effective People, became a blueprint for personal development when it was published in 1990. The Seven Habits are said by some to be easy to understand but not as easy to apply.
Don't let the challenge daunt you: The 'Seven Habits' are a remarkable set of inspirational and aspirational standards for anyone who seeks to live a full, purposeful and good life, and are applicable today more than ever, as the business world becomes more attuned to humanist concepts. Covey's values are full of integrity and humanity, and contrast strongly with the process-based ideologies that characterised management thinking in earlier times.
Stephen Covey, as well as being a renowned writer, speaker, academic and humanist, has also built a huge training and consultancy products and services business - Franklin Covey which has a global reach, and has at one time or another consulted with and provided training services to most of the world's leading corporations.
habit 1 - be proactive®
This is the ability to control one's environment, rather than have it control you, as is so often the case. Self determination, choice, and the power to decide response to stimulus, conditions and circumstances
habit 2 - begin with the end in mind®
Covey calls this the habit of personal leadership - leading oneself that is, towards what you consider your aims. By developing the habit of concentrating on relevant activities you will build a platform to avoid distractions and become more productive and successful.
habit 3 - put first things first®
Covey calls this the habit of personal management. This is about organising and implementing activities in line with the aims established in habit 2. Covey says that habit 2 is the first, or mental creation; habit 3 is the second, or physical creation. (See the section on time management.)
habit 4 - think win-win®
Covey calls this the habit of interpersonal leadership, necessary because achievements are largely dependent on co-operative efforts with others. He says that win-win is based on the assumption that there is plenty for everyone, and that success follows a co-operative approach more naturally than the confrontation of win-or-lose.
habit 5 - seek first to understand and then to be understood®
One of the great maxims of the modern age. This is Covey's habit of communication, and it's extremely powerful. Covey helps to explain this in his simple analogy 'diagnose before you prescribe'. Simple and effective, and essential for developing and maintaining positive relationships in all aspects of life. (See the associated sections on Empathy, Transactional Analysis, and the Johari Window.)
habit 6 - synergize®
Covey says this is the habit of creative co-operation - the principle that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, which implicitly lays down the challenge to see the good and potential in the other person's contribution.
habit 7 - sharpen the saw®
This is the habit of self renewal, says Covey, and it necessarily surrounds all the other habits, enabling and encouraging them to happen and grow. Covey interprets the self into four parts: the spiritual, mental, physical and the social/emotional, which all need feeding and developing.
Stephen Covey's Seven Habits are a simple set of rules for life - inter-related and synergistic, and yet each one powerful and worthy of adopting and following in its own right. For many people, reading Covey's work, or listening to him speak, literally changes their lives. This is powerful stuff indeed and highly recommended.
This 7 Habits summary is just a brief overview - the full work is fascinating, comprehensive, and thoroughly uplifting. Read the book, or listen to the full tape series if you can get hold of it.
In his more recent book 'The 8th Habit', Stephen Covey introduced (logically) an the eighth habit, which deals with personal fulfilment and helping others to achieve fulfilment too. The book also focuses on leadership. Time will tell whether the The 8th Habit achieves recognition and reputation close to Covey's classic original 7 Habits work.
Various phrases on this page are registered trade marks belonging to Stephen Covey.
Stephen Covey's principles are protected intellectual property and feature strongly in the Franklin Covey organization's portfolio of products and services.
Monday, April 16, 2007
Tips For Effective Time Management
– Think and Plan
– Organize in a way that makes sense to you
Set Goals:
– Decide what you want to do
– Take a “SMART” approach
– Goals give you required direction
Prioritize
– Prioritize and identify what you value
– Flagging/Highlighting can be very helpful
– Once prioritize, concentrate on those that would add value
Use a to do list:
– Find out what is urgent and important
– Put them in order of preferences
– One completed delete them from your list
Be Flexible:
– Allow time of interruptions and distractions
– Save larger block of time for priorities
– Ask yourself questions and get back to your goal
Consider your Biological Time:
– Find out which is the best time for you study
– Are you a morning person?
– A night owl?
– Late Afternoon?
Do Right Things Right
– Doing things right is Effectiveness
– Doing things right is Efficiency
– Focus first for Effectiveness
– Concentrate on Efficiency
Eliminate the Urgent:
– Urgent tasks have short term Consequences
– Important tasks are long term and goal related
– Flagging and or highlighting items are important
– Attach deadline to each of the items
Conquer Procrastination
– Learn to say “NO”
– Reward Yourself
Sunday, April 15, 2007
The efficiency curve
• The True Test of Willpower
• Build Your Self-Confidence
• Action Exercises
• Recommended Brian Tracy Program
The more you discipline yourself to working non-stop on a single task, the more you move down the "Efficiency Curve." You get more and more high-quality work done in less and less time.
Each time you stop working however, you break this cycle and move back up the curve to where every part of the task is more difficult and time-consuming.
SELF-DISCIPLINE IS THE KEY
Elbert Hubbard defined self-discipline as "the ability to make yourself do what you should do, when you should do it, whether you feel like it or not."
In the final analysis, success in any area requires tons of discipline. Self-discipline, self-mastery and self-control are the basic building blocks of character and high performance.
THE TRUE TEST OF WILLPOWER
Starting a high-priority task and persisting with that task until it is 100 percent complete is the true test of your character, your willpower and your resolve.
Persistence is actually self-discipline in action. The good news is that the more you discipline yourself to persist on a major task, the more you like and respect yourself, and the higher your self-esteem is.
And the more you like and respect yourself, the easier it is for you to discipline yourself to persist even more.
By focusing clearly on your most valuable task and concentrating single-mindedly until it is 100 percent complete, you actually shape and mold your own character. You become a superior person.
You become a stronger, more competent, confident and happier person. You feel more powerful and productive.
BUILD YOUR SELF-CONFIDENCE
You eventually feel capable of setting and achieving any goal. You become the master of your own destiny. You place yourself on an ascending spiral of personal effectiveness on which your future is absolutely guaranteed.
And the key to all of this is for you to determine the most valuable and important thing you could possibly do at every single moment and then, "Eat That Frog!"
ACTION EXERCISES
Once you start your most important task, discipline yourself to persevere without diversion or distraction until it is 100 percent complete. See it as a “test” to determine whether you are the kind of person who can make a decision to complete something and then carry it out. Once you begin, refuse to stop until the job is finished.