Thursday 19 June 2008

Too Busy in the Office?

Do you hear yourself saying 'Where does the time go..?' or 'I feel like I haven't got anything done?'

Every day around the world a common complaint in the office is that there just isn’t time to get everything done. The result of packed schedules is that workers don’t achieve everything they’d like to during their time at work or they don’t perform to the standard they feel is right for them.

Here are 3 ways to get more done each day, leave work on time and go home satisfied you've achieved a huge amount without being frazzled at the end



1. Set time limits
Rather than starting a task and allowing it to take as long as it takes, decide in advance how long you are willing to spend on each activity. If you’re clear with yourself with what time you want a job completed by, you’ll focus and avoid distraction to make sure it’s done in time. Emails could take no more than 5 minutes; calls no longer than 10 minutes and meetings no longer than half an hour. If you don’t set time limits you can find yourself at the end of a day still trying to complete something you started first thing.

2. Take breaks
If you arrive at work in the morning and the day stretches out ahead of you as one big block of busy-ness, you can feel overwhelmed. Planning regular breaks means you’ll work effectively in short sharp bursts of productivity punctuated with slots of doing something that takes your mind off work and clears your head ready for the next round of activity.

3. Move on quickly
One person we worked with had a 40 minute time limit for everything he did during a day. Whether it be proposals, costings, meetings or lunches; whatever he was doing, he’d move on to the next task after 40 minutes. He claimed that after this time he stopped having useful thoughts on each task so he’d move on to re-energise his brain. He also built in a slot during each day to return to any tasks with thoughts that came into his head while he was thinking about other things.

The key to success with getting more done is to maintain energy and focus throughout each day. This is best achieved by making progress so always keep in mind how each task you take is moving you forwards. If at any stage you feel your not making progress, your energy and motivation will wane and results will slow. You're at work to get things done and achieve a something, but you don't want to spend all your time there and hours thinking about the office when you get home.
Do it, Get it Done, Get home.

1 comment:

Chase said...

I myself use 10 minutes of focused work, some call it a sprint. I've found it takes me about 10 minutes to really get into my work, but when I think about tasks I often think about them from a much longer perspective which tends to overwhelm me a bit. 10 minutes is mess around time, pocket change to me. So I can start my work and get into a groove, get some momentum. I do like the 40 minute max constraint for all work, that's a nice wrinkle I'll have to investigate.