When you were young, there
was always a prerequisite to
having free time: completing
your chores, finishing your homework,
cleaning your room. Whatever it
was, the gist of the message was that
you couldn't do what you wanted to
with your time until your work was
done and things were in their place. It
was a rule meant to teach you a sense
of order. Work came first. Play, or
whatever else you might want to do,
always came second.
Many professionals still hold to the
same rule.
The problem is that in the grownup
world, work is never done. At the
end of the day, there is always more
you could do. This is especially true
in the marketplace, where tasks
revolve around others whose wants
and needs don't diminish when the
clock strikes five. We are often flooded
with to-dos that flow into next
week, and trying to stay productive
feels like trying to stack pebbles in the
middle of a raging river.
To compensate, we fall into any
number of time traps: makeshift strategies
that are intended to help us get
work done, but in the end only put us
in a deeper hole. Here are some guidelines
for escaping the three worst time
traps. But before I share these with you,
I should make a clarification. The solution
to being swamped is not better
time management. This is a false
notion. We can no more manage, tame,
or reclaim our time than we can lasso
the wind and tie it to a fence post. The
solution is to pay attention to (ergo,
manage) something you can control:
the tasks that fill up your time. This
activity is the overarching solution for
climbing out of any time trap.
Time Trap #1:
The Organization Trap
The majority of our disarray is
rarely the result of too much work or
too little time. Disorganization in the
workplace nearly always begins with a
habit of spending too much time on
meaningless, unproductive tasks.
Stepping out of the organization trap
(and actually getting organized) is primarily
a matter of cleaning up the clutter
that unnecessary tasks create.
Here's how I recommend you start:
- Never give your personal digits
to customers. One phone number, one
email address, and one mailing address
is enough. Anything more forces you to
retrieve and return too many messages
from too many places.
- Don't give your work digits to
friends. Ninety-nine percent of your
friendly workday correspondence is
neither time-sensitive nor critical. In
other words, it can wait until lunch or
after work. If it's an emergency, they
know where you work.
- Turn off the instant message
and email alert functions on your
computer. They cause needless interruptions
that are too tempting to resist,
but they rarely merit immediate action.
Set specific times to check your email
and stick to them. (See below How to Disable
Notifications in Microsoft Outlook.)
- Don't answer the phone unless
you are expecting a call. Unless you
are a retailer who takes phone orders,
the odds of getting a call requiring
immediate attention are slight. On your
voicemail greeting, let callers know the
specific times you check and return
messages.
- Avoid checking your personal
email during work hours. It's a needless
time-waster and won't make you
any richer. Catch up on the latest
drama during lunch or after hours.
Time Trap #2:
The Yes Trap
Author David Allen estimates that a
typical worker has about 170 interactions
every day. If you break this down
based on a 50-hour workweek, the
numbers are telling: 170 interactions
per day multiplied by 5 workdays
equals 850 interactions per week.
Divide these 850 weekly interactions by 50 hours a week and you find that
you have about 17 interactions every
hour. Or, in other words, you have
about 3 minutes to focus on any one
thing without interruption.
The problem is simple: Most people
say yes too often. We are a laboring
nation of yes-men and yes-women for
whom nothing is too much to ask and
every task is commenced "Right away,
sir" with a "Consider it done, ma'am"
attitude. The trap is prevalent in a sales
capacity where serving customers
means granting requests. This necessitates
a can-do attitude, but only to a
certain extent. We have to set limits on
what we say yes to. For starters, this
includes the following:
- Pursue only those prospects that
meet our prequalification standards. In general, a qualified prospect will
share your values and professional
standards and offer the potential for a
mutually beneficial long-term relationship.
Say no to pursuing the others.
- Cut ties with high-maintenance,
low-profit clients and opportunities. They steal time that could be better
invested in low-maintenance, highprofit
alternatives. Time is a commodity,
and trading lots of it for little profits
and big headaches doesn't make
business sense.
- Set strict boundaries for the time
you will spend on necessary paperwork
and communication. For each
ongoing task, I recommend blocking
off 30 minutes every other hour.
During these time blocks, complete
only these tasks; say no to everything
else. This forces you to be efficient
with tasks that can easily monopolize
your day.
Time Trap #3:
The Technology Trap
Sir Francis Bacon led us to science,
science led us to technology, and technology
led us to the wonders of timesaving
devices. But these days, the
devices we laud as efficient often end
up stealing the very thing they were
designed to save. In an ever-expanding
era of gigabytes, websites, and satellites,
many of us have become a little
gadget-happy. As a result, we may be
losing more time with technology than
we intended to gain. It's a trap many of
us find ourselves in. Here are five tips
for clawing out:
- Shorten the leash. I'm not sure
which is truer: Technology keeps us on
top of tasks, or, technology keeps tasks
on top of us. When the latter is more
accurate, you need to shorten the leash
and give yourself time free of technointerruptions.
Set a precedent with coworkers
and colleagues: Turn off your
cell phone, laptop, and Blackberry on
evenings and weekends. If someone
needs to catch you, he or she will.
- If you must have a new gadget,
get rid of the old one. When you add
up all the time you lose fiddling with
wires and buttons, it makes sense to
use as few tools as necessary. Use what
increases your productivity and do
away with the rest.
- Ask directions. We waste hours
teaching ourselves to use technology,
when we could learn from an expert in
one-tenth of the time. Technology does
not equal time saved until we know
how to use it proficiently. The quicker
you can get to that place, the sooner it
makes sense to use it.
- Monitor your tools' effectiveness. Don't keep something that has many
functions you don't use. If it's a waste
of time, dump it for something more
efficient. And don't rule out the option
of doing things the old-fashioned way.
- Go backwards to go forward. Sometimes technology isn't better; it's
just prettier. I know there's a subtle
peer pressure to own technology, but if
you can accomplish something more
efficiently without a tool, swallow
your pride and keep your time.
Besides, retro is in these days.
For more than 50 years one statistic
has remained constant: The majority of
professionals spend only 20 percent of
their work time working productively.
This has nothing to do with time. It has
everything to do with the tasks that fill
the other 80 percent of their time.
When it comes to sidestepping the time
traps that keep us in this state of inefficiency,
the same maxim holds true for
all. Pay more attention to the tasks that
fill your time, and the value of your
time will increase. This means more
money in less time with less stress.
Long guilt-free vacation anyone?
This article is used by permission from Todd Duncan's free monthly e-newsletter SalesWired available at www.timetrapsbook.com.
How to Disable Notifications in Microsoft Outlook
Go to Tools > Options > E-mail Options (button) > Advanced E-mail Options (button)
Uncheck all boxes under "When new items arrive in my Inbox" and click OK.
Todd Duncan is the Founder of The
Duncan Group and chairman of
Maximum Impact.
Learn more about Todd Duncan and
his recent New York Times bestseller
Time Traps: Proven Solutions for
Swamped Salespeople.