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Is there a deadline?Date: 2015-10-07; view: 533. What's most important? Tune-up your time management skills The mental checklist for time management decision-making goes something like this. 1. What is the most important thing for me to be doing right now? Let's look at each of these in turn... Good relationships with your colleagues, that's what's most important. Effective managers make time for people because they know in the long run it will pay back many times more. Back to the colleague approaching your desk. He just wants to go for coffee... If you've got a great relationship with this person, then maybe defer the invitation so you can finish up your emails. If you need to get to know him better or smooth out some conflict, then go for it. If thinking about relationships in terms of payback seems calculated and ruthless, then get used to it. This is what good time managers do. It is just another time management skill. The 10 minutes spent going for coffee may uncover why you've had to chase your colleague for that report and get it resolved then and there. If deadlines are looming then they win. After all, in olden days a prisoner would be shot if they crossed the deadline! (Don't you just love the original meanings of words?) But is your deadline negotiable? Can you buy extra time and do it later or de-scope the work and do less but on time? Your careful relationship management will work wonders for you when time is tight. If the deadline is non-negotiable, quit moaning and go do it, or you'll get shot! Back to the ringing phone… It's shouting loudly, demanding urgent attention. Unless you're in customer services or expecting an important call, consider using voicemail to your advantage. Avoid switching from “email mode” to “phone mode” and back where possible as it steals time and affects your concentration. What will happen if….? Will the world stop turning if you don't do something or do it in a different way? Don't fool yourself into being busy by thinking you're work is invaluable or perfect. Question the value of everything you do and how you do it. o Think through your routine tasks or tasks that simply take too much time – are you doing them for a reason or from habit? o Stop sending that report and see who notices. o Prepare online answers to “frequently asked questions”. o Delegate to a colleague. o Redesign the process. It may take time to save time, but it's pays dividends in the long term and makes your job more interesting.
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