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Managing Multiple Priorities
Managing Multiple Priorities
by Dr. Donald E. Wetmore
Description: Time management tips for managing multiple priorities.
Sponsors:
We all have "too much to do". As a professional speaker, I hear that all the
time from my audiences. And that says a lot of good things about you, if you
have "too much to do" because, obviously, a lot of people have entrusted
many things to your care and have confidence in you.
Every priority claims itself as the most urgent and crucial thing in the
world screaming for your immediate attention. The problem is, we can only do
one thing at a time. So, here are four nifty ideas to help you to Manage
Multiple Priorities.
1. Keep the focus on personal balance first. Our lives are made up of Seven
Vital Areas: Health, Family, Financial, Intellectual, Social, Professional,
and Spiritual. We will not necessarily spend time every day in each area or
equal amounts of time in each area. But, if, in the long run, we spend a
sufficient quantity and quality of time in each area, our lives will be in
balance. But if we neglect any one area, never mind two or three, we will
eventually sabotage our success. Much like a table, if one leg is longer
than the rest, it will make the entire table wobbly. If we don't take time
for health, our family life and social life are hurt. If our financial area
is out of balance, we will not be able to focus adequately on our
professional goals, etc. As in the medical profession, it is said that you
cannot be sick and make other people well. In Time Management, then, we have
to keep ourselves healthy first, in balance first, or it won't matter how
many or how important our priorities are, we will not be able to properly
handle them.
2. Schedule Daily Planning. I set aside at least 30 minutes each night for
Daily Planning, a time to have a Board of Directors meeting in the most
important corporation in the world, Me, Inc. I make up a list of things for
the next day that includes not only all the items I "have to" do, but, more
importantly, the items I "want to" do. Putting it all down in writing is
vital because if you want to manage it, you have to measure it. This will
tend to overload your next day, which is useful because it permits us to
take advantage of Parkinson's Law, which says, in part, that a project tends
to take as long as the time allocated for it. If you give yourself one thing
to do, it will take all day to do it. If you give yourself three things to
do, you get them all done. If you give yourself twelve things to do, you may
not get all twelve done, but may well accomplish nine. Having a lot to do,
being a bit overloaded, creates a healthy sense of pressure on us to get
through our list.
3. Review each item and ask, "Is this the best use of my time?". There is a
lot of difference between "I do it" and "It gets done". Which is more
important? "It gets done". Sure, it's great to accomplish things ourselves
but we only have 168 hours per week to accomplish results. (And if we take
away 56 hours per week for sleep, that only leaves 112 hours!) So, each
night during Daily Planning, I review each item on my list and ask, "Is this
the best use of my time?". If it is, I will plan to work on it and if it is
not, I will try to find a way to delegate it to someone so that it gets
done.
4. Prioritize the list. Typically, our "To Do" lists will contain "crucial"
and "not crucial" items. Some items will be more important, some not so
important. Typically, the "not crucial" items are quicker and often more fun
than the "crucial" items, which tend to take longer and are generally less
fun. So what happens for many is that without prioritizing our list, we have
a tendency to do the "not crucial" items first, substituting the quantity
for the quality. Identify the most important "crucial" item on your list,
the one you would want to tackle if you could only work on one item tomorrow
and then label that as "#1". Next, identify the second item you would work
on, if time permits, and label that as "#2". Continue prioritizing the
entire list in that fashion and tomorrow start with #1.
These four steps will help you to more effectively Manage Multiple
Priorities and increase your daily results and that a good thing.
If these ideas were helpful, we have prepared an additional article
entitled, "The Time Management Myth" to help increase your daily success. It's free. If you would like a copy, email your request for "myth" to:
ctsem@msn.com.
Would you like to receive free Timely Time Management Tips on a regular
basis to increase your personal productivity and get more out of every day?
Sign up now for our free "TIMELY TIME MANAGEMENT TIPS". Just go to:
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