1 / 24

Time Management

Time Management. To Delay or Not To Delay. Management Areas. What is it? Concentrate on results, not on being busy. Sense of being effective Applied everywhere: personal, public, business Function well Define order in chaos; achievement in frenzy.

aggie
Download Presentation

Time Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Time Management To Delay or Not To Delay

  2. Management Areas

  3. What is it?Concentrate on results, not on being busy • Sense of being effective • Applied everywhere: personal, public, business • Function well • Define order in chaos; achievement in frenzy

  4. What is it?Concentrate on results, not on being busy • Manage time. Get things done - Beating Procrastination. • Finding out how you really spend your time - Activity Logs. • Tackling the right tasks first - Prioritized To Do Lists. • Deciding your personal priorities - Personal Goal Setting. • Planning to make the best use of your time - Effective Scheduling.

  5. Procrastinate(Excuses ExcusesExcuses) • Important vs. Urgent tasks • Lacking skillset, resources, information • Waiting for the “right” mood or the “right” time • A fear of failure or success • Underdeveloped decision making skills • Poor organizational skills • Perfectionism ("I don't have the right skills or resources to do this perfectly now, so I won't do it at all.") • Being ineffective

  6. ProcrastinateNot a delay • Recognize your mistakes, be honest • Prepare a To-do List, No sense of urgency • Not completing tasks (continuously looking for comfort) • Getting stressed over little, unimportant things • Reasons for Delaying • Unpleasant tasks • Wrong priority • Overwhelming • Resolve and Beat it • Motivate yourself, feel good factor • Reward yourself • Ask someone to help you, keep tab • Determine risks and solutions

  7. Effective SchedulingScheduling is the process by which you plan your use of time Scheduling is then a five-step process: • Identify the time you have available. • Block in the essential tasks you must carry out to succeed in your job. • Schedule in high priority urgent tasks and vital "house-keeping" activities. • Block in appropriate contingency time to handle unpredictable interruptions. • In the time that remains, schedule the activities that address your priorities and personal goals.

  8. Effective SchedulingScheduling is the process by which you plan your use of time By using a schedule properly, you can: • Understand what you can realistically achieve with your time • Plan to make the best use of the time available • Leave enough time for things you absolutely must do • Preserve contingency time to handle 'the unexpected‘ • Minimize stress by avoiding over-commitment to others.

  9. Goal SettingTurn vision into reality By using a schedule properly, you can: • measure and take pride in the achievement of those goals • see forward progress in what might previously have seemed a long pointless grind • raise your self-confidence, as you recognize your ability and competence • Preserve contingency time to handle 'the unexpected' • Minimize stress by avoiding over-commitment to others

  10. Goal SettingFacilitate Success Tips: • State each goal as a positive statement • Be precise (Clarity) • Set priorities • Write goals down • Keep operational goals small (Challenge) • Set performance goals, not outcome goals (what can be controlled) • Set realistic goals (Complexity) • Feedback

  11. Prioritize Courtesy: Mindtools.com

  12. Communication • Concise and Unambiguous • Two way process (open for interpretation) • Message, audience, interpretation, circumstance, cultural context • Too much information, too fast • Channels • Verbal (face-to-face meetings, telephone, video) • Written channels (letters, emails, memos and reports.) • Different channels have different strengths and weaknesses • Not effective to give a long list of directions verbally • Not proper to give someone negative feedback using email

  13. Communication (First Impression) • Be on-time • Personal presentation (clean and tidy) • Be yourself (warm and confident smile) • Project appropriate confidence and self-assurance • Be open and confident • Be positive, courteous and attentive

  14. Communication (Improve Understanding) • Disclosing harmless items builds trust. However, disclosing information which could damage people's respect for you can put you in a position of weakness • In a team, expand knowledge about self and others. This allows better co-operation and understanding for improved productivity and effectiveness. • Provide constructive feedback

  15. Communication (Writing Skills) • Writing – more concrete than verbal communication • Clear and concise • Style and actual working are important Tips: • Avoid the use of slang words • Try not to use abbreviations (unless appropriately defined) • Steer away from the use of symbols (e.g., &) • Brackets are used to play down words or phrases • Great care should ALWAYS be taken to spell the names of people and companies correctly • Numbers should be expressed as words when the number is less than 10 or is used to start a sentence • Quotation marks should be placed around any directly quoted speech or text and around titles of publications. • Keep sentences short

  16. Communication (Effective Email) • Short and concise (too many of them) • Effective Subject • Relevant contact information (phone number) • Clear response (follow up phone call, email) • Quick response (receipt, acknowledge?) • Content relevant to subject • It can be forwarded (be mindful!) • Avoid mixing too many topics in one message • Number paragraphs for multiple points • Manage your inbox (instant action, no delay) • Don’t let other wait for your decisions

  17. Project Build Whatever it takes • Have an objective, set goals • Tackle timelines, resources, skillset • Communication Tools, Overcome Physical Barriers • Work Distribution, Team Work • Get it done! • Be positive, courteous and respectful • Provide feedback, keep everyone involved in a loop • Relax and enjoy

  18. SNY 2010 Yoga for health, Health for Humanity • Awareness about Surya Namaskar • Commitment to improving mental and physical health • Improve Team Work • Generate Samparka • National Campaign Team Work, Proactive Service, Effective TaskMgmt Personal, Groups, Networks Email, Web, Print, Physical Phone, Email, Social Networks, Central Docs

More Related