"The Productivity PRO!"(R) news"E"letter Number 142, March 2011

Published: Tue, 03/15/11

Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (R) Leave the Office Earlier
a news"E"letter from The Productivity Pro - Laura Stack
Number 142:: March 2011

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In This Issue:
Message from Laura
Feature Article: By Popular Demand: Time Management for High School and College Students
Book Laura
Productivity Resources
Educational Resources
Time Tips and Traps
Letters to the Editor
Laura's Blog
The Multimedia Minute
Hot Links
Words of Wisdom
Laura in the NEWS
Where in the World is Laura?
Subscription and Contact Information
Reprint Information

Book Laura

Book Laura

Have Laura speak to your company, conference or organization! How do you know if Laura would be perfect for your next event, meeting, or training? View the "Laura Stack Is Perfect For This Group" fact sheet.

Productivity Resources

SuperCompetent
Buy SuperCompetent Amazon.com To be successful in the business world and reach your full potential in life, it's not enough to be simply competent. Our modern, super-competitive world is full of opportunities for the go-getter, but to take advantage of them, it's essential to become "SuperCompetent." The SuperCompetent person is one that companies fight to get, fight to keep, nurture as team players, and see as future leaders in their business growth. Available now from Amazon.com and at better bookstores everywhere.

Buy The Exhaustion Cure at Amazon.comThe Exhaustion Cure. A holistic approach to increasing your get-up and go, from the productivity expert whose previous books showed people how to Find More Time and Leave the Office Earlier. Available now from Amazon.com

Buy Find More Time at Amazon.comFind More TimeYou can't add more hours to the day, but Laura will help you make the most of the time you have and get things done. Available now from Amazon.com.

Leave the Office Earlier, Leave the Office EarlierLaura shows you how you CAN get more done than you ever thought possible and still get home to your real life sooner.Available now from Amazon.com.

More of The Productivity Pro's Resources

Featured Educational Resource from The Productivity Pro®

The Ultimate Time Management System!
by Laura Stack

Do you find yourself continually racing against time? Do you feel that you have so much to do that it's difficult to get anything done? Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, and she can show you how to create a time management system that works for you.

Managing time effectively is the key to managing your individual performance, but it's much more complicated today than making a list and checking things off.

Learn how to set priorities and focus on what's truly important, plan and schedule your day, and manage your calendar and tasks. Get organized, learn how to efficiently use social media, and eliminate time wasters in your day.

You'll gain scores of new ideas from Laura Stack, aka The Productivity Pro®, on increasing output without increasing effort and performing at your matchless best!

This program is accompanied by a detailed self-study workbook containing exercises, checklists, tools, and templates to apply your learning as you listen in the car, on the go, or at your desk.

Start getting organized today! Get Laura Stack's Ultimate Time Management System!

This product contains the following CD audio recordings with an accompanying 100+ page workbook:
1. Creating a System that Works for YOU: Paper, Electronic, or Hybrid?
2. Important Components of a Time Management System: What You Need to be Organized
3. Managing Your Time: Planning and Prioritizing for Success
4. Tackling Timewasters: Pleasing, Perfectionism, and Procrastination
5. Controlling Your Day in an Uncontrollable World: Maximize Your Personal Productivity
6. Organizing Your Office and Your Life: Clear the Clutter and Your Mind
7. The 6-D System: Processing Paperwork, Email, and Voicemail
8. Emptying Your Inbox: The 12 Best Practices for Handling Email
9. Digital Quicksand: Avoiding Social Media OCD
10. Communicating Effectively with Email: Courtesies, Protocols, and Time Savers

PLUS BONUS CD: The Ultimate Time Management Workbook (PDF)

SPECIAL $34.95!

Click here to purchase.  

Words of Wisdom
""Since time is the one immaterial object which we cannot influence-- neither speed up nor slow down, add to nor diminish--it is an imponderably valuable gift." -- Maya Angelou

"Living your life without a plan is like watching television with someone else holding the remote control." -- Peter Turla

"The key is not in spending time, but investing it." -- Steven R. Covey
Hot Links

13 Ways to Make Your Office Space More Efficient

5 Things to do with 5 Minutes

Putting Productivity to the Test: A Real Life Story of a Mobile Worker

Laura in the News!
SUPERCOMPETENT speaking: Stop and Start Times

SuperCompetent Speaking: Time Management Tips for Presenters

Time Management: Ten Reasons Tasks Never Move off Your To-Do List (and how to fix it)

The Shrinking Cubicle

Find More Time: 10 ways to make more time for your life
Where in the World
is Laura?

These are all private client engagements with Laura Stack. At this time, Laura does not offer open enrollment seminars to the general public. If you're interested in bringing Laura to your organization to present a training seminar for your employees on the day prior or the day after one of these engagements below, please contact John Stack for special "piggyback" pricing.

March 2011

16::Denver, CO

17-20::Tampa, FL

22::Nashville, TN

24::Denver, CO

28::Denver, CO

30::Washington, DC

 

April 2011

1-2::Dallas, TX

5::Nashville, TN

6::Denver, CO

7::Denver, CO

12::San Diego, CA

14::Boulder, CO

21::San Francisco, CA

22::Denver, CO

25-26::Portland, OR

27::Salem, OR

28::Vail, Colorado

30::San Diego, CA

 

May 2011

9-11::Orlando, FL

12::Atlanta, GA

13::Orlando, FL

14::Seatle, WA

19::Washington, DC

23::Denver, CO

 

June 2011

5-7::Estes Park, CO

10::Rochester, NY

11::Natick, MA

22::Pittsburgh, PN

24::Denver, CO

 

July 2011

20::Denver, CO

25::Denver, CO

27-30::Anaheim, CA

 

August 2011

1-3::Anaheim, CA

12-13::Washington, DC

17-19::Las Vegas, NV

20::Smyrna, GA

29::Denver, CO

 

September 2011

10::Ann Arbor, MI

11-14::Baltimore, MD

16::New York, NY

17::Pittsburgh, PA

18::Cleveland, OH

19::Louisville, KY

26::Denver, CO

 

October 2011

6-9::London, UK

10::Clinton Township, MI

12::Colorado Springs, CO

18::Bakersfield, CA

24::Denver, CO

 

November 2011

11::Dallas, TX

12::Houston, TX

18-19::Phoenix, AZ

21::Denver, CO

27-29::TBD, Canada

 

November 2011

5-7:: Key Biscayne, FL

15::Highlands Ranch, CO

16::Denver, CO

17-18::Denver, CO

 

January 2012

7::San Francisco, CA

12::Palm Springs, CA

18:: Salt Lake City, UT

 

Visit Laura's Calendar On-line for her complete availability.

Feature Article:

By Popular Demand: Time Management for High School and College Students

 

Both high school and college can, in their own ways, be as challenging as any job. So as you prepare yourself for adult life, it's important to become well-grounded in one of the most critical aspects of any successful career: good time management. Now, you can't really manage time of course; but you can manage how you respond to it, and you can certainly learn how to use it wisely.

In this article, I'll offers pointers on how you can put your limited amount of time to the best possible use. Not only will implementing these techniques help you do better in school while carving out more time for yourself, while you're still in school you'll have a test-bed where you can refine these methods in anticipation of the day when you step fully into the business world.

The Basics of Organization

Before you can maximize the use of your time, you have to spend some of it on planning. This isn't difficult or especially time-consuming, but you do have to be a little fanatical about it. It all starts with implementing a scheduling system, which can be paper-based, electronic, or some hybrid of both.

Your next task should be to create a master schedule for your life. Put everything on it that you can think of, starting with the fixed items: sleep, meals, chores, classes, tests, upcoming papers, and work time if you have a job. Next, estimate how long you think non-fixed assignments (like research papers) will take you to complete, and block off that time on your schedule. Everything else--favorite TV shows, extracurricular activities, a social life--has to be juggled to fit whatever blanks are left over.

Review your schedule daily, and update it at least once a week. When you do, ask yourself these questions: "What worked this week, and what didn't? Did I schedule the right amount of time for each task? Which tasks took more time than expected, and which took less? What did I forget to plan for?" You can use what you've learned to plan next week's schedule.

Your scheduling system is useless if you refuse to stick to it, so be tough with yourself. If you'd really like to go to a basketball game but you have a math test the next day, you're going to have to buckle down and forego the game. It's necessary to say no to things that you don't have time for, as over-commitment can be stressful and damaging.

Another damaging mistake is to skip sleep so you can get more done, because you need the rest to perform at your maximum. While it may seem the ultimate waste of time, getting enough sleep actually saves you time, because you don't have to redo things that you missed or did poorly because you were so tired you couldn't think straight.

One final note: schedule in the occasional reward, like time with your friends or a nice dinner. If you've been following your schedule religiously, then you deserve it.

Embrace Flexibility

The ability to roll with the punches is important to any active individual--and when you're a student--it can be your best friend. No matter how carefully you plan your schedule, the world's not going to let you follow it point-by-point. You can't always account for bad weather, the actions of other people, or your own health, so it's critical that you allow for the unexpected.

Too much rigidity can lead to indecision and even paralysis if things don't go just right...and when did that ever happen? So schedule a few blocks of free time, so you'll have buffer periods you can use to handle the unforeseen. If nothing happens, great! Now you can do something fun. On the other hand, if your calculus teacher suddenly decides your class needs a quiz the next day, you'll have time to study for it without ditching something else.

Another way to maximize flexibility is to reclaim every scrap of unscheduled downtime. If you have to sit on the bus for an hour every day, then get some reading done. And here's another thing that I hesitate to mention--it's the reality with some college classes--you don't have to focus every second on the instructor. If he derails onto yet another story about his wasted youth, shoot off a couple texts or emails. This isn't viable in high school, but you're the boss in college.

The To-Do List

A good to-do list is the linchpin of any time management strategy, and can be used on a variety of time-scales. However, it all starts with the daily list, a series of short-term goals that you want to accomplish within the next 24 hours.

As a student, the general outline of your to-do list and the order in which you accomplish things is largely predicated by your schedule. If you're having a history test in fifth period, that's when it has to be, no matter how important it is. The hard part is deciding how to deal with all the unfixed items, like that paper that's due in two weeks, or your household chores. While you need to make some progress on all fronts, you also need to categorize tasks according to their importance and urgency, and prioritize them accordingly.

Prioritization--that is, how you determine what comes first, second, third, and never--is the essence of time management. You must focus the majority of your attention on what's most important, with any leftover time spent on your less-pressing list items.

Your list must also be realistic. If you have items that aren't pressing and you just don't have time to do them today, or your list is simply too long to handle, then you must be willing to postpone those extraneous tasks. Assuming you don't defer them indefinitely, this isn't abandonment, just good time management. And in any case, abandonment isn't necessarily a dirty word. If you need to make time in your schedule, look at the things that matter least to you (within the context of your school and home obligations, of course), and let a few go.

A good not-to-do list can also help keep you on track. Simply make a list of things that steal or waste productive time, so you know what to avoid. This will vary from person to person, but may include things like Internet gaming, surfing when you should be working, online chatting, or checking email too often.

The Importance of Visualization and Goal-Setting

Planning for the future and setting goals for getting there is an important part of any time management scheme. Your goals can be big or small. This week, for example, your biggest goal may be passing a geology exam next Wednesday. Then there are the big ones: if you're still in high school, your ultimate goal could be as simple as graduating, but it's more likely that you're looking forward to college at least, and possibly a career in a particular field. So how do you get there?

Simple enough: look at your life, and map out the path from where you are now to where you want to be. Now, what processes, classes, organizations, and decisions will help you achieve that goal? If your short-term goal is pass a test, figure out how much you have to study every day between now and then, and get with it. If the goal's a big one, then break it down into smaller steps with their own individual objectives, determine what resources are necessary to achieve those objectives, and start working through the milestones one by one. This helps you set priorities and calculate how much time you need to spend on each goal, which in turn lets you determine your daily game plan.

Aside from your basic school/career oriented goals, you can't forget the other important goals in life. Social, family, and financial goals all require a certain level of attention, and you can't ignore them if you expect to become a well-rounded individual. Never lose sight of your long-term goals in any of these venues.

Develop a Laser -Sharp Focus

If you want to maximize your accomplishments, then you need to know how to focus in like a laser beam on what's truly important. Needless to say, this is a big part of to-do list prioritization, but it contributes to all aspects of time management--not least in that it helps that you get things done in as little time as possible.

Easily said, right? For many of us, the hard part is learning how to focus. So let's take a quick look at what's required to do that.

First of all, suppress any tendency you may have to procrastinate. Procrastination is hurtful, because rather than focusing on getting something done, you focus on not doing it. All this does is make you feel needlessly bad about yourself. If the task seems too large to handle, then break it down into smaller chunks, set realistic goals for completion, and tackle them one at a time.

Next, choose your personal "prime time," the time of day when you work the best, and concentrate exclusively on one task at a time for a reasonable period: one or two hours works best for most people. Do not try to multitask. If you need to take a break, stop at a logical stopping point, so you don't lose focus on something you haven't finished yet. Whatever the length of your focus period, be sure to eliminate any time-wasting activities, distractions, and disruptions insofar as possible. Even if a text, call, Facebook IM, or email drags you away for just two minutes, it's going to take a while to regain the level of focus necessary to give your task the concentration it needs.

So turn off your phone and all computer alerts, especially email and chat notifications, until you're done. Studies have shown that just knowing a message is waiting can ruin your concentration, even if you don't answer it right away.

A Note About College vs. High School

In the preceding sections, I've outlined the basics required for any high school or college student to maximum their limited time. But I'd be remiss if I failed to point out that in college, things will be tougher than ever. You're going to have to learn to be entirely self-reliant, because no one's going to wake you up and demand that you go to class, or make sure that you study in the evenings rather than party. It's all up to you.

And then there's the difficulty factor. College is much harder than high school, so it requires a more Machiavellian application of your time management skills, especially if you also work (as many students do these days). Prioritization becomes much more important as a method of triaging your activities, and you need to be both more decisive and more willing to let things go. Experiment as needed with specialized memory and organizational methods, or even with tactics as simple as doing your homework is classes that require less direct attention. You don't have to give up a social life if you're careful, but do remember that you're not in college just to have fun. You're there to prepare for the rest of your life.

Conclusions

While I can't claim that the pointers I've outlined here are the be-all and end-all of good student time management, they should provide you with a solid jumping-off point. And be aware, too, that while I've discussed these pointers in sequential style, they're actually overlapping and intricately interrelated. You can't really have a to-do list without having a schedule in place, and to put together your schedule, you need to employ big-picture visualization and set goals for yourself. You get the idea. As with most things of this nature, it's up to you to experiment and find what works best for you. This may take a while, but it's very much worth the effort --and the time--that you'll put into it.

Make it a productive day! (TM)

(C) Copyright 2011 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.

 


 

Time Tips and Traps
To be featured in this section of our newsletter and get a free eBook with our thanks, send your productivity tip or trick to Becca@TheProductivityPro.com with "Tips and Tricks contribution" in the subject line.

How to have efficient and productive meetings: Start with the end of your meeting in mind, plan your road map by preparing an agenda and sharing it with the meeting attendees before the attendee. Each agenda item should have information about the amount of time allocated, the attendee responsible for the item as well as the purpose (e.g. brainstorm, information, decision) of the item. After the meeting evaluate what took place and the next meeting will need to be tweaked to be more productive. Lastly, distribute minutes from the meeting to the attendees.

Eunice Reger CPS

To work, or not to work? That's one of the many decisions that the time-savvy college student has to make. On the face of it, the decision is simple: why add yet another obligation to your schedule? In real life, however, there's often not much of a choice, especially among those working their way through college. About 60% of all college students work full- or part-time. Even among high schoolers, the proportion of those working part-time jobs at least part of the school year has exceeded one-third for the past decade, and approaches 75% for seniors.

Needless to say, working too many hours can have negative effects on academic performance, because it cuts into study time; and for that reason, many instructors don't like the idea. Ironically, though, recent research shows that part-time work can be beneficial for students, as long as it doesn't exceed 15-20 hours per week. Not only do they get a head start on future employment opportunities, they develop better work habits. Grades-wise, they tend to do about as well as their non-working friends.

Interestingly, many college students who work part-time actually do better in school than those who don't, especially if they work fewer than 10 hours. Why? Because having a job forces them to manage their time efficiently. Work time tends to supplant unproductive time--for example, hours that they would otherwise spend watching TV--rather than cutting into study time or social time.

The lesson here is that working part-time doesn't really hurt your grades, as long as you do two things: 1) limit your work hours to less than 20; and 2) use the opportunity to better organize your time.

Whether you should work or not during your school years is up to you, based on your personal needs and goals--but unlike some observers, I'm not categorically against it. The negative aspects appear to be minimal, and it has its benefits. Remember: grades aren't the only measure of achievement in school. Working looks good on your resume, and you already have good work habits once you start your career.

So if you limit your work hours and save your money, you're likely to come out ahead.

Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (r)

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Monthly Microsoft Outlook webinar: Monday, March 28, 2011.

Time: Watch the recording at your convenience or "live" at 10:00AM Pacific / 11:00AM Mountain / 12:00PM Central /1:00PM Eastern

Topic: Working with Your Tasks and To-Do's: The Daily To-Do List, Create a New Task, Recurring Tasks, Regenerating Tasks, Remove Completed Tasks from the List, Change the Sort in Your To-Do Bar, Change Preferences, Capture an Email as a Task on the Task Pad, Collapse Your Tasks, Assigning Tasks, View by Person Responsible, Status Updates, Master Categories Lists, Tag with Category, Project Management, View Tasks for by Category/Project, Filter the View, Sort Tasks, Task Options, Paper To-Do Lists, Finding Tasks, Task Folders, Schedule Tasks from Your Calendar.

Cost is $39 and includes a workbook with screen shots and detailed step-by-step instructions and recording. For more information and to register click here.


Monthly Productivity Webinar:

Monday, March 28, 2011.

 

Time: Watch the recording at your convenience or "live" at 12:00PM Pacific / 1:00PM Mountain / 2:00PM Central /3:00PM Eastern

Topic: By Popular Demand: Time Management for High School and College Students. Both high school and college can, in their own ways, be as challenging as any job. So as you prepare yourself for your adult life, it's important to become well-grounded in one of the most significant aspects of any successful career: time management. Now, you can't really manage time--we all get the very same amount, no matter who we are--but you can manage how you respond to it, and you can certainly learn how to make the best use of the time you have. Not only will implementing these techniques help you do better in school while carving out more personal time for yourself, while you're still in school you'll have a test-bed where you can refine these methods in anticipation of the day when you step fully into the business world. In this course, I'll teach you:

  • The basics of organization, so you can structure your day for maximum effectiveness.
  • The power of maintaining and following to-do lists--and not-to-do lists.
  • How to focus in like a laser on what's really important.
  • Why flexibility can be your best friend.
  • Big-picture visualization and the importance of goal-setting.

    Cost is $29 and includes the recording. For more information and to register click here.
  •  

    Laura's Blog

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    Recent posts:
    Brand You: The Basics of Personal Branding

    Office Productivity: How to Handle a Micromanager
     

    The Productivity Minute

    Recent videos from Laura:

    Productivity Minute Video: Working on Mundane Tasks

    Down Time Does Not Have to Be Wasted Time
     

    Laura's Demonstration VideoView Laura's Demonstration Video

    Letters to the Editor

    Laura,

    As part of the Culture Team presentation at the tax retreat last week a couple of new productivity tools were introduced. The inspiration for these tools came from Laura Stack's Time Management training and are meant to help people focus and be more productive. These tools are going to be used firm wide (Audit, Tax and Admin), and we are really encouraging everyone to participate.

    Focus Time Flags
    This is a universal, firm wide signal to your co-workers that you are in serious focus mode and should help to serve as a kind of "Do Not Disturb" sign. Wall putty has been passed out along with the flags and this is to help secure the flag to the top/side of your cube or door to let people know you are in your focus time.

    A few guidelines for the flags:

  • Flags should only be used for a maximum of 90 minutes per day. They should not be left up all the time or people won't obey them.
  • Phone Calls during Focus Time - this is at your discretion. If you choose to not answer calls during your focus time you must return the phone call/voicemail as soon as your focus time is over.
  • The flags are not a free pass for missing meetings, client obligations, or ignoring someone you just don't want to talk to.
  • Urgent Issues - being in the client service business as we are, we all know that issues come up. If someone has their flag up but you really need to speak with them immediately, then interrupt. If the conversation can wait an hour, then come back later or send them an email (which the person focusing should not get because their email notifications have been turned off or outlook is closed)

    Ping Pong Balls
    The second tool that we introduced are the "Quiet Please" Ping Pong Balls. These are meant to be tossed as necessary to help people avoid the awkward "quiet please" request. For example, feel free to toss a ping pong ball towards someone talking loudly near your area who doesn't see your flag or if you forgot to put your flag up, or if there seems to be a small party in the cube/office next to you while you're trying to work. These are not meant to be rude or offensive to anyone, they are meant to be a tool to help other people realize when they may be distracting to someone else.
    We are not suggesting that all personal conversation at the office should stop. That is not our Culture here at ACM, nor should it be. This is meant to be a light hearted way to help address the noise issue in Cubeland.
    (The ping pong balls have not arrived yet, but we will get them passed out as soon as they do!)

    Hopefully with these new tools ACM can become a more productive place and they will help to minimize stressful situations. Because as we all know, the last thing we need in this profession is more stress!!

    Happy Busy Season!

    The Culture Team.
  • Laura in the News!
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    3 Easy Ways to Stress-Proof Your Mornings

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    Reprint Information
    All Articles (C) 1999-2011 Laura Stack. All rights reserved. This information may not be distributed, sold, publicly presented, or used in any other manner, except as described below.

    Permission to reprint all or part of this article in your magazine, e-zine, website, blog, or organization newsletter is hereby GRANTED, provided:

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    This credit line MUST be reprinted in its entirety to use any articles from Laura Stack:

    © 2011 Laura Stack. Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, author, and professional speaker who is dedicated to building high-performance SuperCompetent cultures by creating Maximum Results in Minimum Time® through increased productivity. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time management training firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations. Since 1992, Laura has presented keynotes and seminars on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today's workplaces. Her books include SuperCompetent (Wiley, 2010); The Exhaustion Cure (Broadway Books, 2008); Find More Time (2006); and Leave the Office Earlier (2004). To have Laura speak at your next event, call 303-471-7401. Visit www.TheProductivityPro.com to sign up for her free monthly productivity newsletter.
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