In This Issue: |
Message from Laura |
Feature Article: How To Manage Crises While Maintaining Workplace Productivity |
Book Laura |
Productivity Resources |
Educational Resources |
Time Tips and Traps |
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 |
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
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.
The 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
Find More Time. You 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, Laura 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® |
By popular demand! After nearly eight years of readers asking, in partnership with audible.com, professional voiceover talent Gaby Gold has recorded the audio version of my bestselling book, Leave the Office Earlier: The Productivity Pro Shows You How to Do More in Less Time and Feel Great About It.
You can purchase the audio book via any of the links below:
Amazon
Audible
iTunes
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Words of Wisdom |
"There cannot be a crisis today; my schedule is already full." -- Henry Kissinger, American politician.
"When is a crisis reached? When questions arise that can't be answered." -- Ryszard Kapuscinski, Polish journalist and writer
"Crises refine life. In them you discover what you are." -- Allan K. Chalmers, American author |
Laura's Blog |
Subscribe to feed:http://blog.theproductivitypro.com
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Hot Links |
15 Essential Tips to Get the Most out of Outlook
Is 'Cyberloafing' Good for Productivity?
Not productive? It's about time
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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.
October 2011
12::Colorado Springs, CO
17::San Francisco, CA
18::Bakersfield, CA
21::Denver, CO
24-26::Tempe, AZ
27::Denver, CO
November 2011
5::Somerset, NJ
12::Dallas, TX
18-20::Phoenix, AZ
21::Denver, CO
26-29::Toronto, Canada
December 2011
2::Vail, Colorado
5-7::Key Biscayne, FL
15::Denver, CO
16::Denver, CO
17-18::Denver, CO
January 2012
8::Orlando, FL
10-11::Orlando, FL
12::Palm Springs, CA
18::Salt Lake City, UT
20::New York, NY
February 2012
1::Dallas, TX
2-5::Dallas, TX
10::Deer Valley, UT
11-12::Canada
March 2012
9::Cleveland, OH
12::Grapevine, TX
14::Grapevine, TX
20-30::Paris, France
April 2012
13-15::Tempe, AZ
16::Orlando, FL
18::Cedar Rapids, IA
19-20::Anaheim, CA
20-21::Washington, DC
23::Dallas, Texas
24-30::Durban, Kwazulu-Natal, SA
May 2012
2-5::Duala Lampur, Malaysia
6-11:Singapore
24::Denver, CO
June 2012
21::Pewaukee, WI
Visit Laura's Calendar On-line for her complete availability.
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Feature Article: |
How To Manage Crises While Maintaining Workplace Productivity
As much as we try to structure our work time, there's no scheduling the unexpected. Emergencies and other crises overwhelm us all occasionally; unfortunately, no one has ever invented a predictive model (or crystal ball for that matter) that can actually warn us about everything that might blindside us during the average business day.
In a perfect world, we would expect the unexpected, since we all know from experience how quickly things can go south. But somehow, it rarely turns out that way. Ever the optimists, most of us look forward to the workday proceeding smoothly and according to plan, so we can keep to our schedules and maximize our productivity. And sure, optimism has its good points; but sometimes, we let a positive, can-do attitude blind us to the reality that things can and do, in fact, go wrong.
Advance planning can mitigate some disruptions. But that assumes you can plan for those disruptions...and we human beings share a perverse talent for inventing new problems for ourselves and others. When something comes completely out of left field, you have no choice but to fall back on good, old-fashioned flexibility: you deal with the disruptions as they appear, doing whatever you can to alleviate their effects without utterly derailing your personal productivity.
If you're lucky, you can hand the problem off to someone else who can solve it more easily and efficiently than you can. In other cases, it's best to take a direct hand yourself, stepping in and mitigating the damage, so similar disruptions can't happen again. Whatever the case, the real test of a work process isn't how well it works when everything's going smoothly, but how well it performs when you're slammed with unscheduled events. So in this article, we'll look at ways to mitigate such events in ways that allow you to keep your workplace productivity on an even keel, without killing yourself with overwork.
Pre-Crisis Planning
Even when all seems well, you sometimes have to stop for a moment and take a good look around. A broad view will give you a better chance of seeing things as they come over the horizon. After all, forewarned is forearmed, as the old saying goes. True productivity requires more than just focus, drive, and determination; as I've emphasized many times, it also means putting systems and processes in place to monitor your workflow and safeguard it when things go awry.
If necessary, establish guidelines to direct your responses to various categories of emergencies, from things like unexpected tasks added suddenly to your to-do list to more serious threats like fires and natural disasters. If such guidelines already exist, review them, learn them thoroughly, and don't hesitate to tweak or even replace them as necessary (assuming you have the authority to do so). If company-wide crisis management plans already exist, study them; and if they don't, then step forward and propose them. The time you invest in all this will eventually pay off.
You or a consultant can also perform vulnerability audits, which dissects in detail the processes and systems comprising a personal, team, or organization-wide workflow and identifies potential weaknesses that might either cause or contribute to a crisis. Large companies typically use such audits to identify the worst potential problems, especially those associated with employee discontent.
You can adapt the concept to almost any type of emergent situation. For instance, a vulnerability audit might help you identify a productivity bottleneck that develops into a real issue only when a rush job forces people to work faster than normal, or illustrate how things might fall apart if a water main happened to flood your office. Once you know what can go wrong, you can plan for it.
Embrace Flexibility
Another way to give yourself some elbow room is to pad your schedule with a little slack time. Try to do so within the constraints of your existing schedule, and don't overdo it; just make sure your to-do list has enough flexibility to accommodate a bit of the unexpected. This doesn't mean you have to add empty slots to your schedule just in case, although that's one possibility. If you go that route and nothing comes up, then hey, you can get a little extra work done on something else or go home a bit early (always a nice option).
It may be wiser, however, to start separating your to-do list into the "Want To Do" and the "Must Do" tasks. Make sure that some of the low-priority tasks on your list have some give in them, so you can reprioritize or postpone them at a moment's notice in favor of handling something unexpected--instead of wearing yourself to a frazzle by adding more tasks to an already unwieldy schedule.
Handling the Crisis
When an unexpected event does occur, face the situation calmly. Most people either freeze in place or let everything grind to a halt, or they overreact in some way, making things worse. Neither paralysis nor freaking out can help you. Instead, carefully and deliberately assess the situation, and then do whatever you must to fix it.
It helps to reframe the crisis as a challenge, if at all possible¬--something you can turn into an advantage in some way. That may make it easier to handle, at least in the short term. Even if you can't work the crisis into an advantage, you may learn something from it; so be open to that possibility as you go into action.
And speaking of action: motion beats meditation...as long as you have enough facts to make an informed decision. Don't go off-half cocked. Unless you find yourself dealing with something obviously dangerous, like a life-threatening injury or an earthquake, reacting too soon may prove as disastrous as reacting too late. And needless to say, deciding how to react on the spur of the moment can be just as difficult, especially when you have to deal with an unfamiliar situation you haven't planned for. In such a case, metacognition--thinking about how you think--can supply a solution. Even if you lack a crisis management or contingency plan for a particular conundrum, you can train yourself to think in such a way as to quickly decode the issue and invent one on the spot.
Business schools often teach students to use some variation of the SLLR method in crisis situations. "SLLR" stands for the four steps involved: Stop, Look, Listen, and Respond. These strictures gain particular importance when the lines of communication, command, and responsibility have broken down. If you have no idea what to do when a disruption rears its ugly head, Stop. Instead of reacting instinctively (or worse, panicking), take a moment to cool down and think. Assess the situation, absorbing as much information as possible; Look at the obvious factors, and Listen to the people involved so you can learn more. After you have all the facts in hand (or as at least as many as you can effectively gather), Respond. Move forward decisively and untangle the snarl.
If the problem takes the form of a bottleneck or dependency, like those I wrote about in last month's newsletter, then try to fix it or find a way around it. In the average office, most personnel-related crises trace back to just a few people whose lack of preparation or consideration for others--or, in some cases, sheer orneriness--jams up the gears of progress. Some crisis creators may respond to reason, if their obstructions are accidental or, as I suggested last time, caused by a process flaw or a missing resource. Often, you can handle them by cheerfully lending a hand and providing what they need. Other crisis creators are themselves the root of the problem; they may take a positive delight in acting as what one author has called "a dinosaur-brain" and making life difficult for their co-workers. It doesn't matter why they do it; you simply have to find a (legal) way to deal with the problem.
The biggest crisis creator in your office may be your boss. I've lost count of the number of times people have told me about bosses who consider every task top priority, piling them into their subordinates' inboxes willy-nilly without pointing out which is truly the most urgent. If you find yourself faced with such a situation, take the bull by the horns and ask your boss, politely of course, precisely which of the tasks needs to come first in his or her estimation.
Involving Others
By the time you respond to a crisis, you should know whether or not you can deal with it alone. Never hesitate to seek assistance whenever you need it; one aspect of true wisdom is knowing when to ask for help. Pull together a team, if necessary, before implementing your response; then split the issue into more easily handled sub-issues, and parcel them out. Make sure everyone knows precisely what they must do to solve their piece of the problem.
If nothing else, try to get buy-in from the key players in the crisis, assuming you have the time to do so. And as you implement your response, do what you can to keep everyone in the loop--including your clients or end users, as necessary. You may find the latter particularly important if you're a solopreneur, and you face a crisis that stops you in your tracks...a nasty case of the flu, perhaps. In most cases, clients will respond positively to a request for a little extra time; and if they don't, have a contingency plan in place whereby you can hand over their work to a contractor during the interim.
Post-Mortem Dissection
After the crisis has passed and all the repercussions have died down, take a little time to dissect what happened, so you know how to respond if it ever happens again. This amounts to more than just "Monday morning quarterbacking," because to paraphrase philosopher George Santayana, "Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it."
If possible, pull together the key people involved in the crisis, analyze what went wrong, and figure out how to keep it from happening again. If you lack the authority to call everyone together, conduct the postmortem on your own. This process may require additional resources or reallocation of existing resources to pull it off, and yes, it may take some time you'd rather spend on something else. But in the long run, every second and cent will be worth the cost if you can keep similar disruptions from shooting holes in your future productivity.
Cautious Optimism
It's human nature to be hopeful, and thank goodness; that gives us the drive we need to succeed through thick and thin. But truly successful people refuse to let their guards down, no matter how positive their attitudes. They understand the need for both advance preparation and superb flexibility. So have contingency plans in place for everything you can think of, and roll with the punches as they occur--even when they come from unforeseen directions and take unanticipated forms. Most disruptions soon yield to the application of a healthy dose of discipline and creative thinking; and once the crisis passes, you can analyze what happened and put plans into place to head off similar occurrences.
When faced with the unexpected, don't just throw up your hands in despair. Step forward, take charge, and, no matter how hard a crisis hits you, learn something from the situation. Better yet, find a way to profit from that knowledge. When life hands you lemons in the workplace, don't just make lemonade--find a way to sell that lemonade for a tidy profit!
Make it a productive day! (TM)
If you enjoyed this article, you can register for the August 30, 2011 webinar on exactly how to do this! http://www.theproductivitypro.com/2011webinars.
(C) Copyright 2011 Laura Stack. All rights reserved. |
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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.
Increase Your Personal Presence and Credibility!
Personal presence may be difficult to define, but you know it when you see it. People with presence look confident and comfortable, speak clearly and persuasively, think clearly--even under pressure. They act with intention and integrity. What they say and do matches who they are. Wherever you are and wherever you want to go, presence can help you get there.
That's where my colleague, business communication expert Dianna Booher, comes in. In her latest book, Creating Personal Presence: Look, Talk, Think, and Act Like a Leader (Berrett-Koehler), Dianna presents 20 principles to help people move along the continuum from low impact to high impact. This book is filled with practical tips to improve your communication and expand your influence.
Order the book on Amazon, to receive bonuses worth more than $1200 from celebrity authors and experts--including my own bonus--at: http://tinyurl.com/3zaqpdk. If you'd like a sneak preview, check out this video trailer.
Order the book on Amazon, to receive bonuses worth more than $2,100 from 15 celebrity authors and experts--including my own bonus--at http://www.booher.com/buybook/ | |

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LAST CHANCE! Are you tired of hearing "do more with less"? Many people are already working as long and as hard as they can, and "productivity improvement" classes can be hard to swallow. Laura Stack, The Productivity Pro®, turns time management on its head and shows overwhelmed professionals how to actually DO LESS and ACHIEVE MORE. They'll produce greater results and create significant impact on organizational goals. Laura teaches her latest thinking using this innovative workflow formula to reduce to-do lists, reduce commitments, reduce distractions, reduce the glut of information, reduce inefficiencies, and reduce energy expenditure. Past clients using these systems and methods report savings of 90 minutes a day and higher productivity than ever before!
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Monthly Microsoft Outlook 2010 webinar: Using Other Software with Outlook
Date: October 24, 2011
Time: Watch the recording at your convenience or "live" at 10:00AM Pacific / 11:00AM Mountain / 12:00PM Central /1:00PM Eastern
Topic: Advanced E-mail Tricks and Tips. Writing Letters in Word with Outlook Contact Lists, Printing Labels and Envelopes with Outlook Address Book, Mail Merge, Creating Mass Merged Emails, Emailing Directly from Other Microsoft Office Applications, Using Public Folders, Plug-Ins for Outlook, Scheduling Meetings with Doodle, iCal Feeds for Outlook, OneNote Integration, Text Messaging with Outlook, SmartPhones, iPhone/Droid/iPad Productivity Apps for Outlook, Business Card Scanner, Mozy Backup of Outlook Data, Xobni, Windows Live File Sharing and Calendar Publishing, SharePoint Online, Emailing Directly from Windows Explorer
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: Emergencies, Rush Jobs, and Unexpected Situations: How to Manage Crises Without Ruining Your Day
DATE: August 30, 2011.
Time: Watch the recording at your convenience or "live" at 12:00PM Pacific / 1:00PM Mountain / 2:00PM Central /3:00PM Eastern
Topic: As much as we try to structure our work time, there's no scheduling the unexpected. The best that you can do with disruptions is to deal with them as they appear--or, in some cases, to learn to manage the people who cause them. If your boss insists that everything he gives you is top priority, then how do you decide which project is Priority One? That requires a different approach than determining how an urgent request for a report revision will fit into the work queue. Whatever the case, the real test of a work process is not how well it works when things are going smoothly; it's how well it performs when it's hit with unscheduled disruptions. In this class, we'll look at ways to:
Mitigate the worst effects of crises without damaging your overall schedule.
Create systems and work processes flexible enough to handle unexpected events without flying apart.
Work around the "crisis creators" whose lack of planning disrupts everyone else.
Dissect crises once they're past, so you can avoid similar situations in the future.
Schedule a little "slack time" here and there so you can more easily handle the unexpected.
Cost is $29 and includes the recording. For more information and to register click here.
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The Productivity Minute |
Recent videos from Laura:
Productivity Minute Video: Procrastination - Can We Talk About This Later?
Productivity Minute Video: Refusing Can Free Up Time
Productivity Minute Video: Refusing Can Free Up Time
Productivity Minute Video: Stop Doing Everything At Once
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Laura in the News! |
How Experts Achieve a Work-Life Balance and How You Can Too
"Brainstorming is all about quantity, not quality," says Laura Stack, The Productivity Pro, Denver. "The rules are: no one is allowed to criticize..."
What's the big idea?
East Lansing using The Exhaustion Cure for Book Club
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© 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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