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Time
Tip Planning Principles
PLANNING PRINCIPLES By: Dr. Donald
E. Wetmore
The old adage reminds us that “People don’t plan
to fail but a lot of people do fail to plan.” During a war,
we find a tank operator and a general. Which function is more important?
It is probably the general, at least in this sense. One can be the best
tank operator on the line, get out there everyday and shoot off more rounds
of ammunition and shoot them more accurately than anyone else on the line,
but if he is not shooting at a target that makes any sense, then his whole
day is wasted. The general, through advanced planning, decides where the
tank operator ought to go and thereby increases his/her “productivity”.
There's enough complexity in your life already; the last thing you need
is an even more complex and cumbersome system to manage it!
A lot of people run their days like a tank operator without a general.
Awake in the morning, get dressed, off to work, grab the first fire hose
someone throws their way, get caught up addressing the demands coming
from the loudest voices shouting in their direction, come home at night,
sometimes beat and exhausted, get rested, get up the next morning and
repeat the cycle. That is living life by accident. I encourage people
to live their lives on purpose.
Beyond career success, however, managing your time effectively permits
you to do more of the things you want to do and enjoy a better quality
of life every day-both at work and at home.
I want each of us to be a general. And there’s a war out there in that
either you are in control of your time or someone else is. And the best
way for us to be a general and in control of our own time is doing effective
Daily Planning every day.
Here’s
five nifty Planning Principles
....... to help maximize your Daily Planning.
1. ) Do your planning the night before.
I try to set aside time each night for Daily Planning. I’ve wound down
from the workday and I am less pressured. The major benefit, however,
it that by having a plan of action completed the night before, we go to
bed with a sense of certainty and control about our next day and with
a sense of anticipation we would not ordinarily have. After getting into
the habit of accomplishing our Daily Planning each night, the quality
of our sleep will be enhanced because we have established a plan each
night that gives us the roadmap or game plan for the next day eliminating
the need to wrestle with all the loose ends in our heads during our sleeping
hours, interfering with the quality of our sleep.
2. ) Put your plan into writing.
There is extraordinary power in the pen. Putting our plan into writing
helps us to increase our feelings of control and, indeed, the reality
of control. When we try to keep track of everything in our heads, things
tend to slip through the cracks.
3. ) “Have
to’s” and “Want to’s”. Good planning involves more than just
properly administering our “Have To’s”. Sure we ought to better handle
our “Have To’s”, but we also need to do a good job taking care of our
“Want To’s”. Plan out not only the things you “have to” do, but, more
importantly, the things you “want to” do.
4. ) Over plan your day. “If you want
to get something done, give it to a busy person.” The more you plan to
do, the more you can get done because you take advantage of Parkinson’s
Law which says, in part, that a project tends to expand with the time
allocated for it. If you have one thing to do for the day, it will take
all day. If you have three things to do for the day, you’ll get all three
done. If you have twelve things to get done for the day, you might not
get all twelve done, but probably will get nine completed. See, having
a lot to do creates a healthy sense of pressure on us and we almost automatically
become better time managers.
5. ) Prioritize your list. Our list
will almost always include “crucial” as
well as “not crucial” items. Some
items are more important, others less so. Without some direction, we tend
to gravitate towards the “not crucial” items because they are typically
easier to do, take less time, and may even be more fun than many of our
“crucial” items. A simple numerical listing will suffice. Put a “1” next
the most important item on your list, the one item you would want done
if you could only accomplish one item. Then place a “2” next to the second
most important item, continuing the process until all the items on your
list are prioritized in order of their importance.
Get Organized Now - See the latest publication
from Dr. Donaled E. Whitmore
KISS
Guide to Organizing Your Life (Keep It Simple Series)
Book Description
The only guide you'll ever need to get more done in less time with less
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at work and at home. Discover how to overcome stumbling blocks to greater
personal productivity. Find out how to eliminate time-wasters. Learn how
to prioritize and delegate tasks.
The methods Don writes about, and uses every day, are not lofty theory,
but, rather, practical, common sense tools and techniques that he has
tested himself; If they work for him-and they can work for you, too.
Source: Contributed by: Dr. Donald E. Wetmore - Professional Speaker
- Productivity Institute
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