What’s Impacting Your Ability to Manage Your Time?
From the Thoughts on Project Management Blog
by Gina Abudi
Articles will focus on the the people-side of project management - team leadership, communication, virtual teams, change management and cultural diversity.
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All project managers have a number of tasks to accomplish in any given day! There is just too much to do to accomplish the goals and objectives we need to get done to ensure our projects are a success. It seems easy to say to just limit what you have to do; but that is rarely possible to do – after all, projects must be completed!
Here are a number of common mistakes we all make that distract us from focusing and accomplishing our goals:
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Not keeping a “to do” list
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Not prioritizing work to be done
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Not managing distractions and interruptions
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Procrastinating on tasks
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Taking on more than we can accomplish in a given time period
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Not taking breaks from the work
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Not effectively scheduling tasks/projects to be completed (with sufficient time to be done)
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Trying to multitask
I have found that when we know we are making these mistakes, and stay aware of them, we can more easily move past them! Here is one best practice to try that has worked effectively for me – I keep a prioritized “to do” list of what needs to be accomplished. I prioritize in the following two ways:
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Highest impact (client focused vs personal goal)
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Effort required to complete the task
Prioritize in any way that works for you. Each day I create a “to do” list to be completed that day. I set aside time to work through that list; blocking time on my calendar to do so. During this time I send my phone to voice mail and keep my email off so I am not distracted.
Since I am a “morning person,” I complete my more complex “to do” items during the early morning hours.
How do you effectively manage your time?
Posted on: December 19, 2015 07:28 AM |
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Comments (10)
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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Thanks for sharing you experience Gina. I totally agree with what you've mentioned and I foloow the same pace. There is always time for most of the things to do but its all about how you plan your day and manage your time.
rachel town
Kent State University Ashtabula
Ashtabula, Oh, United States
Thank you for your wonderful insight! I like the way that you prioritize your "to do" list! This is a great idea! The issue I always seem to run into upon making a "to do" list, is diving right into doing the most challenging task first without prioritizing.
Gina Abudi
President| Abudi Consulting LLC
Amherst, Nh, United States
My "to do" list can be fairly long Rachel Town so it is absolutely essential that I prioritize it. I balance challenging tasks (always done in the AM for me!) with "quick hits" so that I feel I am making progress.
Thanks for sharing..i used to follow the same way what you mention in handling "to do" list; completing complex item in the morning hours results in releasing the stress.
Thanks for sharing. In addition, any task/thing which can be finished quickly (5-10 minutes), lets do it directly without even adding it to list, so that we can save time on tracking and reminding ourselves.
Andy Kaufman
Host| People and Projects Podcast
Lake Zurich, Il, United States
Great post, Gina. Three books have greatly impacted me regarding this topic.
1. David Allen''s classic
Getting Things Done taught me to stop trying to remember everything. Get it out of our head! This last year I changed my todo list tracking to the Todoist app. I use it religiously and it''s made 2015 a much better year.
2. Charles Duhigg''s
The Power of Habit is a great read. A good chunk of our day (40-45% by some measures) is on auto-pilot. If we want to better manage our time, we need better habits. Duhigg breaks this down masterfully. If this sounds interesting to someone but don''t have the time to read the book, start with this interview on HBR''s IdeaCast podcast:
https://hbr.org/2012/06/habits-why-we-do-what-we-do/
3. Elizabeth Grace Saunders short little book
How to Invest Your Time Like Money. The idea is simple: most of us are in debt--way in debt--when it comes to how we "spend" our time. But what if we managed our time like we do our money? My conversation with Elizabeth is at
http://PeopleAndProjectsPodcast.com/137
Here''s to us all better managing our time in 2016!
Gina Abudi
President| Abudi Consulting LLC
Amherst, Nh, United States
Great suggestions Andy Kaufman - thanks for sharing. I have heard of the app for tracking "to do's;" but haven't yet tried it. I do use task tracking on Outlook which I find valuable (in addition to my paper "to do" list.) I'll check out the app you mentioned.
Kenneth Ashe
Blockchain Project Manager| On Chain
Fanwood, Nj, United States
I track my TODO list in excel. I refresh it and reprioritize it each morning. It really helps me keep focused through out the day.
Great tips. I need to start blocking my calendar more often.
Marlynn Dellosa
Section Head| National Grid Corp. of the Phils.
Angono/ Rizal, Philippines
Great ideas everyone. Yes, I agree with Andy Kaufman, David Allen''s classic Getting Things Done also helped me a lot. I am also using Outlook to manage my task and I use the Categories column with color coding to assign task priority.
Markus Kopko
AI Enabler for Project & Program Mgmt | Founder PMotion.ai / The PM
AI Coach| PMotion.ai
Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
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