Monday, May 18, 2020

Five steps to higher productivity

Five steps to higher productivity One of the best ways to distinguish yourself at work is through productivity. Were all sifting through too much email, we all have more work than we can ever get done, and we all have access to more information than we could ever consume. The people who make the best decisions about how to process this information quickly and effectively are the people who will stand out in the workplace. Productivity Is a Skill It used to be that people went to work from 9 to 5, and if you were serious about your career you worked much longer hours. But few people still aspire to a 9-to-5 job, and most of us use productivity tools to manage our time in a way that facilitates a great personal life and a great work life. Thousands of people read productivity tips on Lifehacker.com every day of the week, and dissect David Allens bestselling book Getting Things Done with the fervor of an English lit student explicating Ulysses. Productivity skills are a new measure of career potential, so you need to develop them. Here are five suggestions for how to excel at productivity. 1. Do the most important thing first. Gina Trapani, the editor of Lifehacker.com, calls this a morning dash. She sits down at her desk and does the No. 1 item on her to-do list so that she knows its finished. This requires a lot of prior planning. You need to write an accurate, prioritized list and you need to block out a portion of your morning to accomplish your No. 1 task uninterrupted. The hardest thing about living by a to-do list is that you have to constantly ask yourself the difficult question, Whats the most important thing to me right now? A good to-do list includes long-term and short-term projects, and it integrates all aspects of your life. Pick out lawn furniture is on the same list at go to the board meeting because both are competing for the same, limited amount of your time. 2. Keep your inbox empty. Your inbox is not your to-do list; your to-do list is something you compile and prioritize. If your inbox is your to-do list, then you have no control over what youre doing youve ceded it to whoever sends you an email next. Productivity wizards  experience less information overload because they deal with an email as soon as theyve read it respond, file, or delete. Nothing stays in the inbox. Reading each email four or five times while it languishes in your inbox is a huge waste of time, and totally impractical given the amount of email we all  receive. 3. Become a realist about time. You can schedule and schedule and schedule, but it wont do any good unless you get more realistic about time. Develop a sense of who in your life is good at estimating time and who isnt, because you need to be able to compensate for the people who mess up your schedule with poor time estimates. In general, though,  were all bad at estimating time. We overestimate how much time we have and cope poorly with the fact that what we do with our time changes from day to day. So  the first step toward being good at estimating time is to understand your own inherent weaknesses. Then, at least, you can start compensating. 4. Focus on what youre doing so you can do it faster and better. Most of the time, multitasking doesnt help you. It works for short, repetitive tasks that youre very familiar with. But you dont want to develop good work habits for boring work. Youd probably prefer to stretch your brain and try new things, and that kind of work requires focus. A wide range of research has shown that even if you can talk on the phone and use email and IM at the same time,  multitasking decreases your productivity. Our creative powers are compromised when we multitask. The other common culprit to focusing is lack of sleep. Some people think they can use caffeine to dull the need for sleep, but it catches up with them. Fortunately,  you only need a 10-minute nap  to get your brain back on track. And when youre making up for several nights of lost sleep, you dont need to make it all up you just need seven hours to get back on your game. 5. Delegate. Once you know whats most important to you in all aspects of your life, youll know what to delegate. And the answer will be almost everything. The hardest part of productivity is admitting that  you cant do everything. In fact, its the core of what being an adult is as a child, everything looks possible. Adults are hit quickly with the cold reality that  they can only do whats most important. So be very clear on what that is, and delegate as much of the other stuff as you can. At work, good delegating doesnt mean dumping your worst tasks on your co-workers. In fact, you often need to  delegate your most appealing work  and do some of the grunt work yourself. Because in the end, your No. 1 productivity goal is to get whats important done it doesnt matter who gets it done, and youre more likely to get a lot of help if you offer your fun stuff. This holds true for your home life, too  you can delegate a lot more at home than you think you can  without losing the things you care about most. Productive to the Core The core of productivity is self-knowledge, which is emotional intelligence. You have to know what you want most in order to know what to do first, and you have to know your goals before you can productively meet them.

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