Get
Started Now And Use Your Time Effectively
(Use Time Management Skills & Stop Procrasting in Your Freelance / Home-Based / Small Business)
by Wendy Hearn
Using
your time effectively requires you to manage yourself, not
time itself. One of the steps is to continually evaluate what's
working well for you and do more of it.
As
I reviewed the past week to see what had been better for me,
I realized I'd been able to make more effective use of my
time by starting a project much earlier than usual. Previously
I would have bought into the thoughts of 'You've got plenty
of time', or 'You don't need to start that now' and so left
getting started until later. On this occasion, I didn't waste
time listening to my thoughts but got started when my energy
level was good and I felt inspired to take action.
A
lot of time can be wasted and pressure generated by procrastinating
or leaving things till the last minute. I found that by starting
this task much earlier than I needed to, I actually saved
time. When I got stuck or lacked clarity and understanding,
I had time to allow the clarity or next step to come to me
quite naturally. Instead of wasting a lot of time trying to
think it through, I had confidence that the answer would come
and I'd start moving forward again. This happened when I least
expected it, such as while driving, walking, sleeping, playing
squash, cooking a meal, having a conversation and listening
to music.
Starting things early enables you to work in shorter
bursts as you have a reserve of time to break down a bigger
piece of work into smaller pieces. You work more effectively
and productively in shorter chunks of time and can benefit
in many ways from the breaks between each burst of working.
If you wait until the last possible minute before starting
something, you miss out on the benefits of doing smaller stints
and enjoying breaks away from whatever you're working on.
Being successful and effective requires you to start things
early enough. So what stops many people doing this? Perhaps
it's procrastination, lack of forward planning, thinking they
have too much to do or simply a lack of awareness if they
haven't experimented with this idea before and experienced
the benefits of it. A lot of people think they enjoy the adrenaline
rush and the pressure of leaving things till the last minute.
They think they perform better under this pressure. Yet often,
they suffer more stress and make more mistakes. The task may
take even longer to complete because they have to redo it.
A pressing deadline will cause you to 'make yourself' do something
which doesn't usually inspire you and often means you're not
able to work at your best. If you want to use your time effectively,
to be inspired and to perform at your best, then I invite
you to experiment with starting some things earlier and evaluate
the results for yourself.
You
may choose to pick one particular project or task to experiment
with at first. This may entail writing a report, getting your
finances and investments in order or devising a business or
a career development plan.
When
you're ready to experiment with this, make sure that if you
do start something early, you don't give it too much time
and allow it to expand into the time available. This isn't
effective working. If you start work on something early, consider
working only in 15-20 minute slots at a time, create artificial
deadlines for yourself and thus benefit from healthy commitment.
What I want for you is to be effective with your use of time.
Wendy Hearn
She
works with business owners, professionals and executives to
discover and unlock their own inspiration, to effortlessly
take the actions required to have the success they desire.
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