procrastination

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You know you need to work on your productivity if …

Monday, April 30th, 2012

stress

Today I thought I’d come with a list of attributes and behaviour that are commonly found in people who still need to work on their productivity. If some of these apply to you, that doesn’t mean that you never get anything done, but the more times you nod when you read the following list or mentally say “oh yes”, “yup, that’s me” or “oops, did that” the more likely you could do with a bit of tweaking of habits and improving of techniques that could help you get more done and spend less time treading the hamster wheel.

So, do any of these describe you?

  • being late to meetings
  • forgetting items
  • having more than a screen’s worth of emails once you’re finished dealing with them
  • not being able to find things on your desk
  • not being able to lay your hand on important documents
  • double booking appointments
  • regularly exceeding deadlines
  • being unable to delegate
  • being unable to say no to more work
  • being a master procrastinator
  • working regularly on evenings and/or weekends
  • insisting on working on holiday (if holidays are even taken)
  • forgetting to do to-dos
  • paying late fees
  • finding yourself constantly apologising
  • having no inbox on your desk
  • having an overflowing inbox on your desk
  • winging it instead of preparing
  • being constantly stressed out

I’m not going to give a number here, saying if you agree with these statements x many times, you need to do y. You know yourself, whether you’re in need of improving your productivity. There are many ways you can achieve this, but all result in the same 3 steps:

  1. Deciding that you have a an issue
  2. Getting help (this can be anything from a book to attending a seminar or personal productivity training)
  3. Implementing what you have learned, step by step

The third step is probably the most important. The best productivity coach, the most amazingly written book won’t be able to help you if you don’t put into action what you have learned. It’s about changing habits and sticking to the new regime. That’s the same as if you were trying to give up smoking or losing weight.

And the first step needs to come from the person needing the help. It’s no good to identify that your partner/co-worker/friend needs to get their act together and get organised. They need to realise it and want it for themselves, otherwise it won’t work, no matter how well meaning the advice is.

 

Joining another blog challenge in June

Saturday, April 28th, 2012

author blog challenge

I’ve just signed up to join another blog challenge in June. This time it’s a challenge specially designed for authors. Well, I’ve already written an eBook and I have been thinking for a while of writing a “proper” book on productivity and organising. I think this new challenge is going to give me the incentive to get on with it and making the intention a reality, stop procrastinating and start acting. If you want to find out more about the Author Blog Challenge, here is the website: http://authorblogchallenge.wordpress.com/ .

I already have a skeleton outline of the book and a couple of chapters have been started. A good start to continue from. I am going to use the blog challenge to keep myself accountable for my progress during June.

The only thing yet to decide is whether I will blog on this page or set up another blog especially for the creation of the book.

What do you think? Any suggestions or advice? Please comment.

Discovering Pinterest

Friday, April 20th, 2012

Pinterest

I signed up with Pinterest yesterday and have suitably procrastinated all day today. It is very, very tempting to be on there forever discovering wonderful things, liking and repinning them, then discovering even more. But to be honest, I did allow myself that time today, since it was my first day. I am going to use it as a tool to share good organising ideas and also some more private things such as favourite places and other things I like. My Facebook and Twitter pages that link to my business website are quite professional, so this will be the place to show a bit more of who I really am as a person, while connecting with people and sharing organising tips as well.

So, what’s the plan, the strategy? Well, I will allow myself up to 20 minutes a day on Pinterest. Either in one session or two, depending on my schedule. And these are the things I will do in that time:

  • Find interesting organising ideas to share
  • Post photos of my own projects
  • Connect with 2-3 new people
  • Comment on my followers’ pins to create a dialogue
  • Thank people who have repinned my pins
  • If there is spare time share personal pins

If and when I come across pins that interest me privately I am going to put them in tabs that I will look at once my work is done for the day, or if I take a break. I’m already looking forward to all those finds!  :)

Have you got a strategy for Pinterest or other social media? Please share in the comments.

Perfection – the myth

Monday, April 16th, 2012

perfection

As a Professional Organiser I often come across people who believe that I must be perfect because of what I do. Well, sorry to shatter your illusions, I’m not. I am a very normal human being, who sometimes forgets things, is late now and again and hasn’t got a house and office that are tidied to perfection at any given time.

The reason I became a Professional Organiser is that I used to be a bit of a disaster organisationally. I know where people come from when they need help and because I’ve taken the journey and learned about the tools to get organised, I know I can teach them. I have acquired the skills to be more organised over many years and it has taken research and trial and error to figure out what works (for me) and what doesn’t. That’s why I know there is no perfect solution. Every person is different and every situation is different and the way I approach my clients is: how can we use your habits and make only small adjustments so that you are more likely to keep up with the changes to improve your situation.

Changing someone’s life completely might be dramatically very interesting for a TV show, but in real life dramatic change hardly ever last very long and it is very easy for people to slide back into old habits. Making smaller changes is much easier, therefore it is more likely to stick long term.

Trying to get everything perfect is most likely to lead to procrastination, because the conditions will never be perfect, and neither will the outcome. It will be an improvement over the current situation and any improvement is a good thing.

So let go of perfection, it’ll do you good. I did, and I’m much happier for it. I don’t have to be perfect, I just have to make small continuous improvements to keep growing and learning.

Procrastination and predicting the future

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

We’re so incredibly bad at predicting the future. We are getting better at predicting the weather, at least to a degree (no pun intended). Trying to predict the weather more than a couple of days into the future and all goes pear shaped again. But try and predict out own feelings. Forget about it!

This is one reason why procrastination is such a difficult thing to break. We think “I’ll feel more like it tomorrow” and put off a task we were intending to get on with. Immediately we feel better because we have made a decision that we are definitely going to start tomorrow. We can even imagine what it will feel like to “feel like it”. And lo and behold, when tomorrow comes, we find that yet again we don’t feel like it at all. We find reasons why we can’t possible start and put it off for yet another day, week, month etc.

We not only fail to predict our feelings but we also fail to take into consideration the actual time we have available. The reason is usually a lack of clarity how much we actually have to do that is not scheduled. We are aware of our appointments but what about all those little things we need to do on a day to day basis, that take up time and add up, taking up a large part of our day without us even realising it.

One way around this could be to simply start your task. It doesn’t matter at this point whether the task will actually get finished, but once you have started you give yourself a chance to create some momentum to keep going. You might surprise yourself and even finish the task. Or you might finish a fair chunk of the task and realise it wasn’t nearly as bad as you thought it would be. It doesn’t matter, doing a task in chunks is better than not doing it at all.

If you would like to find out more about this and many other aspects about procrastination, why not pop over to www.procrastination.ca where the Canadian university professor Tim Pychyl shares all his knowledge about procrastination from an academic perspective.

Deadlines – stick to them or you’ll get shot!

Monday, February 20th, 2012

This sounds drastic, but the origin of the word deadline is related to this headline. According to Lossing’s History of the Civil War (1868): “Seventeen feet from the inner stockade was the ‘dead-line’, over which no man could pass and live.” (Source:  Random House)This referred to the line around a military prison beyond which soldiers were authorized to shoot escaping prisoners. Not a nice thought but it gives the word deadline a bit more severity than it has nowadays.

We are used to move deadlines, extend them, argue over them or simply ignore them. But does that actually help with the day-to-day running of our affairs? Not really. Moving a deadline simply means that you still have to do the work, you just eat into the time of when you were already meant to do something else. You will not get the gratification of feeling proud of yourself for finishing on time. You will not get the praise of others that you are reliable and trustworthy. You are letting yourself and others down by asking for yet another extension. You have to spend more time picking up from where you left of and you have no idea what the time landscape will look like around the new deadline, it might even be more hectic!

So what can you do? How about seeing the deadline as exactly that – cross it and you’re in trouble. Stick to it.

Here are 3 strategies to do exactly that, and in the process become proud of yourself for being reliable and a real team player.

  1. Set yourself partial deadlines along the way with the final deadline due before the actual deadline. Let’s say the project is due in 4 weeks time. Set yourself weekly deadlines for what you will have achieved by the end of each week and set the final deadline 2 days before the 4 weeks are up. You then have a couple of days to make sure all the I’s are dotted and the Ts are crossed and you can deliver an amazing project on time.
  2. If you are the one setting yourself a deadline, make sure it’s realistic. Take into consideration how long each step of the project is really going to take, build in a buffer for things going wrong and don’t forget to add time for travelling, delivery periods and other extras that are out of your control. With a realistic deadline you are less likely to move it and will start to respect it. And if you don’t need the buffer for things going wrong, you will even be able to finish early, giving you extra gratification.
  3. Decide to adhere to deadlines and make it a new habit. Just like being on time, eating healthy and working out, it is often simply a matter of will power and determination whether you stick to your deadlines. And if you keep in mind what happened to those poor prisoners who overstepped their dead-line in the olden days, you might just stay on track from now on.

Bonus Tip: Post the deadline in a visible place to remind you that you haven’t got all day and to keep procrastination at bay.

Use Waiting Time Wisely

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Now and again we find ourselves waiting. Waiting for the kettle to boil, being on hold on the phone, standing in a queue at the photocopier or waiting for the computer to boot up. Generally we view these short pockets of time as wasted but have you ever thought of using them productively?

You can use those time pockets to get small jobs done. There are dozens of little mini tasks that always need doing, such as filing a couple of papers, deleting some emails that clutter up your inbox, reading an article or blog post, tweeting, etc. Maybe some of those jobs have been hanging around for a while because you have been procrastinating.

Create a list of those tiny, (sometimes pesky) jobs that need doing but don’t need much time. And whenever you find yourself waiting, do one of those 1 or 2 minute tasks. Keeping on top of those little jobs by using your time pockets will save you a lot of time in the long run.

5 Ways to Erase Daily Procrastination in Your Business

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

According to Real Simple magazine’s survey of 10,000 readers, the average daily to-do list has 5 to 9 tasks on it. Only 5% of the readers are productive for 3 hours during a 9-to-5 workday as a result of web-related distractions. According to the Procrastination Research Group, based on some figures, it is estimated that as much as 95% of the people are prone to procrastination. Amongst them, 20% of them are chronic procrastinators.

Procrastination is generally defined as avoided tasks or activities that need to be accomplished. Poor time management and procrastination can be a direct result of having unreachable goals, having to meet others’ standards, disorganization or the inability to handle the task. Below are ways to erase daily procrastination in your business.

  1. Use the first hour or two of your day to work on things that require your attention or have deadlines. Accomplishing necessary tasks will invigorate you to do more.
  2. Inspire yourself with insightful reading. Read at least one business article daily and take action. Try implementing a new idea. Don’t just read about it, but do.
  3. Afternoon organization can make the next day easier. Take 15 minutes at the end of each day to think about tomorrow’s priorities. Knowing what needs to be done at the beginning of each day gives you focus and direction.
  4. Break large projects or tasks into smaller activities and schedule them on your calendar as appointments. Do them in 30-minutes, 1-hour or 3-hour time blocks. You wouldn’t interrupt a scheduled appointment, so don’t allow unnecessary interruptions when working on your projects.
  5. Don’t make lofty goals. Be reasonable in your expectations of yourself, your time and your commitments. Overextending yourself can cause you shut down. Be practical and realistic.

It’s always helpful to identify the source of your procrastination. Take some time to think about why you are putting things off and then try one of the above techniques. Procrastination can really be a struggle and challenge for small business owners, especially when they are simply overwhelmed and unsure of their next move. Take it one step at a time and be conscious of your actions AND inaction.

A.Michelle Blakeley is the Founder and CEO of Simplicity, Inc.; a progressive small business development firm. She manages her clients’ business expectations and prevents information overload via Micro Business Therapy™ and Micro Business Action Plans. She is featured in Forbes.com and the Financial Post as one of 30 Women Entrepreneurs to Follow on Twitter and the host of Simple Truths for Women Entrepreneurs on BlogTalkRadio.com.

Tuesday’s Tip – Go and Set Some Goals

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Everyone talks about goal setting these days. But why exactly should you do it? Just because people keep telling you to is probably not a good enough reason. And I completely agree with you on that one. But what about if you look at these 5 reasons:

  1. Goals can give you a target to aim for
    If you don’t know where you’re going, how are you going to get there?
  2. Goals can help you focus
    What do you want to achieve today?
  3. Goals can motivate you
    If you know what’s at stake you will want to stop procrastinating.
  4. Goals can help you set priorities
    Find out what’s really important to you and do something do improve exactly that.
  5. Goals can be a roadmap
    Find your way from where you are now to where you want to be.

Start today by writing down your goals and see where they can take you.

Today’s tip is the first in a series of posts on goal setting. I believe that goal setting is a great way to organise your mind and your time so it’s very relevant to the Well Organised philosophy.

Procrastination – You’re Fired!

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Watching the latest season of “The Apprentice” has inspired me to this title, as you can probably imagine. And the series is a good example that you can only get anywhere in life if you are pro-active. This also applies when you are aiming to get organised. You will not achieve a lot of progress if you are constantly thinking about getting organised but never actually do anything about it.

The successful candidates in the show were not the ones taking the back seat and the ones trying to stay under the radar. The successful people stood out as taking risks and doing the tasks to the best of their abilities.

Now when it comes to a project like getting organised, you can do many things to bring about success. But the main thing is to get started. Yes, do spend some time making a plan, but then start implementing it, making the first step. A Chinese proverb states: Even the longest journey starts with the first step. And this also applies to the largest of organising projects.

Divide your project into tasks. Break down the tasks into small, manageable bite-size chunks. Think about what needs to be done first and then do it. It will do you and your disorganised surroundings no good if you have the best plan and you don’t implement it.

If you’re not too sure how to go about the whole thing, get some outside help. HIre a Professional Organiser who will put you on the right track and stay with you for as long as you need. They can plan the whole project with you and you decide how much they actually do with you. Once you’re ready to go it alone, they will usually leave you with a host of good advice to increase your confidence and help you on your way.

So why not fire that procrastination today and get started!

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    At the end of the challenge I have reached the end of the Ultimate Blog Challenge. Today is the last day, and this is the final post. I've made it! I must say, that I'm quite proud of myself. >>

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