"The
key is not to prioritize what is on the schedule,
but to schedule your priorities."
but to schedule your priorities."
- Stephen
Covey, Author and Speaker
Want to tame time? Here's how to
maximize the precious minutes we get each day.
From John C. Maxwell:
Time is precious.
Ask the coach whose team is
behind in the final seconds of a game. Ask the air traffic controller in charge
of scheduling takeoffs and landings at a major airport. Ask the news reporter
who has just received a breaking story from the AP wire. Ask the cancer patient
who just learned he has only two months left to live.
Time management is an oxymoron.
Time is beyond our control, and the clock keeps ticking regardless of how we
lead our lives. Priority management is the answer to maximizing the time we
have. Our days are identical suitcases-all the same size-but some can pack more
into them than others. No one has a magical ability to make time, but if our
lives have direction, we can make the most of the moments we have been given.
Time stewardship is perhaps a
leader's greatest responsibility. In the words of Peter Drucker, "Nothing
else distinguishes effective executives as much as their tender loving care of
time."
How do we maximize the precious
minutes given to us each day? Learn and emulate the five characteristics of
people who use time wisely:
1. They are purposeful.
People who use time wisely spend
it on activities that advance their overall purpose in life. By consistently
channeling time and energy toward an overarching purpose, people can most fully
realize their potential.
We cannot reach peak performance
without a peak purpose. Purpose enlivens all that we do. In fact, I believe the
two greatest days in a person's life are the day they are born and the day they
discover why. Uncovering purpose helps to refine passion, focus efforts and
sharpen commitments. The cumulative result is to amplify achievements.
2. They are committed to
values.
People who use time correctly
underscore their values with the time they spend. By acting in accordance with
their beliefs, they find fulfillment. Failure to identify values leads to a
rudderless existence in which people drift through life, uncertain as to what
they hold dear. Clarity of values is like a beacon of light, guiding the way
through life's twists and turns.
When extended to an organization,
values inspire a sense of broader purpose. They make work worthwhile. In an
organization, if vision is the head and mission is the heart, then values are
the soul. Values endow day-to-day operations and transactions with meaning.
3. They are attuned to
their strengths.
People who use time correctly
play to their strengths. By doing so, they are most effective. People don't pay
for average. If your skill level is a two, don't waste substantial time trying
to improve because you'll likely never grow beyond a four. However, if you're a
seven in an area, hone that skill, because when you become a nine, you've
reached a rare level of expertise.
As Jim Sundberg says,
"Discover your uniqueness; then discipline yourself to develop it."
You are blessed with a unique set of skills and talents. Find them, refine them
and let them carry you toward success.
4. They are choosers of
happiness.
People who use time the right way
choose happiness by prioritizing relationships and recreation. While choosing
happiness may seem simple and obvious, far too many people are trying to prove
themselves and validate their worth. These people chase after power and
prestige, and along the way their friendships wither, their family is ignored
and they skip vacation after vacation. In the end, any success they earn is a
hollow and lonely achievement.
Family and friendships are two of
the greatest facilitators of happiness. Prioritizing time to cultivate relationships
is a hallmark of a healthy leader. Likewise, scheduling leisure combats stress
and allows us to delight in the hobbies that bring us joy. In the end,
happiness is an inside job. We are wise to surround ourselves with family,
friends and fun, but ultimately we determine our internal response to the
people and circumstances in our lives.
5. They are equippers.
People who use time properly
equip others in order to compound their productivity. They realize the
limitations of individual attainment, and they build teams to expand their
impact. By developing an inner circle of leaders and investing in them, wise
time-users multiply their influence.
Equippers recognize that legacies
are carried on by people, not trophies. They pour themselves into the lives of
others and watch the ripple effect of their leadership spread through those
they have taught and mentored. Equippers seek significance over the long term,
which causes them to have a vested interest in the success of their successors.
As much as we would like, we
can't find more time-it's a finite and constantly diminishing resource. But we
can learn to spend time wisely.
My Add:
Identify your ROCKS - the high priority, high value
projects/actions - and block your calendar. Make appointments with yourself (60
-90 minutes at a time) and stop and focus on those ROCKS as though it is an
appointment with your most important customer. No cutting it, no moving it
around, no fitting it in somewhere else. Maybe one block a day.
Regards,
Rick Wallace
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