In this series, professionals share their secrets to being more productive. Read the posts here, then write your own (use #ProductivityHacks in the body).
When it comes to productivity, we all face the same challenge —
there are only 24 hours in a day. Since even the best ideas are
worthless until they're executed, how efficiently you use your time is
as important as anything else in business.
I've become fascinated by productivity secrets because some people
seem to have twice the time, and there's no better way to reach your
goals than by finding ways to do more with the precious time you've been
given.
It feels incredible when you leave the office after an
ultra-productive day. It's a workplace high that's hard to beat. In my
experience you don’t need to work longer or push yourself harder — you just need to work smarter.
I've learned to rely on productivity hacks that make me far more
efficient. I try to squeeze every drop out of every hour without
expending any extra effort.
And my favorite hack also happens to be the easiest one to implement. It's so easy and useful you can begin using it now.
Never touch things twice.
That's it. Never put anything in a holding pattern, because
touching things twice is a huge time-waster. Don’t save an email or a
phone call to deal with later. As soon as something gets your attention
you should act on it, delegate it, or delete it.
To pull this off you're going to have to eat some frogs. “Eating a frog”
is doing the least appetizing, most dreaded item on your to-do list. If
you let your frogs sit, you waste your day dreading them. If you eat
them right away, then you're freed up to tackle the stuff that excites
and inspires you.
You'll also need to master the tyranny of the urgent. The tyranny of the urgent
refers to the tendency of little things that have to be done right now
to get in the way of what really matters. This creates a huge problem as
urgent actions often have little impact. The key here is to delete or
delegate. Otherwise, you can find yourself going days, or even weeks,
without touching the important stuff. You'll need to get good at
spotting when putting out fires is getting in the way of your
performance, and you'll need to delete or delegate the things that
hinder real forward momentum.
No is a powerful word that you're going to have to
wield. When it’s time to say no, avoid phrases such as I don’t think I
can or I’m not certain. Saying no to a new commitment honors your
existing commitments and gives you the opportunity to successfully and
efficiently fulfill them. Research conducted at the University of
California in San Francisco shows that the more difficulty that you have
saying no, the more likely you are to experience stress, burnout, and
even depression. Learn to use no, and it will lift your mood, as well as
your productivity.
If you aren't going to touch things twice, you can't allow e-mail to be a constant interruption. You should check e-mail on a schedule,
taking advantage of features that prioritize messages by sender. Set
alerts for your most important vendors and best customers, and save the
rest until the scheduled time. You could even set up an autoresponder
that lets senders know when you’ll be checking your e-mail again.
To make my system work, you're also going to have to avoid multitasking.
It's a real productivity killer. Research conducted at Stanford
University confirms that multitasking is less productive than doing a
single thing at a time. The researchers found that people who are
regularly bombarded with several streams of electronic information
cannot pay attention, recall information or switch from one job to
another as well as those who complete one task at a time.
Multitasking reduces your efficiency and performance because your
brain can only focus on one thing at a time. When you try to do two
things at once, your brain lacks the capacity to perform both tasks
successfully. Never touching things twice means only touching one thing
at a time.
Bringing It All Together
We’re all searching for ways to be more efficient and productive. I hope my productivity hack helps you to find that extra edge.
What productivity hacks do you rely on? Please share your thoughts in the comments section below as I learn just as much from you as you do from me.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Dr. Travis Bradberry
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