Time
Management and Ideas for Getting Through the Busy End of the Year
What
is Time Management?
Managing
time means investing your time to obtain those things you decide you want
out of life, including what you want out of both your personal and professional
lives. This definition implies goal-oriented action. It assumes that you
know what things are important to you. This concept of managing time assumes
that you have clearly focused values about your work, your social activities,
your personal life, and the commitments that you make to most importantly
yourself and other people. The payoff of an effective time management
program is the ability to get more done and control your life. In other
words, what you should be working towards is putting yourself in control
of your life and your job instead of your life and job controlling you.
Categories
of Time Use
As you consider
the things you need to accomplish, try to place them in categories of
importance.
Important
and Urgent
These
are things that must get done, immediately or in the very near future.
Example:
Your supervisor needs an assignment by 10:00 a.m. tomorrow, you need
to submit a report to a volunteer committee in 2 days, you need to attend
a personal engagement that you committed to 1 month ago, and it is April
15 and you havent finished your tax return submission.
Important
but not Urgent
Attention
to this category is what divides effective time managers from ineffective
ones.
Most of
the really important things in our lives are not urgent. They can be
done now or later. In many cases they can be postponed forever, and
in too many cases they are. These are the things that we never get around
to.
Example:
The diet youve intended to begin, the annual doctors appointment
youve been talking about scheduling for 3 years, getting to see
a counselor about an issue that is bothering you, calling the bank to
resolve a problem with your bank account.
All of
these things have one thing in common: despite their importance to your
health and your well-being, they will be postponed indefinitely unless
you yourself initiate action. If your ability to get things done is
driven by outside influences or other peoples deadlines or priorities,
then you will never get around to managing your own priorities.
Urgent
but not Important
These
are the things that clamor for immediate action, but that we would assign
a low priority if we examined them objectively.
Example:
Someone asks you to volunteer for a project, that you really are not
interested in, but because someone is looking for an immediate answer
and you do not know how to gracefully decline, you say yes. These tasks
typically have built-in time lines, and because of that they get done,
while items that are Imporant but not Urgent, get put on the back burner.
Busy
Work
There
are many tasks that are marginally worth doing but are neither urgent
nor important. They provide a feeling of activity and accomplishment
while giving us an excuse for putting off those Important but not Urgent
tasks that are far more important.
Example:
You decide to work late one Friday night because you have a lot of work
to catch up on. When you sit down at your desk you start organizing
the information on your desk. Having done so, you decide that while
you are at it, you should just organize your top desk drawer. You spend
the rest of the evening filing a pile of paper that has accumulated
on your desk over the course of the lsat month.
Wasted
Time
The definition
of wasted time is subjective of course.
Ernest
Hemingway is quoted as having defined immoral as anything
that you feel bad about after. This definition may not stand up to theological
scrutiny, but it may apply nicely to wasted time.
Example:
Television viewing, can be time well spent if we come away feeling that
we have been enlightened or entertained. But if, afterward, we feel
that the time would have been better spent conversing with friends or
family, exercising, or reading a good book, then we can count that time
as wasted.
People
who scramble madly to get control of their time often look for things
in the wasted time category to blame for their inefficiency. Perhaps
however, this is not where the problem lies. It lies rather with allocating
too much time to things in the Urgent but
not Important and Busy work
categories, rather than Important but not
Urgent category.
Managing
Your Time Effectively
The close
of the year can be hectic for even the best administrator. There are things
that you can do however, to make the job easier. Lets give some thought
to the following:
Getting
the Job Done
- When you have a big job to accomplish, divide the job into manageable
parts, and conquer the individual parts. This will give you a sense
that the job is not too large, and with each task you accomplish you
will be motivated to complete the remainder of the job.
- Understand that at points it is important to finish a job, and at
points it is best to stop and come back to it later. If it takes you
one hour to finish something that should take 15 minutes, youve
not used your time wisely.
- You dont always have to do things the same. Sometimes trying
to do things differently will help you find new and more efficient ways
of getting things done.
- Manage paper carefully. Handle paper as few times as is possible.
Look at it and figure out whether you should throw it away or keep it.
If you decide to throw it away, do so immediately. If you decide to
keep it, put it in a specific place as a reminder that you need to do
it. When it is done, file it or throw it a way.
- Take time the night before to think about what you need to get done
the next day.
- If youre working on something hard, switch occasionally to
a less intense task.
Self
Analysis
- Sometimes you need to stop non-productive activities as soon as possible
and you need to understand your personality traits. Are you too cautious?
Do you talk too much? Are you too friendly? Are you still working on
a work assignment at 3:00 p.m. that is due at 5:00 p.m. that evening?
- Do your hardest work at the time of the day when you are at your
peak.
- Always consider the commitments you make to others. Dont volunteer
for things that do not interest you and will take up important time.
Remember that if you promise to do something, you should do it without
needing to be reminded or nagged. Be assertive, and feel comfortable
pleasantly stating the word No from time to time. You cant
be all things to all people.
Understanding
Your Priorities
- There will always be a battle for priorities, and you need to decide
what is of high priority to you and focus in on those things. Balance
your personal life, personal commitments and work life so that no area
suffers because of another.
- Remember that crisis and unexpected things will always come up (especially
when working in housing and residence life!). Build time into your day
to account for the fact that this will happen from time to time.
- Help your supervisor make better use of your time. Keep him or her
informed of your work, what is going well and what is not. Dont
ask your supervisor to do work for you that you could do yourself, or
to solve problems that you can solve. Talk to your supervisor about
time used together and how it can be most efficiently spent.
Look
out for Your Well-Being
- Protect
your health. Avoid not getting enough rest, relaxation, sleep and exercise.
- Remember
the value of time spent relaxing. Enjoy your life, get work done and
then play. Sometimes doing nothing or planning nothing is one of the
most healthful things you can do.
NOTE: Much
of this concepts and ideas in this article have been taken from information
compiled by Mary Beth Cooper, Associate University Vice President and
River Campus Dean of Students at the University of Rochester, and Brian
McAree, Interim Vice President for Students at Ithaca College. This information
is presented per the permission of Mary Beth Cooper.