Time Management Techniques - 3 Tips to Turn Guesstimates into Power Estimates for Planning Your Time

Time management techniques elevate your effectiveness. So you face each morning with a thorough to-do list, confident that you will master the challenges ahead. But do you often run out of time before you run out of tasks? If so, use this guide. Develop the techniques for calculating how much you can accomplish, and when.

Why does estimating time for tasks become much easier when using a chart like this? For one thing, our sense of time is highly subjective. Painstakingly hunting down computer support online can drag 20 minutes into seeming like an hour. But time for lunch with a friend flies by, until you look at your watch with a jolt.

Charting your time sharpens your estimating and scheduling skills. Try this straightforward technique.

Prepare a typical to do list for the day ahead. From that list, select:
One task that you enjoy,
One you feel neutral about, and
One you dislike.

Write them down. Next to each item or task, estimate how long you think you’ll need to finish it. After completing each activity you’ve listed, record the actual time next to the estimated time. What do you learn?

Experiment. Shuffle the time of day when you engage in these activities. Again, record the time needed to get each job done. Ask yourself:
When is the best time to tackle tasks that require creativity? Or focus?
When is the most efficient time to take on a task you dislike?
What other factors play in?

Explore your options until you pinpoint the best time to approach each project, the ideal conditions, and how much time to set aside.

Repeat Steps #1 & 2 with a new set of three tasks. Compare the results.
What happens if you start your day with a task you’ve been intimidated by?
What changes do you make to complete difficult tasks?
What patterns emerge?

Continue this exercise until you have charted each activity.

Now you can schedule with success, using realistic assessments. If unexpected events eat up a portion of most days, schedule in some buffer time, as well.

This exercise works if you work. It helps you schedule activities for times you’re best equipped to handle them. And you can now set aside the time you genuinely need, not what you think you ‘might’ need. You will be able to greet each day with a clearer sense of your capabilities and a deeper appreciation of how much you actually accomplish.

What is your next step to build stronger time management techniques?

You will find expert guidance quickly with our free, twice-weekly Finding Time Tips. Each short time tip is paired with a practical action step you can use immediately to enhance your time effectiveness.

And as a bonus, you’ll also receive our free, monthly Award-Winning Finding Time Ezine, where we discuss the role of time in our lives. You are invited to sign up at www.findingtime.net/ezine.html

Offered by Paula Eder, Ph.D. The Time Finder.

Article Source: EzineArticles.com/?expert=Paula_Eder

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