Try to plan your route so that you can include as many tasks in sequence as possible when you travel.
When you have finished with an item don’t put it down, put it away.
Learn to speed read.
Schedule your priority task at the most efficient time. This could be at your peak performance or contacting someone when they are most likely to be around.
Your greatest resource is the team. Increase their awareness of Time Management for maximum effect.
Make sure all goals are owned by those who will be affected by them.
The person may do the task differently to your self but they may do it better with new ideas.
Don’t limit delegation to the work environment, practice it at home as well.
One you have made a decision don’t waste time worrying about ‘what ifs’ focus on the current path.
Try to develop these skills as early as possible.
Forecast the future better by using your experience with well planned systems.
If you have a lot of trouble with interruptions that are unavoidable break up a task into smaller pieces.
Back up all your systems regularly.
Back up externally and retain a local and remote copy of critical systems, software for re-installation and files.
Keep focussed and don’t give up. Regularly review progress.
If you have two top priorities try to resolve or delegate one.
We may have a great system but it will be no good if you can’t remember to implement it. Not everything will end up in a diary, or electronic reminder.
Some tasks just don’t fall into this category. If it is important to do something, don’t trust to memory design your own reminder. An easy technique is to put a reminder where you will constantly see it or even trip over it.
If you find you have spare time, think what tasks you can get out of the way. By putting common outstanding non urgent tasks into common folders you can attack similar tasks all at one time.
If you have 2 meetings, one after the other, with ‘monochronic’ (see 'monochronic time') people you probably won’t have too many problems keeping to time. However, if you consider those persons as having ‘polychronic’ personalities (see 'polychronic time') you may need to give them a little extra time otherwise overlap may occur.
If you are pushed for time, the task appears to be 70 to 90% complete and you are running out of ideas what can you do? Try calling it a day and asking another for their opinion and input of ideas.
This may be just what the task needs to get it finished. It will free up some time for other work and perhaps remove the necessity for gaining input after the ‘finished article’ has been circulated.