Source: Freelancingandmore.com |
Everyone knows that the level of your success and
productivity in life and in all your endeavors is directly, and greatly
influenced by your ability to manage time. It’s not just important to learn to
manage your own time, but that of your coworkers, colleagues, friends and
fellow students. However, you must know that time is a wild beast that can
never be tamed. What I am saying therefore, is that it is impossible to ‘manage
time’.
“You can’t manage time, you can only manage yourself” –
Brain Tracy (from the book, Goals!). One
of the greatest tools in managing time, as it were, is the tool of personal and
life management. If you cannot manage yourself, you cannot manage your time.
Even the Bible, in Proverbs 16 verse 32, helps us to understand that the man who
can control himself is mightier than a strongman who takes a city.
Self-control, self-discipline and self-mastery are very important tools in the
quest to maximize time. This is because, there are general rules for time
management but these rules vary, in application, from one individual to
another. The way one person can practice and properly utilize these rules is
different from how another person can. Therefore, the emphasis here lies on
one’s ability to understand himself, his strengths and weaknesses, put them
into cognizance, and then begin to plan the effective use of his time around
these things.
Another important thing to notice in time management is the
use of lists. In managing your time, it is imperative that you learn how to
make a daily list. Start small, then you can get better from there. What I mean
here, is that time management requires you to make a daily list of the things
you want to achieve for each day (do this the night before). After making this
list, rearrange it in order of priority, regardless of the time each task will
consume. The most important tasks must come first on the list. After this is
done, look at each task and, in front of it, allot a sensible time estimate to
it. Be realistic. If there is a task on your list that cannot be completed in
one day, indicate it on that list. Don’t assume. Every task on your list must
have a timeframe in front of it.
When you’re done allocating timeframes, go over the list
again to see if there are changes to be made. If there aren’t, then you’re good
to go. From time to time, you may need to reorder the list, don’t worry, that’s
part of life. Change is permanent in life. Remember to tailor the list to suit
your level of personal effectiveness and management. What works for one person
may not work for the next person. Moreover, as you practice these simple steps
and as you learn more about yourself, with the view to improve your personal
effectiveness, you will find that you are able to achieve more in lesser time.
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