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Getting Things Done. Personal Productivity. At your tables: Share approaches to personal productivity that have worked for you Record the most useful tips on flipchart. Good Time Management.
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Personal Productivity At your tables: • Share approaches to personal productivity that have worked for you • Record the most useful tips on flipchart
Good Time Management • Understanding and accepting one’s own natural style of time management (especially if it differs from experts) • Realizing when we need to use ways other than our habitual ones (and to recognize to do so may require some conscious effort) • Understanding and accepting others’ time management “preferences” and how they may be complementary with or in conflict with our own. • Taking responsibility for managing what’s irritating to others and “negotiating” time management practices that work for both of us.
Time Management Approaches • Steven Covey: First Things First • Jim Loehr: Power of Full Engagement • David Allen: Getting Things Done
Personal Productivity Training With your like-type partners, discuss: • What are the difficulties you encounter in the way you organize your work that keep you from being as productive as you would like to be?
GTD - Balance and relaxationClearing your mind and being flexible Two objectives: • Capturing all the things that need to get done into a logical and trusted system outside of your head and off your mind • Disciplining yourself to make front-end decisions about all of the “inputs” you let into your life so that you will always have a plan for “next actions” that you can implement or renegotiate at any moment
Managing Commitments: Basic Requirements If it’s on your mind, your mind isn’t clear – capture it in a system outside your mind You must clarify what your commitment is and what you have to do, if anything, to make progress Once you’ve decided on all the actions, keep them organized in a system you review regularly
Managing Commitments Individually • Write down the project or situation that is most on your mind at this moment • Describe in a single written sentence your intended successful outcome for this project or situation • Write down the very next physical action required to move the situation forward
Knowledge Work • You have to think about your stuff more than you realize but not as much as you’re afraid you might
Why things are on your mind • You have not clarified exactly what the intended outcome is • You have not decided what the very next physical action step is; and/or • You have not put reminders of the outcome and the action required in a system you trust
Managing Action Horizontal Action Management: • Getting current on and in control of what’s in your in-basket and your mind right now. Frees you up for… Vertical Action Management: • Project Planning -- Thinking up and down the track of individual topics and projects
5 Stages of Mastering Workflow • Collect things that command our attention • Process what they mean and what to do about them • Organize the results, which we… • Review as options for what we choose to… • Do
Collection Success Factors • Every open loop must be in your collection system and out of your head • You must have as few collection buckets as you can get by with • You must empty them regularly
“stuff” Process In-basket What is it? Trash Someday/ maybe {ticker file; hold for review} Is it actionable? no Projects {planning} Multistep projects yes Reference {retrievable when required} What’s the next action? Project plans {review for actions} Will it take less than 2 minutes? yes no Do it Defer it Delegate it Calendar {to do at a specific time} Next actions {to do as soon as I can} Waiting {got someone else to do}
Process • Process the items you have collected (decide what each thing means, specifically) • If it is not actionable – toss it, “tickle” it for possible later action, or file it as reference
Process • If it is not actionable – decide the very next physical action” • do (if less than two minutes), • delegate (and tack on “waiting for” list), or • defer (put on an action reminder list or in an action folder). • If one action will not close the loop, then identify the commitment as a “project” and put it on a reminder list of projects.
“stuff” Organize In-basket What is it? Trash Someday/ maybe {ticker file; hold for review} Is it actionable? no Projects {planning} Multistep projects Reference {retrievable when required} yes What’s the next action? Project plans {review for actions} Will it take less than 2 minutes? yes no Do it Delegate it Defer it Calendar {to do at a specific time} Next actions {to do as soon as I can} Waiting {got someone else to do}
Organize The four action categories are: • Projects – projects you have a commitment to finish • Calendar – actions that must occur on a specific day or time • Next Actions – actions to be done as soon as possible • Waiting For – projects and actions other are supposed to be doing, which you care about
Organize • Add sub-categories of these lists if it makes them easier to use (calls, errands, at home, etc.) • Add lists of longer horizon goals and values that influence you • Add checklists that may be useful as needed (job description, event trigger lists, org charts, etc.) • Maintain a general reference filing system for information and materials that have no action, but which need to be retrievable • Maintain an “on-hold” system for triggers of possible actions at later dates • Maintain support information files for projects as needed
Review Most frequently: • Calendar • Next Actions list
Critical Success Factor:The Weekly Review • Gather and process all your “stuff” • Review your system • Update your lists • Get clear, clear, current, and complete
Review • Review calendar and action lists daily (or whenever you could possibly do any of them) • Conduct a customized weekly review to get clean, get current, and get creative (see Weekly Review) • Review the longer-horizon lists of goals, values, and visions as often as required to keep your project list complete and current
Do: Choosing Actions in the Moment Four Criteria: • Context • Time available • Energy available • Priority
Do • Stay flexible by maintaining a “total life” action reminder system, always accessible for review, trusting your intuition in moment-to-moment decision-making • Choose to: • Do work you have previously defined or • Do work as it appears or • Take time to define your work • Ensure the best intuitive choices by consistent regular focus on priorities. Revisit and recalibrate your commitments at appropriate intervals for the various levels of life and work.
Mastering Workflow Exercise Individually • Pull out the list of all the stuff that is currently in your “in-basket”. Consider the Collecting step – is there anything you would add to your list? In Pairs/trios • Go over each person’s “in-basket” • Select 1-2 items and walk each one through the Processing and Organizing Stages • Briefly discuss how you might use the Do: choosing actions in the moment to move forward
Practicing Stress-Free Productivity • You increase your productivity and creativity exponentially when you think of the right things at the right time and have the tools to capture your value-added thinking
Practicing Stress-Free Productivity • Getting Started: Setting up the Time, Space and Tools • Corralling your Stuff • Processing: Getting ‘In’ to Empty • Organizing: How to Make it Work
Stress-Free Productivity Task • Review pages 20-22 that includes tips for stress-free productivity • Note any questions you have • Star 2-3 tips that stand out for you as particularly helpful
Tools • Paper-holding trays • Plain paper • Post-its, staplers, clips, etc… • The Labeler • File Folders • Calendar • Wastebasket/recycling bins
Success Factors for Filing • Maintain your own personal, at-hand filing system • One Alpha system • Have lots of fresh folders • Keep the drawer less than ¾ full • Use an auto labeler • Get high-quality mechanics • Get rid of hanging files if you can – if you can’t - use one file folder per hanger
Corralling your Stuff Mental gathering – the mind sweep: • Write out each thought, idea project or thing that has you attention – on a separate piece of paper Complete your sweep: • Print out each task you have in your e-mail, Lotus Organizer, or on voicemail
Processing: Getting “In” to empty • Trash what you don’t need • Complete any less-than-two-minute actions • Hand off to others anything that can be delegated • Sort into your organizing system reminders of actions that take more than two minutes • Identify any larger commitments (projects) you now have, based on the input
Organizing: Setting up the right buckets • A “Projects” list • Project support material • Calendared actions and information • “Next Actions” lists • A “Waiting For” list • Reference material • A “Someday/Maybe” list
Managing E-mail Based Workflow • Get “In” to “Empty”: • “do” less than two-minutes • Delete what you can • File what you want to keep • Set up folders on your navigator bar – mostly for reference or archived stuff • Create one folder for longer-than-two minute action e-mails – at top of bar: • Use the “-” in Lotus or “@”in Outlook • “-Action”; “-Waiting For” • File using “Send and File” in Lotus Notes
Organizing Nonactionable Data August July June May April 3 2 1 March 31 30 29 28 27 26 • The tickler file:
Reviewing:Keeping your system functional A few seconds a day is usually all you need for review, as long as you’re looking at the right things at the right time
Five Phases of Project Planning • Defining purpose and principles • Outcome visioning • Brainstorming • Organizing • Identifying next actions
Defining purpose and principles Purpose: Ask the “why” question • Often the only way to make a hard decision is to come back to the purpose Principles: Standards and Values you hold • Simple, clear purpose and principles give rise to complex and intelligent behavior. Complex rules and regulations give rise to simple and stupid behavior
Outcome Visioning The “what” question: • View the project from beyond the completion date • Envision “WILD SUCCESS”! (Suspend “Yeah, but…”) • Capture features, aspects, qualities you imagine in place • I always wanted to be somebody. I should have been more specific - Lily Tomlin
Brainstorming The “How” question: Capture your ideas – mind-mapping and other techniques. Keys: • Don’t judge, challenge, evaluate or criticize • Go for quantity, not quality • Put analysis and organization in the background
Organizing • Identify the significant pieces • Sort by (one ore more): • Components • Sequences • Priorities • Detail to the required degree
Identifying Next Actions • Decide on next actions for each of the current moving parts of the project • Decide on the next action in the planning process, if necessary
Project Planning • Shift the level of focus on the project, if needed • If your project needs more clarify, raise the level of your focus • If your project needs more to be happening, lower the level of your focus • How much planning is required? • If the project is off your mind, planning is sufficient • If it’s still on your mind, then more is needed
Project Planning In your team • Assess the extent to which you are using the 5 phases of project planning: • Which ones are you using effectively? • Which ones could you be using more effectively – and how?
Individual Task • Review the description of the implications of your type for management of time and note those aspects that seem to be “you.” • What are some of the challenges for your type for managing time well? • What are the strategies that work well for you with respect to time management?
Join others with whom you work… • Share your reflections about your type and time management. • Agree with one another about one or two commitments you will make to be more effective at ‘getting things done.’ • Be prepared to share your commitments.