Saturday, November 16, 2013

Do Less to Get More Done

Paulina ArcklinThis is a rehash of things I've read in other places, and bears emphasizing.  It's similar to the concept of lions on the hunt.  They don't waste their energy on small prey, they wait for the large prey.  But it can be harder for those of us who employ ourselves, when sometimes it can be a guess of what activity may or may not have the most impact.


"In a time of constant movement, constant communication, continual achievement and an ongoing list of to-dos, at the end of the day, we feel we’ll never get ahead. It seems like our days are controlling us, rather than us controlling them.

This constant busyness can actually take you off course from your high-value goals; hurt your physical, psychological and emotional system; and even damage or destroy relationships.
I’ve been studying some of the top executives, CEOs, authors and millionaires over the past couple of years, and I’d like to share some things I’ve observed that might help you work at your productive best:

1. 80/20 everything.

This is called Pareto’s Law. It can be summarized as follows: 80% of your output results from 20% of your input. Out of 10 tasks and activities you want to accomplish, two of them will produce more results than the other eight combined.
Sometimes when we get busy, we feel we must get more done rather than focus on the tasks that create bigger results. Challenge yourself to really think intelligently about what 20% of your work you can do with absolute focus that will yield huge results.

2. Most things don’t matter.

I remember Tim Ferris stating that “most things make no difference.” Being busy is a form of laziness, lazy thinking and indiscriminate action. Being overwhelmed is often as unproductive as doing nothing, and is far more unpleasant.
Being selective and taking more intelligent action is really the path to high productivity. Focus on the important few and ignore or delegate the rest.

3. Doing something unimportant well doesn’t make it any more important.

Activities that aren’t connected to an outcome or purpose are the drain of all fortune. Understand that what you do is a lot more important than how you do it. Effectiveness is still important, but it’s useless unless applied to the right things.
There are a handful of things you could be focusing on that will create exceptional outcomes for your goals. It’s easy to get caught in a flood of trivial matters.
The key to not feeling rushed is remembering that lack of time actually means lack of priorities. Take time to stop and refocus your priorities as often as needed. Intelligent thinking combined with the right action will get your productivity to a level few attain. Remember what Jim Collins stated in his bestseller Good To Great: “If you have more than three priorities, you don’t have any.”

4. Obey Parkinson’s Law.

Parkinson’s Law dictates that a task will become of larger importance and complexity in relation to the time allotted for its completion. I have personally found high value in deadlines. If I give you 12 hours to complete a project, the time pressure forces you to focus on execution, and you have no choice but to do only the essentials. If I give you a week to complete the same task, it will most likely be six days of validation, excuses and procrastination and one day of rushed work. If I give you a month, it usually becomes a mental monster.
The result of deadlines is often higher quality due to greater focus.
Identify the few critical tasks that contribute most to your income, and schedule them with very short and clear deadlines. If you haven’t identified your critical tasks and set aggressive start and end times for their completion, the unimportant becomes important. Even if you know what’s critical, without deadlines that create focus, the minor tasks forced upon you will rise to consume time until another minuscule task jumps in to replace it, leaving you at the end of the day with nothing accomplished.
I’ve spent months jumping from one interruption to the next, feeling run by my business instead of the other way around. Don’t make the same mistake — instead, adopt these four strategies in your life and business today."


Read more: http://blog.brazencareerist.com/2013/11/13/4-strategies-for-cranking-up-your-productivity/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=4-strategies-for-cranking-up-your-productivity#ixzz2kokXIqEe

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Work Spaces


Storage

Curiosity about other people's work spaces is a sort of sub theme of this blog. This guy's work space is truly awe inspiring.  Click through to see the rest of his photos. Catnip to someone like me.