3. Prioritising tasks
Each day, look at your list and mark those items that are the top priority. At this stage, you consider the urgency and the importance of each task identifying the ones that you deem to be very urgent, urgent, very important, important, neither urgent nor important, difficult or easy. Because the easy tasks will not require much of your time, you can work on them first, but note that you should not spend more than 30 minutes a day on them. You should also create room in your agenda to concentrate on ‘neither urgent nor important’ tasks to prevent them from becoming so.
4. Using the 4D’s rule
The same rule of prioritising can apply for your emails using the 4D’s: Delete, Do, Delegate and Defer.
- Delete: get rid of useless emails
- Do: reply to urgent emails, since you can do so very quickly
- Delegate: forward emails that are out of your expertise and can be dealt better by someone else
- Defer: put aside the emails that require longer action and take care of them later
5. Setting deadlines
Setting deadlines is a good way to make sure you do not spend too much time on one activity. Here is no point in setting deadlines if you make executive decisions to always push them back. Set a deadline and try your best to stick to it. Set your deadline a few days before the task absolutely has to be done. This allows for the possibility that other things will get in the way, but also allow for you still to get the task done.
6. Taking breaks
As odd as this might sound, taking regular breaks, even when you are busy is highly recommended. According to the New York Times, breaks help to stay on schedule. When you work long hours, as a human being you will inevitably lose your focus. Taking regular breaks will help you to gather your thoughts and increase your productivity. Consider also taking “active breaks”, such as walking around your office or go for a coffee break, and try not to stay put and just check your Facebook account at your desk.
“Should you find yourself in a chronically leaking boat, energy devoted to changing vessels is likely to be more productive than energy devoted to patching leaks.” – Warren Buffett
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