Quick Summary of the article:
You can't get more time, but you can have more energy.
Learn five simple strategies to gain more time through
maximizing your energy.
Get
More Time by
Managing Your Energy
In
the book The Power of Full Engagement, Jim Loehr
and Tony Schwartz offer a paradigm for time management
which focuses on leveraging energy rather than time. Loehr
says, “The ultimate measure of our lives
is not how much time we spend on the planet, but rather
how much energy we invest in the time we have.”*
Based on the authors’ concept of harnessing your
energy to be in FULL ENGAGEMENT#,
here are some key strategies to help you to empty your
plate and accomplish more:
1)
Manage your energy, not your time.
Start paying attention to your body.
If you experience afternoon fatigue, consider the source.:
Is it your diet? Are you getting only a little sleep?
“Pushing through”
tasks when your energy is low causes ineffectiveness.
When you're sharp and focused, you can
complete the job more quickly.
2)
Downtime is key for your success.
While it would be great to run at 110%
all the time, our bodies require food, rest and relaxation.
Many successful people recommend one day a week
that you do NO WORK, giving you more energy for the other
six days of the week. Think of your body as a
battery and your day off as the charger. Constantly
unplugging it and using it will drain it, and you’ll
never get fully charged if you keep unplugging the battery
and using it. It takes three times as
long to charge a dead battery than it does to keep it
charged (and who wants to run out of juice mid-task),
so don't wait until you are dead; charge yourself
weekly with downtime.
3)
Rituals help to maintain focus.
When
we are overwhelmed or overloaded, we operate less efficiently
and waste time. The authors of The
Power of Full Engagement recommend RITUALS for optimizing
energy and time. Rituals set up a recurring time
and pattern for needed tasks and behaviors. Coaches
commonly suggest establishing 10 daily habits, or rituals,
that support what you have to do anyway. However, by
linking them together in a set time and pattern, you go
on autopilot and accomplish them
quickly and easily. Habits or rituals
are daily tasks that take a short amount of time and add
to your productivity, e.g., making
to-do lists, confirming appointments,
bill paying, clearing your desk, filing, returning
phone calls, checking e-mail, drinking water, eating
fruit, etc.
4)
Purpose fuels performance.
Know why you are doing what you are doing. We
get caught up in doing tasks because we always have done
them, think we need to do them or just should do them.
“Shoulds” are a performance killer. They never
quite reach priority status on our to-do list. Why
is the task important? Why do you care that it
gets done? Things that we
approach in a lackadaisical manner take longer to accomplish;
stand to be interrupted; are likely to
be put off or left undone; or are completed with loose
ends. When you work with purpose, you complete
things quickly, stay focused and generate momentum.
This will allow you to finish the current objective in
less time and go on to accomplish even more.
5)
Work in sprints (small bursts of focused energy).
Life is full of interruptions and urgent
or unplanned tasks. How do you keep yourself from falling
victim to a reactionary cycle of running from one urgent
thing to the next, praying for a minute to last longer?
Schedule sprint times where
you are 100% focused on one thing. I recommend
sprints be 30 or 50 minute time blocks. Close the doors,
shut off the phone, have a full drink, and clear all distractions
for your sprint time. Know exactly what you want
to accomplish, and work only on that. You’ll
be amazed at how much you can get done, creating momentum
and focus, which lends itself to building energy naturally.
You will often get more
done in this period than you can in an entire day of random
interruptions and urgent demands. This
is a great time to work on important tasks such as writing,
billing, customer service, or things that if they don't
get done will not kill you now, but will need serious
time and attention if neglected.
What
is important that you need to do? What
will you plan to begin doing right now that will allow
you to harness your energy and gain more time? Pick
one thing you will do today and enjoy the renewed energy
and time you gain!
*(New
York: Free Press, 2003), 4.
#Ibid.,6.