Google
Useful Links: ____ Article Search -___ Link Parters ___- Ebook Library___- Product Search


.
New Articles
Ebook Library
Link Exchanges
Business Directory
Advertising Space
Join Our Newsletter

Name:
Email:


You will recieve a weekly email that contains new articles, useful product recommendations & more! [Privacy]







Further
Reading ...
How to Start a Pet-Sitting Business - Peggie Arvidson Dailey
Everyday someone asks me, “How do you start a pet-sitting business?” I try to answer their question succinctly. But the truth is, starting a pet-sitting business, or any business is not always a succinct process. Following are 21 tips that I know...

Office Organization: How to Use the Tool Professional Organizers Love - Karen Fritscher Porter
Many professional organizers don't leave either home or office without one tool. What is it? Drum roll please… …The answer is a labelmaker. "Most organizers favorite tool is the electronic labelmaker," confirms Diane Hatcher, president of...

Making The Most Of Drop Shipping - Murray Hughes
Making The Most Of Drop Shipping Drop shipping, as I mentioned in Part 2 of this course, is a simple method of selling a product without actually having to ever warehouse, pack or ship the product yourself. Drop shipping is unheard of by most...

Stay at Home Jobs and Home Based Businesses - Dream Come True or Nightmare? - Charles Fuchs
Stay at home jobs and home based businesses have never had as much appeal as they have today. Chucking the nine-to-five grind to stay at home is a dream that appeals to most of us. Really, you think, what’s not to like about not having to dress up,...


 

10 Time-Saving Calendar and Scheduling Tips

Written By:
Eve Abbott

By Eve Abbott, Excerpted from her new book, "How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain” TM

Nowhere is the line drawn more clearly between 'Industrial brains' and 'Electronic brains' than when it comes to the way people prefer to keep and use their calendars. These scheduling tips will really make your calendar talk to you, whether you use a packaged set, print out a computer calendar because you like the paper 'view' for better planning, or you synchronize your Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) with your laptop and office computer and it never hits paper.

Time Guidelines
Although everyone's situation is different we can learn a lot from the CEOs who are running multi-national corporations. Forbes magazine ran a one-page article based on interviews with CEOs and CFOs about their time guideline practices.

Not one scheduled more than 75% of their time, and the majority scheduled no more than 65% of their time. So you're looking at no more than 2/3 to 3/4 of their daily time being scheduled. Here are the earth-shattering reasons that these world class MBAs came up with for these Time Guidelines.

First, everything takes longer than you think it will. Second, things come up that you've got to deal with right away.
(No matter how important what you're working on is.

And the Third, he told as an anecdote, "You never walk into a meeting when there are millions of dollars at stake having worked right up until the last minute before the meeting. Because no-one else in the room has." Take a break before important meetings: you'll be more creative.

I share these with you because the more I apply these Time Guidelines the better my workday goes.

The Buffer Zone
Allow one hour in-between any meeting's scheduled finish and your next appointment. If you work with someone who schedules meetings in your absence, explain that you want them to hold this line for everyone except your boss and their boss (or perhaps your spouse).

Leaving/Returning from a Trip
If you are returning to work at beginning of the business day, schedule no appointments before noon. Give yourself some time to unpack and thoroughly review your voice mail and e-mail. If you return to work mid-day schedule nothing until the next morning so you have re-entry time to process action items from your trip or meetings.

The reverse is true if you are leaving on a trip: allow at least a half day to prepare for the trip itself, as well as a final review of your in-box and e-mail to make sure there are no 'time bombs' hidden among the rest that can wait.

Auto-Response e-mail
For every day you will be out of the office (or in meetings all darned day again) set up an auto-response e-mail that includes an alternate contact, if appropriate. Even if you're only going to be out for one day, informing every one when you will actually be available, creates more realistic expectations.

Voice-mail Outgoing Message
When you are "Out of the Office" it's best to change your outgoing message on your voice mail as well. Let them know when you will be 'open for business' and who to contact in your absence. Start by saying "WAIT! Listen to this message carefully."

Many people skip outgoing messages automatically. Other - continued below ...





continued ...
people simply don't listen to what is actually being said because they've heard it many times before.

Be as specific as possible when referring callers to another source. Give the person's name, phone, e-mail, and/or web address. The more specific you are the more likely it is someone will make the effort to get their questions answered by your alternate.

The goal is to keep delivering services, even in your absence. This also whittles down the backlog awaiting your return.

Electronic Calendaring Programs
Most computer calendaring programs are connected to a contact database wherein all the pertinent contact information is accessible. It is truly a relationship-based way of thinking.

Today's Contact Management Programs are the best generation of much simpler contact/calendar software, and are designed to center all your information about contacts by automating and documenting your communication (e-mail, phone, documents, e-fax, notes, etc.).

Color-Coding Your Calendar
Color-coding is highly effective way to keep yourself straight with modern life's many and varied activities. Color-coding will reduce misfiles by as much as 90%, even if you don't change anything else about your filing system.

For those who use a paper planner, using pencil or erasable pen can be helpful especially if you rewrite your calendar often. I recommend that clients carry two erasable pens in their organizer; black for business appointments and blue for personal ones.

I also suggest you use the four-color ballpoint pens for scheduling appointments with categories like black-business, blue-personal, red-travel, green-project action items. Buy plenty of whatever kind of pens/pencils you use to color code your calendar!

Your color-coding doesn't have to be this complicated and if you use one of the many excellent computer calendars around you can automatically color code your entries as they appear on screen and in printout.

Most Contact Management programs including ACT have the option to assign a range of priority colors to any activity. However, since I don't schedule anything that isn't high priority I use the colors for my categories of black-business, blue-personal, red-projects.

Color display PDA's are highly recommended over the black/gray/white displays. The display area of the PDA is limited so having the color provides you with improved visual function.

Be careful when using the calendar function to check the day before and the day after the one you are looking at scheduling for any complications in coordinating your activities.

Applying any of these guidelines will help you out some. Applying all the tips that you possibly can, will change the way you work for the better. Just do it!

About the Author
Copyright, Eve Abbott All Rights Reserved. The Organizer Extraordinaire's new book "How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain" TM is available online at http://www.organize.com Sign up for more time-saving tips. Enjoy free brain quizzes to help you work at your personal best! Eve’s guide is the first book to offer easy, online assessments that will help you make your own personal organizing solutions match your individual work style.



_Additional Resources ...









Time Poverty - Esther Smith
There is a misguided thought that being busy is the same as making progress. With shorter deadlines, competing priorities, interruptions and even higher quality expectations, it brings today’s time challenges to another level. Yet the number of...

Making money on ebay is really easy... - Munya Chinongoza
If I can do it you can. Let me tell you my story... After having tried many other ways of making money online and failed, I was left with no other option but to try the "ebay selling" thing. Until then I always thought it was too complicated and...

Is It Still Possible To Make Money On The Internet? - Larry Lim
Many people are saying that the internet is dead. So is there still money to be made on the Internet? The answer is a definite YES. Research shows, time and again, that consumers want to spend more online, and that the internet is fast...



This website is powered by Hostland ...