Jim Meisenheimer. Recomended by Jeff Gitomer in his recent Sales Caffine news letter which included the following article:
a guest column by...
Jim Meisenheimer - Time Management - The Ultimate Oxymoron
Get a grip. Is it possible to manage time? Can you make the clock run faster? Can you make it run slower? You have no control over time. Each of us begins the day with 1440 minutes and 86,400 seconds. It's your personal inventory. You use the time or you lose the time.
There are simply no alternatives. Each week has 168 hours, no more and no less. While managing time is out, managing yourself is in. Remember, as Henry Ford once said, "Don't complain, don't explain."
Here are ten techniques for achieving more in less time:
1. Get up 30 minutes earlier every day. Do the math and see how much extra time it gives you over the span of one year.
2. Take a course in self-management or priority management.
3. Commit to keeping a time log for one entire week. Record every activity and the time you give it. Your time busters will become very apparent.
4. Throughout the day, routinely and quietly ask yourself, "Am I making the very best use of my time right now?"
5. Never do one task if there is a more important one to be done. Never! Foregoing priorities gets you off track more than anything else. Look up the word "priority" in your dictionary.
6. Build flex time into every day's schedule to allow for the unexpected. To do this is wise, not to do this is foolhardy.
7. Buy a timer. Time all phone calls, meetings, and projects. There is nothing more precious than your time. Don't squander it, and don't permit others to steal your time.
8. Set aside one hour every week getting rid of things (personally and professionally) you don't need and can live with out. It's called simplifying. Most of us have too much stuff that we can live without.
9. Take a few moments to write your own epitaph. Really do it. After you write it, look at it, and ask yourself, "Is this the life I'm leading?" It's never too late to make changes in your life. (I take that back, it's probably too late when someone else starts writing your epitaph.)
10. Learn to say NO! Try saying it firmly and softly at least once a day to any unreasonable requests.
There is a reason why you need more time. It's because you're attempting too much. Plan your life and plan your days. If you want more balance in your life . . . schedule it. Here's a big tip if you want to take control of your time: keep a log of everything you do for a week. Just use a yellow legal pad and pencil. This isn't high tech stuff. At the end of the week review your log. The changes you need to make will leap off the pages. It's truly a no-brainer.
Let's go sell something . . .
Jim Meisenheimer publishes The No-Brainer Selling Tips Newsletter, a fresh and high content newsletter dedicated to helping you grow your business and multiply your income. Use this link to sign-up for Jim's F-R-E-E No-Brainer Selling Tips Newsletter and to get your copy of his Special Report titled, "The 12 Dumbest Things Salespeople Do." www.meisenheimer.com
Friday, February 17, 2006
This week's Goodies
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Wednesday, February 15, 2006
What is your day going to be like?
How many people are you going to have a positive influence on? In other words, will you measure your success by how much you "get" or how much you "give". This article talks about networking, however, I challange you to do it in every aspect of your day.
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Nope, no thanks, I changed my mind
How many of us haven't heard that recently? It is our job to find out why. Is there something that we have done? Not done? Does it have nothing to do with us? Is there a way we can help no mater what the reason?
My goal is to develop at the minimum, advertising PARTNER relationships with my clients. This takes work. Time. Effort. No pitching the latest "deal" until I know why it would benefit my advertising partner.
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