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Time Management
Handle Paperwork
- Create a block of time during non-prime hours to handle paperwork.
Schedule this in your planner and stick to it.
- Sort through and handle the papers in your in-basket no more
than twice a day.
- Never handle a piece of paper more than once. Avoid the "I'll
just put this here for now" habit.
- Throw away previous drafts. They serve no purpose and can confuse
your workflow.
- For items that will reach you, ask your assistant to
- sort it according to urgency,
- highlight important aspects, such as magazine articles and
- attach relevant files or information.
- Ask work colleagues to submit recommendations along with important
reports. Nothing should be sent to you without a summary or indicated
action.
- Limit the length of letters, recommendations, responses, meeting
requests and other correspondence to one page.
- Try not filling out redundant sections of forms, to see if anyone
is really using them.
- Ask people if reports they prepare (or you prepare) are really
necessary. Prepare them only when needed, not as a regular routine.
- Don't keep copies of all your requests to others, unless there
are legal or personnel reasons to do so.
- Do something with every piece of paper that reaches you and
put it in its proper place - not just back on the pile.
- Handle routine requests or tasks immediately whenever you can.
- Cut back on sending memos. Use a phone call instead.
- Reduce the number of memos you keep. After all, memos are primarily
for short-term information. Record the information you need and toss
the memo.
- Don't keep business cards tucked away in a drawer. Enter them
on a contact manager database, and then throw out the card.
- Create different file folders :Reading files for long reports
and magazines. If you read everything when it arrives, you will never
get through your in-basket. Personal file for those wacky inter-office
jokes you want to keep (but will probably never look at again) Training
file for useful items on personal or professional development. Supplier
file for information on products and services. Files for each item to
pass on or discuss and Invoices to pay.
- Upcoming events to attend.
- One for each major project you're working on.
- Throw out last month's copy of a magazine when this month's
copy arrives. If you must save them, only keep a year's worth.
- Stop subscriptions to magazines and newspapers you don't read
anymore. This saves you money as well as time
and guilt.
- Schedule major reading for twice a week during non-priority
times. Try reading between appointments, or make a block of time to catch
up on reading priorities.
- When you find items you keep putting off reading, ask "How
likely am I to read this and how valuable is this information?" Throw
it out.
- Extra storage space ends up getting filled up quickly. Try reducing
or throwing out extra paperwork collectors. Limit your stacking trays
to two: one for incoming papers and the other for outgoing papers.
- Pay bills by automatic deduction. Most utility bills can be
handled this way.
- Put all your receipts in a small envelope. Sort through them
every month or every quarter.
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