
Are you usually punctual or late? Do you finish things within the time you stipulate? Do you hand in your reports/work on time? Are you able to accomplish what you want to do before deadlines? Are you a good time manager?
If your answer is “no” to any of the questions above, that means you’re not managing your time as well as you want. Here are 20 tips on how to be a better time manager:
- Create a daily plan. Plan your day before it unfolds. Do it in the morning or even better, the night before you sleep. The plan gives you a good overview of how the day will pan out. That way, you don’t get caught off guard. Your job for the day is to stick to the plan as best as possible.
- Peg a time limit to each task. Be clear that you need to finish X task by 10am, Y task by 3pm, and Z item by 5:30pm. This prevents your work from dragging on and eating into time reserved for other activities.
- Use a calendar. Having a calendar is the most fundamental step to managing your daily activities. If you use outlook or lotus notes, calendar come as part of your mailing software. Google Calendar is great – I use it. It’s even better if you can sync it to your mobile phone and other hardwares you use – that way, you can access your schedule no matter where you are.
- Use an organizer. The organizer helps you to be on top of everything in your life. It’s your central tool to organize information, to-do lists, projects, and other miscellaneous items.
- Know your deadlines. When do you need to finish your tasks? Mark the deadlines out clearly in your calendar and organizer so you know when you need to finish them.
- Learn to say “No”. Don’t take on more than you can handle. For the distractions that come in when you’re doing other things, give a firm no. Or defer it to a later period.
- Target to be early. When you target to be on time, you’ll either be on time or late. Most of the times you’ll be late. However, if you target to be early, you’ll most likely be on time. For appointments, strive to be early. For your deadlines, submit them earlier than required.
- Time box your activities. This means restricting your work to X amount of time. Read more about time boxing: #5 of 13 Strategies To Jumpstart Your Productivity.
- Have a clock visibly placed before you. Sometimes we are so engrossed in our work that we lose track of time. Having a huge clock in front of you will keep you aware of the time at the moment.
- Set reminders 15 minutes before. Most calendars have a reminder function. If you’ve an important meeting to attend, set that alarm 15 minutes before.
- Focus. Are you multi-tasking so much that you’re just not getting anything done? If so, focus on just one key task at one time. Close off all the applications you aren’t using. Close off the tabs in your browser that are taking away your attention. Focus solely on what you’re doing. You’ll be more efficient that way.
- Block out distractions. What’s distracting you in your work? Instant messages? Phone ringing? Text messages popping in? I hardly ever use chat nowadays. The only times when I log on is when I’m not intending to do any work. Otherwise it gets very distracting. When I’m doing important work, I also switch off my phone. Calls during this time are recorded and I contact them afterward if it’s something important. This helps me concentrate better.
- Track your time spent. Egg Timer is a simple online countdown timer. You key in the amount of time you want it to track (example: “30 minutes”, “1 hour”) and it’ll count down in the background. When the time is up,the timer will beep. Great way to be aware of your time spent.
- Don’t fuss about unimportant details You’re never get everything done in exactly the way you want. Trying to do so is being ineffective. Read more: Why Being A Perfectionist May Not Be So Perfect.
- Prioritize. Since you can’t do everything, learn to prioritize the important and let go of the rest. Apply the 80/20 principle which is a key principle in prioritization. Read more about 80/20 in #6 of 13 Strategies To Jumpstart Your Productivity.
- Delegate. If there are things that can be better done by others or things that are not so important, consider delegating. This takes a load off and you can focus on the important tasks.
- Batch similar tasks together. For related work, batch them together. For example, my work can be categorized into these core groups: (1) writing (articles, my upcoming book) (2) coaching (3) workshop development (4) business development (5) administrative. I batch all the related tasks together so there’s synergy. If I need to make calls, I allocate a time slot to make all my calls. It really streamlines the process.
- Eliminate your time wasters. What takes your time away your work? Facebook? Twitter? Email checking? Stop checking them so often. One thing you can do is make it hard to check them – remove them from your browser quick links / bookmarks and stuff them in a hard to access bookmarks folder. Replace your browser bookmarks with important work-related sites. While you’ll still check FB/Twitter no doubt, you’ll find it’s a lower frequency than before.
- Cut off when you need to. #1 reason why things overrun is because you don’t cut off when you have to. Don’t be afraid to intercept in meetings or draw a line to cut-off. Otherwise, there’s never going to be an end and you’ll just eat into the time for later.
- Leave buffer time in-between. Don’t pack everything closely together. Leave a 5-10 minute buffer time in between each tasks. This helps you wrap up the previous task and start off on the next one.
Do you have any tips to be a better time manager? Feel free to share in the comments area!
















[...] Kaynak [...]
The time management matrix by Stephen Covey classifies all activities we do into 4 quadrants (important / urgent vs. not important / not urgent). It's an extremely useful tool to be a better time manager – I integrate it into my activity planning. I've written an article in detail about it: http://celestinechua.com/blog/2008/12/put-first-t…
Here's another resource which will be useful – it's a list post of 50 ways to boost your productivity which I wrote sometime last year (the tips are timeless and definitely relevant): http://celestinechua.com/blog/2009/07/boost-your-…
[...] mendapatkan tips dari sini, untuk lebih jelasnya anda bisa langusng berkunjung ke sana, siapa tahu anda bisa terbantu, [...]
Very well written post. The 'add a buffer time' tip is great. Thanks.
The most helpful tool I use is from David Allen – the two minute rule. If something will take two minutes or less, do it now. It helps prevent small tasks from piling up into chaos.
Also, quick recommendation to go along with number 18: If you aren't sure where you're wasting time, test yourself by keeping an Activity Log for a few days. I did it recently and was horrified with how much time I was wasting, especially in the blogosphere. Once I land on one blog, it's all over. I can bounce around for hours without even realizing it. The activity log opened my eyes.
I think the 2 minute rule really helps keeps the clutter down, keep things flowing, and keep you less distracted later in the day. A great follow up after that would be #15 (Prioritize).
I try to use the 5 minute rule. I also set the timer on my microwave to make sure that I'm done in 5 minutes. It actually makes me work faster because I feel I'm going against the clock.
As usual, another wonderful article by Celes. And regarding Celes’s comment, Stephen R. Covey did a great writing on time management in his book 7 Habits of Highly Effective people, and his “Fourth generation planner” was awesome! By the way @Celes Can I get the softcopy of the fourth generation planner anywhere in the net?
I want to suggest another application for tracking your time spent online/with computer – RescueTime (great for increasing your productivity)
I agree with hotrao, that daily planning leaves little flexibility so I prefer weekly planning.
[...] have featured Celestine, from Stepcase Lifehack before. She has a wonderful article on time management… we can ALL learn from [...]
Great post as always. When it comes to getting goals and tasks done; time management is key. Too often do people set their mind on doing something only to get lost in the lack of planning and organizing.
@Chrissy – I use the 2 minute rule too in my email management. It helps to reduce clutter in the system. I totally agree having an activity log can be very mind-opening. It's shocking how we can be unconscious in how we are spending our time (me included)
@Sourav – Did he write a book on it? I haven't read it actually. On daily/weekly planning, just to share, I was initially doing weekly planning. What I found in the past few months was that it resulted in the mid-parts of the week being unoptimized. I've since been doing daily planning and it has been a huge help in triggering consistent action (with clear outputs every day). Ultimately we should choose the system that works best for ourselves.
[...] 20 Quick Tips For Better Time Management [...]
"Peg a time limit to each task" is a great tip! So seldomly do we create hard and fast time limits on our tasks, yet it is vital to your productivity. If anything, it grants you the permission to walk away from a task, and maintains a discipline to get things done.
Great post!
[...] Lifehack – 20 Quick Tips For Better Time Management [...]
You say to "Eliminate your time wasters." On the contrary, I say encourage them. If you work nonstop without distraction, your productivity will fall significantly. I make a note to "get distracted" for 2 minutes after 10 minutes of work. I ONLY let myself get distracted during those 2 minutes and devote the 10 minute segment to full concentrated work. If you repeat this, you get 50 minutes of highly concentrated work and 20 minutes of distraction. This keeps me focused, productive, and creative.
Nice, useful tips. These days every post about tips on time management emphasis the same points over and over. Prioritise, plan and organise.
I ONLY let myself get distracted during those6 minutes and devote the 8 minute segment to full concentrated work. great post!
[...] 20 Quick Tips For Better Time Management [...]
[...] have better time management [...]
More great tips… blocking out distractions has been the biggest for me. It's amazing how much more productive I am when my phone/email/IM/etc. are turned off.
Highly disagree with #6, learn to say no is the equivalent of not taking any new jobs on, despite the demand for your skills. If you get overloaded, you raise rates instead of saying no. That’s the proper way to do it and you get a more profitable business in the meanwhile.
[...] 20 Quick Tips For Better Time Management (by Celestine Chua, 497) [...]
Batching tasks is so efficient. It prevents the ad hoc approach. It’s a great way to ensure everything in a group gets done.
these are the best tips but i know there are much more tips as well.
Great
post Celes. Highly agree with ‘Focus and block out distractions’. When there’s
too much distractions in your work like phone calls, email notifications
popping up in your monitor and co-worker dropping off in your office
consistently to ask for work related questions, you somehow easily get
distracted by these constant distractions and you’re having a hard time to
focus on your work at hand. At the end of the day when you analyze what you
have accomplish for the day you feel frustrated because you haven’t
accomplish anything at all. You keep yourself busy all day but it doesn’t mean
that your busyness makes you productive.
To improve your work quality, watch this video at
http://davecrenshaw.com/top-10-tips-to-move-from-a-culture-of-now-to-a-culture-of-when-2/
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I too personally recommend point #10, when it comes of project management and ensuring the best use of time and energy. If we have something or someone who can remind us about 10 minutes before the time by when the job we are working on needs to be done, we’ll be able to align activities in our mind in trying to bring it to an end. I have personally experienced it and it works really well!
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A lot of these are repetitive, but good advice.
thes are the best tips but i know there are much more in this as
needed 4 home work just copied ,thank you inter net
VER GOOD
These tips really make sense. I do practice some of these but I admit that I still have to work on managing my time on some other tasks. I believe that while there are top tips and suggestions on how to do things, there are still no clear cut ways that work for everyone, maybe a combination of these tips will really improve the way you organize your tasks and manage your schedule.
don’t answer your phone unless you can deal with and talk to the person on the other end
it is very usefull.