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Home | Time Management


Time Management Strategies for Modern Life Syndrome

By: Denise Landers

Pay attention...focus...concentrate...prioritize…Easy to say but hard to do when so much is vying for your attention. What makes it so hard to master these basic concepts?

Have you ever stopped to consider how many distractions are fighting for your attention? Just picture for a moment:

Opening a website page
--pop-up dialogs springing into view
--boxes of ads and comments lining the sides of the pages
--multiple colors screaming out at you

Driving down the freeway
--billboards, high and low,
--radio ads interrupting the traffic report
--your cellphone ringing

Watching your favorite television show
--Floating announcements advertising other shows
--Information strips scrolling weather updates and political announcements

All of that is before you get to the office. The frenetic pace continues as deadlines loom and you cope with constant office interruptions. End results are often that you have to work late, bring work home with you, or come in early. You become tired and stressed, which makes it even more difficult to focus.

I read of one person who would leave the office and go sit in his car when he had papers he needed to absorb and make a decision on. It was simply impossible for him to concentrate in the office.

Almost everyone today is exhibiting symptoms similar to those relating to an ADD diagnosis. Whether you are suffering from Modern Life Syndrome or ADD, you need to employ processes that will limit distractions and increase your productivity. Strategies are similar:

1. Prioritize your work before you leave the office each evening. It will eliminate that 20-30 minutes of sorting through stacks before you get started the next day. The morning is most people’s prime energy time, and you do not want to waste those blocks of time trying to decide where you should be focusing.

2. Plan a solid block of time with limited interruptions. Put this on your calendar so that you will stick to it. Use that time for your most important, focused work.

3. Track what causes the interruptions. Do this for two weeks so that you can begin to recognize patterns. Who interrupts you? How often? What times of day? Once you find the routines, you can begin to eliminate some of these distractions.

4. Do not let email control your day. It is too easy to become absorbed in your overflowing inbox and lose track of time. Set up specific blocks of time when you will focus on email alone.

If you do not stop now to make changes, the result can be a major overload because of constant stress. Stress is responsible for many of our illnesses, from colds and flu to heart conditions. When you are not willing to step back and make adjustments, you may wind up with a situation over which you no longer have any control.

Wouldn’t it be nicer to choose your priorities and be more productive in the process, before the ability to choose is taken away from you?

Article Source: http://www.wahm-articles.com

Denise Landers is the author of Destination: Organization. As a productivity trainer and professional organizer she helps you develop efficient ways to manage work with less stress.

This article may be reprinted for free so long as the author's resource box is kept intact and all links remain live and clickable. The Article Source must also be included. All rights are reserved by the author.

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