Tuesday, November 19, 2019
3 sneaky excuses for procrastination
3 sneaky excuses for procrastination 3 sneaky excuses for procrastination Iâm guilty. Yes.There are some really legitimate-sounding excuses that executives like me hide behind when it comes to Getting Stuff Done. Or âGSDâ as they call it at HubSpot, my daughter Lindsay Kolowichâs hip, highly successful, and fast-growing software company headquartered in Boston. (Where âStuffâ is probably not GSDâs middle name.)According to Lindsayâs recent blog post âHow Effective Managers Use Their Time: 9 Pro Tips from Real HubSpot Managersâ, leaders at Hubspot who are thought to have âhigh GSDâ have an uncanny ability to churn out the really crucial stuff, while doing end-runs around distractions which masquerade as important.Really crucial stuff is rarely the chowder on our to-do lists. Rather it involves the bigger, game-changing, or mission-critical items which boost your business or improve what people think about you or your products. It might include the strategic or operational plan for next quarter or next year. Or the paper, report, webs ite, or article which - once written and published - is likely to bring in new leads or additional funding sources. It might involve long-postponed check-inâs with top clients or employees. Or getting your recently-approved research project off the ground. Or making time to actually HIRE for your open team position (which youâre so busy back-filling for personally that you have no time to scan resumes.)So⦠what are the legitimate-sounding distractions that most typically get in our way?After talking with hundreds of executives in my leadership programs, here are what I find to be the big 3:1. Other to-do list items.If you look closely, most to-do lists contain 1 or 2 âbig rocksâ (i.e. the really crucial stuff) and lots of pebbles. The problem is that items of vastly different importance may each deliver one equal-sized dollop of self-satisfaction in the form of a âcheck mark.â Especially to people like me, who are addicted to both their to-do lists AND to the process of accomplishing lots of things each day. Iâm not going to lie: if I can shorten my to-do list by checking off 6 smaller items on my list over the next 60 minutes, I may put off that very important three-hour chore thatâs going to take intense concentration and possibly leave me feeling I somehow got âfewer thingsâ done today. The solution? First, recognize whatâs happening. Then re-jigger your to-do list or time management strategy. Prioritize more ruthlessly. Consciously crown 1-2 items on your list as your âbig rocksâ each morning or each week. Then set aside blocks of time for them â" maybe early in the day before prime energy wanes or before you allow yourself to meander among smaller action items. Or break each big, juicy, or hairy-but-important project into multiple smaller steps. Then put THOSE sub-steps on your to-do list (Which â" YEAH! â" will each generate its own lovely reward of a check mark, when done.)2. Your direct reportsI know, I know. I hear you reminding me over narrowed eyes that your âopen door policyâ is absolutely crucial to your leadership brand. However, it is all-too-easy for a whole day to slither by while your most precious leadership asset â" your time â" gets eaten alive by othersâ problems and opportunities. Not your own. But I know many leaders who will happily shut their door for an hour to meet with a direct report. So why is shutting the door for their own projects so much more difficult?Many successful executives have calendars crammed wall-to-wall with meetings, so theyâve had to learn the essential 21st century art of booking themselves on their own calendars for critical project work. (Regularly tackling crucial projects late at night also works for some, but comes with a warning label and way too many long-term, unwanted side effects.)So donât be shy. After finishing this post, jump onto your calendar and book a 1- 2 hour time slot tomorrow for one of this weekâs most important undone action items, and see how it feels.3. EmailYes, checking email in 2015 seems about as natural as breathing. Weâre on a high of âconnectionâ the likes of which the world has never seen. What if something - or someone - of great import floats into our inbox while weâre not looking?According to the Fortune article âStop Checking Your Email Nowâ by Laura Vanderkam, a July 2012 McKinsey Global Institute report found the average office worker spends 28% of his/ her time (14 hours a week) handling email.How can you (and your direct reports) reclaim some of that time, with no ill effects? Most experts sing the time-saving praises of âbatch processingâ email. Which might mean checking email just three times a day. Or if that makes you feel nervous â" limit email processing to just 10 minutes of each hour. Knowing youâve got limited time, youâll be more likely to write shorte r notes, gloss quickly over emails of lesser import, and replace long email-drafting exercises with quick phone calls / voicemails.So whatâs standing between you â¦. and finishing YOUR most crucial initiatives?
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