The Top 10 Time Termites
and How to Exterminate Them
Did you know that
“time termites” eat up as much as 25 – 50% of your time?
It’s true, and in this article I’ll discuss what a time
termite is, as well as what the top 10 time termites are,
and - most importantly! – how you can exterminate them and
take back a huge amount of your time and your life.
Time termites are
activities and people that “eat up” your time and destroy
the beautiful design of your life. In my Time Architect™
model of time management, we design a life that is grounded
solidly in the four cornerstones – physical, emotional,
mental and spiritual. We protect these areas by
understanding and applying the storm proofing principles.
Just like you
design your home to withstand intruders (such as termites),
you must design your life to strongly protect against the
situations and people that will run right over you and eat
up your life - if you let them.
Let’s look at the
top ten time termites, based on my unscientific experience
with hundreds of clients.
1. Wasting time on trivial items – computer games, gossip,
etc.
2. Waiting around to talk with the boss or manager
3. Meetings without a good agenda and/or good facilitation
4. Too many unnecessary reports to write
5. Problems in locating documents or other needed items
6. Answering unimportant phone calls & email
7. People with a negative attitude - complainers and whiners
8. Inability to say "No." That is, saying "Yes" to too many
people
9. Interruptions
10. Add your own: What’s your biggest time termite?
Time termites
vary depending on whether you work in a huge Fortune 500
type business, or a small company or organization, or are a
solo entrepreneur, but these are a representation of what
steals most people’s time.
As a business and
executive coach I work with hundreds of high achieving
business owners and professionals. In my experience, only a
very energetic, intelligent and vigilant approach will work
to protect your time.
Extermination
tactics:
1. Values & vision: Get crystal clear on your
personal values and vision. You must know what matters most
to you and where you are going in order to be able to make
choices that support the best use of your time.
2. Planning: When you create annual, monthly, weekly
and daily goals, plan with your values and vision clearly in
mind. This way, you will focus in on your highest value
activities.
3. Systems: Get good systems in place. Be able to
find immediately any information or tools you need in your
business or organization. These systems are highly
individual. Feel free to contact me for information on
resources to help you get organized.
4. Boundaries: Erect strong barriers around yourself
– you can think of this as a sturdy fence with an electronic
gate around your house (and life) that only grants access to
those people and activities that fit in with your
priorities. This is a challenge to anyone who likes to think
of themselves as a “nice person,” which is many of us. It
takes some practice to regroove our neural pathways to hold
a new belief that having boundaries is not only OK, but
downright healthy. (For more on strong boundaries, email me
for an article that goes into more depth on that topic.)
So get crystal clear on your values and vision, create a
good plan, install excellent systems, and erect strong
boundaries. When you implement just one of these suggestions
each month, in a year you will have 12 awesome new habits
that will help you take back 25-50% of your time…and your
life. Congratulations: your time termites will have been
exterminated.
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