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Forget Planning, I've Got It
All Right Up Here...
Is Planning A Waste of Time?
By
Steve McClatchy, President
Alleer Training & Consulting
Imagine that there is
a new legal pad on the market. It’s brand new and it just
hit the store shelves. It has this amazing ability, at
random times, to instantly bring back to your attention
things that you forgot to do in the past. Pretty neat… but
there are a couple of quirks. First, you can never predict
when it’s going to work and when it’s not and whatever it
brings back to your attention, it’s often too late to do
anything about it. The second quirk is that it can only
hold one task at a time. When you write down a second task
on your list the first task that you wrote down disappears.
When you write down a third task the second disappears, and
so on.
How long do you think
this legal pad would last on the market? Not very long,
because it would do more harm than good. It would do more
to cause you stress and frustration in your life than peace
and success. I created this imaginary legal pad to make a
point. Many people have chosen this exact tool to help them
manage their time. It’s called the human brain. Have you
ever, after an exhausting day, gotten into bed to enjoy a
good night’s sleep and after laying there for just two
minutes, just like the new legal pad, something you forgot
to do three weeks ago pops into your head? Oh, that’s
helpful. Just before you drift off into fantasyland your
brain decides it’s a great time to bring this forgotten task
to your attention. Not only does it feel like you were just
hit with a bolt of lightning, it’s at a time when you are
least able to do anything about it.
Have you ever gotten
up to go get something in another room and when you arrived
in that room thought to yourself “why did I come in here?”
It seems to have happened to all of us. How can your brain
forget what it was thinking just eight seconds ago? What
happened was that on your way into that other room you
thought of something else and as a result the reason you got
up disappeared, just like on the legal pad that can only
hold one task at a time. Have you ever taken a vitamin or
aspirin and then forgot whether or not you had taken it?
Have you ever taken a shower and shampooed twice because
you couldn’t remember if you had already done it? Have you
ever gone to the grocery store and gotten everything but the
one thing you went to get? How could your brain do this to
you? Sometimes I wonder whether it’s working with us or
against us. If you saw your brain on the shelf of a retail
store you would not buy it and yet it’s the tool that most
people rely on to manage their life.
Taking the time to
write something down is a chore that takes effort and
discipline as well as time. The conundrum is that it is
very effective. When you plan your day in writing and run
your day from the plan you are much more effective than when
you do not. We have all planned a day and we have all gone
through a day just winging it. There is a real difference
in the results you get when you have a written plan that
considers your discretionary and non-discretionary time. In
this article I will highlight five benefits of taking just
five minutes a day to make a written plan. .
1.
You
Don’t Forget Anything
- When you have a list of fifteen things written down you no
longer have to remember fifteen things. The only thing you
have to remember is the list. This is a great
stress-reducer. It allows your mind to focus on the task at
hand, it prevents details from falling through the cracks
and it prevents lightning bolts from striking you when you
climb into bed for a good night’s sleep.
2. You Get More Done
- Do you find that one of the most productive weeks of your
life is the week before you go on vacation? The reason we
are so productive is not only because of the energy that
comes from the excitement of an upcoming break but it is
also the week that everyone seems to keep a list. Even
people you know that never keep lists seem to keep one the
week before they go on a vacation. Why? Because you don’t
have any time to waste. When you don’t have a list the
transition time between tasks is much longer.
Have you
ever completed a task and while pondering what to do next
you were interrupted…by you own thoughts? The human body
has what I like to call check in points. When there is a
break in the action your body starts to influence what you
think about. If it’s hungry and/or thirsty it will remind
you to get food and water. If you’re tired or exhausted it
will remind you to get some rest (or caffeine). If it’s
bored it will remind you of fun times from your past and
encourage you to daydream or get up and be social. If it
has to go to the bathroom then there you go. These check-in
points happen throughout the day during your downtimes or
transition times. When you are focused on a task or
headstrong into a project or goal your body follows your
lead and seems to leave you alone. I have been so focused
on a project at times that for twenty-four hours I did not
eat, sleep or even go to the bathroom. Going to this
extreme is, of course, not always necessary but the point is
that when you have a list you can keep your focus, you
don’t give your mind time to wander, you lessen transition
time between tasks and leave no time to get distracted.
-
You Can Better
Recover From Interruptions – So armed with a plan you can manage to keep your own
brain on a short leash but how about dealing with the
inevitable interruptions and distractions that come from
working with other people? Have you ever had an
interruption take you so far off your plan that you never
actually returned to what you were doing? Interruptions
are a part of life and are not always bad things.
Important matters can come to your attention by way of an
interruption. However, the real time lost is often the
time it takes to return to exactly what you were doing
before the interruption happened. When you are working
your day from a list and you are interrupted, no matter
how long the interruption takes, your recovery time is
seconds. All you have to do is refer back to the list to
get refocused.
-
You Make Better
Decisions –
I often get asked when is the best time to plan, in the
morning, in the evening, at lunch time. The best time is
the time that works best for you. If you are a morning
person then plan in the morning. If you are an evening
person then plan in the evening. If lunch time is your
time then plan at lunch. The key is to plan the next
twenty-four hours of your life and my strong advice is
always plan before you check email and voice mail
not after.
Email and voice
mail, by their very nature, are other people bringing
things to your attention. I don’t think anyone has ever
become wildly successful by just doing what other people
brought to their attention. Voice mail and email put you
into a mindset that is focused on other people’s agendas.
When we start the planning process with what others want
from us, it’s hard to get out of that mindset. So what’s
my advice? Plan before you check email and voice mail and
only adjust the plan if necessary afterward. I understand
it is usually necessary to respond to other people and get
them what they are looking for, however, when we start the
day with giving away our productive time, we often end
there as well and don’t get to address our own important
agenda. Prioritize the tasks that come from these sources
and work them into your plan accordingly so you don’t wind
up spending your most valuable productive time on
something less important to you.
What happens if,
once you have planned the perfect day, you go on to check
voice mail and email and there is actually an urgent
matter that requires your immediate attention? When this
happens having the plan will help you make better
decisions. When you have a plan you can weigh the voice
mail matter against your plan and decide what is the best
use of your time. If you didn’t have a plan, that voice
mail, as compelling as it is, is not being considered
against anything else. When you don’t have something to
weigh your decisions against everything seems to have top
priority. When you have a plan you can see it for what it
really is and make the right decision.
- You’re
Proactive, Not Reactive – To me, being reactive means
letting deadlines drive your decision making. Up until
you reach the deadline associated with a task you have the
ability to choose the best time for the task to get
completed. When you reach the point when you are as far
out from the deadline as the task itself is going to take,
you have lost your freedom to decide when to do it. The
task and the deadline have now made the decision for you,
and you are no longer in control. How do you feel when
you are not in control? How do you feel when your next
task is being dictated to you? If you’re like me, it’s
far from feeling motivated and far from a desire to do
your best work. It’s often work that includes a touch of
resentment and regret. There is certainly a lot of energy
and excitement involved with waiting until the last minute
but I never find it to be worth the anxiety, fear, stress
and wasted time that leads up to it.
Being proactive, on
the other hand, means you still have a choice. You could
do it now or at another time. Even if the task is an
unpleasant one, it feels better when you are in control of
the decision. Planning your day puts you into the
proactive mode. It allows you to decide the best time for
something to get done before the deadline makes the
decision for you. It also allows you to group like tasks
together to save time and deal with the unexpected. One
of the biggest benefits of planning is that it puts you in
control. When you are in control you feel a lot more
energized and motivated and feeling like that directly
impacts your productivity and the quality of your work.
Many
people say that when you fail to plan, you plan to fail. I
don’t necessarily agree. We have all gone through an
unplanned day without failing at anything at all. But did
we have our best day? We also have all had days when we
were very busy but felt like we got nothing done. This is
the more likely outcome of a day without a plan. There are
plenty of things to keep you busy when you don’t have a
plan. To have a day where you feel like you accomplished
what you wanted, you have to plan for it.
The crises
and time crunches in our lives that leave us feeling
overworked and stressed out are often created by us making a
commitment and never writing it down, saying yes before we
checked the plan, or procrastinating precious time away.
Take five minutes right now and think about the next
twenty-four hours of your life and create a plan in writing.
Planning
is
not a waste of time and I promise that if you invest just
five minutes each day it will return a lot more than five
minutes and be well worth it.
Steve McClatchy is the president of
Alleer Training &
Consulting
a provider of
training, consulting and speaking services in the areas
of Consultative Selling, Time Management and
Leadership. If you
would like to learn more about the ways Alleer can be a
resource to your organization email
Steve.McClatchy@Alleer.com
or call 1-800-860-1171. |
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reserved.
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