January 28, 2020
In our previous blog we talkedabout how we feel the key to personal productivity is to embrace that old enemystress as a friend, celebrating its benefits but also managing itsystematically and incrementally, in a positive way, to ensure you maximiseyour energy.
But where do youstart?
We recommend that you doso by asking yourself a very basic question – how productive am I now? Andwe’re not talking guesswork here. You need to look, as objectively as you can,at the reality of where you’re currently putting your effort. The process isquite straightforward – but it needs you to be honest and disciplined inrecording what you do.
First you need to draw the simple time management matrix that was designed by Stephen Covey in his great book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
Zone 1 relates to the urgent and important – pressing problems, deadlines, crises even. Making effort here is unavoidable but we need to ask how many of these demands have become urgent through procrastination, insufficient planning, poor communication and a whole host of other possible factors.
Zone 2 is where we do long-range development; we anticipate and prevent problems by using Plan-Do-Review methodology (more on that later in the series); we increase our skills and knowledge; and we invest in relationships using our core communication habits. Making effort here increases our ability to get things done before they become urgent. So it also shrinks Zone 1.
Zone 3 is the Zone of Deception because the noise of urgency creates the illusion of importance – but for whom? If we’re not careful we can spend a lot of time and effort here in meeting the priorities of other people.
And Zone 4? Well, we tend to go here simply to escape from Zones 1 and 3 – and we don’t get anything done that’s productive. At all.
Now,the key point here is research shows conclusively that people who use their time mosteffectively spend the vast majority of it in Zone 2.
Thisis the main generator of productivity. Double your Zone 2 score and youwill probably halve the time spent fire-fighting in Zone 1 and quadruplethe success of your enterprise at the same time.
So why not take the first step by doing this simpleexercise to identify your Personal Productivity Score by doing the following:
Reflecting on the results, what 2 changes might you be able to make to improve that score by 5%?
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