Author Archive

Self-Management

By dstamp@prioritymanagement.com

Shifting priorities and crisis management are the single biggest personal productivity issues. Yet management guru Peter Drucker says that crisis management is the management style of choice for the majority of people. The outcome is that you risk becoming a constant firefighter. Consider this: your management style might be contributing to or even starting some of the fires you are putting out! Indeed, you may well be the office arsonist responsible for many of the crises. So what strategies can you use to get back in control?

The first is to get everything out of your head, off post-it notes, calendars, bits of paper and your inbox and write it in one place. This might be your electronic organizer like Outlook, Lotus Notes or Groupwise, your handheld Smartphone or even your trusty Priority Manager paper system. What tool you choose is irrelevant—what really counts is that you can trust this place to contain all the things you have to do today and into the future. Just getting everything written down in one place is an enormous stress reliever and gives you an immediate feeling of control.

The second vital step is to look at this list and set some priorities. Use a simple principle for designating them as ‘A’ or ’B’ tasks. For example, I always make a promise to another person an ‘A’ and I always make my important project tasks ‘A’. Things I can do another day are automatically ‘B’. It’s amazing to see a long list of to-do’s become a manageable short task list of important work. Work that speaks to who I am and what I want to achieve. I do not consider a day successful if all I did was start at the top of a random list and try and get everything done or be a slave to my incoming e-mail!

Thirdly, set aside the first ninety minutes of the workday to tackle your ‘A’ list. Protect this time from intrusions such as email, the telephone or unimportant meetings. You will be surprised at how much important work can be achieved in this time slot.

Click below to find out more:

Working Smart with Outlook

Working Smart with Lotus Notes

Working Smart with GroupWise

Working Smart with BlackBerry

Priority Manager

Priority Curriculum

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on March 9th, 2011 No Comments

WORK-LIFE BALANCE: TIPS TO RECLAIM CONTROL

When your work life and personal life are out of balance, your stress level is likely to soar. Use these practical strategies to restore harmony.
By Mayo Clinic staff

There was a time when the boundaries between work and home were fairly clear. Today, however, work is likely to invade your personal life — and maintaining work-life balance is no simple task. Still, work-life balance isn’t out of reach. Start by evaluating your relationship to work. Then apply specific strategies to help you strike a healthier balance.
Married to your work? Consider the cost.

It can be tempting to rack up hours at work, especially if you’re trying to earn a promotion or manage an ever-increasing workload. Sometimes overtime may even be required. If you’re spending most of your time working, though, your home life will take a hit. Consider the consequences of poor work-life balance:

Fatigue. When you’re tired, your ability to work productively and think clearly may suffer — which could take a toll on your professional reputation or lead to dangerous or costly mistakes.
Lost time with friends and loved ones. If you’re working too much, you may miss important family events or milestones. This can leave you feeling left out and may harm relationships with your loved ones. It’s also difficult to nurture friendships if you’re always working.
Increased expectations. If you regularly work extra hours, you may be given more responsibility. This may lead to only more concerns and challenges.

Strike a better work-life balance

As long as you’re working, juggling the demands of career and personal life will probably be an ongoing challenge. Use these ideas to help you find the work-life balance that’s best for you:

Track your time. Track everything you do for one week, including work-related and personal activities. Decide what’s necessary and what satisfies you the most. Cut or delegate activities you don’t enjoy or can’t handle — or share your concerns and possible solutions with your employer or others.
Take advantage of your options. Ask your employer about flex hours, a compressed workweek, job sharing, telecommuting or other scheduling flexibility. The more control you have over your hours, the less stressed you’re likely to be.
Learn to say no. Whether it’s a co-worker asking you to spearhead an extra project or your child’s teacher asking you to manage the class play, remember that it’s OK to respectfully say no. When you quit doing the things you do only out of guilt or a false sense of obligation, you’ll make more room in your life for the activities that are meaningful to you and bring you joy.
Leave work at work. With the technology to connect to anyone at any time from virtually anywhere, there may be no boundary between work and home — unless you create it. Make a conscious decision to separate work time from personal time. When you’re with your family, for instance, turn off your cell phone and put away your laptop computer.
Manage your time. Organize household tasks efficiently, such as running errands in batches or doing a load of laundry every day, rather than saving it all for your day off. Put family events on a weekly family calendar and keep a daily to-do list. Do what needs to be done and let the rest go. Limit time-consuming misunderstandings by communicating clearly and listening carefully. Take notes if necessary.
Bolster your support system. At work, join forces with co-workers who can cover for you — and vice versa — when family conflicts arise. At home, enlist trusted friends and loved ones to pitch in with child care or household responsibilities when you need to work overtime or travel.
Nurture yourself. Eat healthy foods, include physical activity in your daily routine and get enough sleep. Set aside time each day for an activity that you enjoy, such as practicing yoga or reading. Better yet, discover activities you can do with your partner, family or friends — such as hiking, dancing or taking cooking classes.

Know when to seek professional help
Everyone needs help from time to time. If your life feels too chaotic to manage and you’re spinning your wheels worrying about it, talk with a professional — such as a counselor or other mental health professional. If your employer offers an employee assistance program (EAP), take advantage of available services.

Remember, striking a healthy work-life balance isn’t a one-shot deal. Creating work-life balance is a continuous process as your family, interests and work life change. Periodically examine your priorities — and make changes, if necessary — to make sure you’re keeping on track.

Click here to learn how Priority Management can help you develop a healthy work/life balance.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on February 23rd, 2011 No Comments

THE 10 GOLDEN RULES OF A MEETING

THE 10 GOLDEN RULES OF A MEETING

You’ve been sitting in the meeting for 93 minutes. It feels like 93 days. It was supposed to last an hour, max, but the Senior VP is in the room, and the point of the session was to discuss his pet project, and no one wants to be the first to crack. Everyone else is busy making gratuitous points designed to flatter Mr. Big. You’re entertaining fantasies about throwing a cream pie, or worse, at the blowhard who just won’t stop talking about how successful the project will be. You know it’s doomed to fail; it’s the high-tech equivalent of selling ice to the Inuit.

You’re asking yourself, who’s in charge here? How did all these reasonably well-intentioned people get so far out of whack? And, more to the point, how can this juggernaut be stopped?

Since mass laryngitis is not an option, you need the Ten Golden Rules of Meetings. Moreover, you need to post them prominently in meeting rooms so that everyone can begin to follow them – especially the leader.

Remember that even Moses had trouble with his unruly flock from time to time, so be prepared for the occasional outburst of the modern corporate version of Baal worship.
Always Know What Time It Is – The clock is God in meetings. Out of respect for the commitment and sanity of everyone who attends, meetings should never run over the time allotted. Especially regularly scheduled meetings. If the session gets bogged down in an issue, table it for another meeting. If the meeting must conclude by taking an action or decision, then schedule it accordingly. Tell all the participants before the meeting starts that it will go as long as necessary to reach the stated conclusion. Don’t mislead people by minimizing the amount of work involved; that kind of trickery will only come back to haunt you.

Never Forget the Main Reason for Meetings – The only good reason to have meetings is to do something together that you can’t do better alone. In business, meetings have three primary purposes: communicating, administering, and deciding. Of these, the first and last are most worthwhile. But the focus of all three kinds of meetings should be action. They should either be communicating the intention to take an action or the results of action that has been taken, administering a plan of action, or deciding among alternative actions. If you find yourself calling meetings – or going to them – that have some other purpose, you’re wasting your time. And everyone else’s. Find something else to do.
Remember the Golden Rule of Meetings: Praise in Public, Criticize in Private – Shut off public criticism when it arises. It’s extremely destructive to morale and should be prevented. Indeed, much misery could be avoided in the business world if all members of the corporate community would remember a simple fact: if they are working for the same employer, then they are all on the same team. Corporate politics we will always have with us, but that doesn’t mean that we have to accept them tamely. Help your vocally critical teammates by making it clear, in advance of each meeting, who is in charge, how long the meeting will last, and what the point of the meeting is. Then deal with attempts to take the meeting in other, more vicious directions as simple misunderstandings of the agreed-upon ground rules. Politely but firmly steer the meeting back to the right terrain.

Do Not Convene Meetings Outside of Normal Business Hours – Of course there are times when this rule must be broken, but they should be reserved for real emergencies. People who schedule meetings for evenings and weekends are merely advertising the embarrassing fact that they have no life – and they’re expecting others to give up theirs. That kind of person should not be allowed to run anything, much less part of a modern corporation, because they lack the basic humanity to do a good job. Surviving in the fast-moving, devil-take-the-hindmost business world of today requires good peripheral vision as well as keen understanding of the work involved. Those without the necessary life balance can’t possibly understand that world they’re in or see around the next business corner.

Never Use Group Pressure to Logroll Conclusions – It is simply wrong to use meetings to pressure people into agreeing to actions or ideas that they know to be immoral or illegal in order to promote the business of the corporation. Group pressure is a powerful force, especially where jobs are at stake. Don’t misuse it to get people to stray from the straight and narrow, or bend the rules, or set the quotas dangerously high, or cut corners on quality, or any one of a thousand such activities that go on every day in misguided organizations everywhere. Your corporation has a set of values. If it doesn’t include adherence to a code of ethics and the rule of law, change the values or find values or find somewhere else to work.

Don’t Use Meetings to Destroy Others’ Careers – There is enough room in every meeting for a disagreement without making it personal or destructive. More than that, it’s wrong – and politically unwise. Modern corporate life has become so ephemeral and its denizens so transient that your past is bound to come back and face you again, and sooner rather than later. A petty triumph at someone else’s expense at one job may well prove seriously embarrassing at your next job. Resist the temptation. Curiously, the unstable nature of today’s workplace has encouraged people to take the opposite attitude. The thinking seems to run, “I’ll never see these people again, so why not cut loose?” But the opposite is almost certainly true.

Keep the Personal and the Corporate Distinct – There’s nothing wrong with having friends at work. But meetings are not for social calls. To be sure, a certain amount of socializing at the beginnings and endings of meetings is part of the grease that keeps the well-oiled corporate machine running smoothly. But the balance should be clearly kept on the side of business. Too much socializing will lead to resentment among the others at the meeting who are not part of the party. More than that, it’s inefficient, bad for business, and corrosive for your soul. You need to have a life outside the corporate one. If you find that all your socializing is taking place in business meetings, it’s time to change a few things.

Remember that the Best Model for Meetings Is Democracy, Not Monarchy – Resist the temptation to railroad your fellow participants into a decision you want. You need to lead by moral persuasion, not by virtue of your title. Brute force is not the appropriate mode for meetings, though jujitsu sometimes is. As a leader, you should always strive to understand the sense of the meeting. If you want to issue edicts, publish them in the media available to you. You don’t need a meeting to announce a new course of proceeding that is not up for discussion. And watch out for other participants in the meeting trying to take control. Hijacking a meeting is a cherished corporate game, but a nasty one. It’s your job as a leader to prevent that from happening.

Always Prepare a Clear Agenda and Circulate It Beforehand It is more than courtesy – it is good efficient business practice to think hard about the purpose, nature and structure of a meeting before it takes place. These thoughts should be codified in the form of an agenda and circulated to all participants well in advance of the meeting. Time enough, at any rate, for the participants to prepare whatever they need to in the way of reports, plans, proposals, or the like. Far too often, people who call meetings grossly underestimate the amount of preparation required of the participants.

Terminate a Regularly Scheduled Meeting When Its Purpose for Being No Longer Exists – If you can no longer clearly state the reason for having a regular meeting, it’s time to kill it. Purposes change, and when the meeting has lost its reason fortaking place, be the first one to put an end to it. All periodic meetings should have a stock-taking every few sessions to determine if the meeting still has a purpose. It’s just one way to fight corporate bloat and bureaucratic encrustation. Of course, for this discipline to work, you must have decided what the regular meeting was for when it was begun. Goal-setting is just as important in meetings as it is in the rest of corporate life.

The only meetings that people wish had run longer are those magical ones that take place when lovers first set eyes upon one another. Don’t make the mistake of thinking that your business meeting is that thrilling. Keep its timing, purpose, and tone in perspective. Live to meet another day.

Click here to learn about Priority’s Training Curriculum

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on February 14th, 2011 No Comments

SIX WAYS LEADERS CAN FUEL EXCELLENCE AT ANYTHING

By Tony Schwartz
The notion that we can be excellent at anything prompts passionate debate. On the one hand, it’s empowering and inspiring to believe that excellence is within our reach in any area to which we devote ourselves with sufficient diligence — something the researcher Anders Ericsson calls “deliberate practice.”

Just think of how many movies — often based on true stories — tell the story of inspiring teachers, coaches and mentors helping undervalued kids become extraordinary performers: The Blind Side, Stand and Deliver, Lean On Me, Mr. Holland’s Opus, The Bad News Bears, and Dangerous Minds, among many others.

At the same time, it’s daunting to consider that when we ourselves fall short of excellence, it’s not that we lack talent but rather we haven’t put in the right kind of effort.

There is precious little scientific evidence to suggest that genes are our destiny — and more and more evidence of neuroplasticity— the capacity to influence the way our genes express themselves. So what, then, can leaders do to most effectively inspire and nurture excellence in those they lead? Here are six keys:

  1. Ban words like “talented,” “gifted,” and “special” from your vocabulary. Well meaning as these words may be, they tend to give people credit for something they did nothing to earn, while also suggesting that others don’t have equal potential. Consider replacing these words with ones like “effective,” “determined,” “accomplished,” “skilled,” “persevering,” and “masterful,” all of which give due credit to effort.
  2. Regularly, genuinely, and specifically acknowledge and appreciate people’s successes. Believe deeply in their potential, enthusiastically encourage their passions, and don’t be overly fazed by their failures. There may be nothing more motivating to the people you lead than to notice what they’re doing well, and to express your appreciation with detail and specificity. Likewise, there may be no single more powerful act than to handwrite and mail someone a personal note of appreciation.
  3. Provide constant feedback. Annual or semi-annual reviews are vastly insufficient and often worthless. Most people don’t improve their skills over time, in large part because they don’t get consistent, specific feedback. That’s different than judgment or criticism. As often as possible, resist pointing out people’s deficits, and focus instead on where you can help them improve or take it to the next level in any given area.
  4. Create and protect periods of uninterrupted focus. Don’t demand instant responses from your people all day long. Interruptions fracture their attention, and absorbed focus is a prerequisite to high quality work, especially on the most challenging tasks. Stop measuring your people by how many hours they work, and assess them instead based on the value they produce.
  5. Encourage and model intermittent renewal throughout the day. Great performers, the research shows, work intensely for periods no longer than 90 minutes and then stop to recover and refuel. Create a “renewal room” so people have a place to truly chill out. Nothing better fuels productivity in the afternoons than a 20-30 minute nap between 12 and 2 p.m, and encouraging people to exercise at midday runs a close second.
  6. Tie the pursuit of excellence to a larger mission. Excellence requires enormous effort. You need to give your people a compelling reason to push beyond their comfort zones. What most of us hunger for is evidence that what we’re doing truly matter and serves something beyond the bottom line. CEOs such as Alan Mullally at Ford, John Chambers at Cisco, and Steve Jobs at Apple have done a great job rallying their people around a higher mission. Start by defining what you truly stand for, share with others what gets you up in the morning as often as you can, and encourage people to go through the same exercise for themselves.

Priority Training will help you develop your leadership skills and competencies and your team to achieve excellence.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on January 18th, 2011 3 Comments

2011 GOALS

by Danny Gamache

What are critical activities? Critical activities are those activities that directly move you towards your goals. Every goal has critical activities. The problem is that most of us spend significant amounts of time doing things that are not critical. Often we convince ourselves that they are something we ‘need’ to do to be successful, but usually they are things that are not critical.

Step #1 – Identify your goals
You can’t know what the critical activities are if you don’t first have a clear understanding of what your goals are. You need to understand where you are going before you can know how to get there. Go beyond just labeling something as your goal, get a grip on WHY you want to achieve your goal. Before you plan how to get to your vacation destination you first need to know where you are going and what you want to do when you get there. Your destination is your goal, and what you want to do when you get there is your WHY.

Step #2 – List major outcomes needed to achieve your goal
For each goal make a list of the outcomes that you need to complete in order reach that goal. These outcomes should be the major results that lead to achieving your goals.  You may view these as the steps along the way, or the main accomplishments needed to move you forward. If your goal is to increase your sales, your major outcomes will be finding new clients and keeping your existing clients. These would be the two major outcomes that will help you achieve your over arching goal.

Step #3 – Determine the activities needed
In this step you need to take your outcomes from step #2 and break them down into all of the activities that are needed to get you to those outcomes. There are likely several activities needed for each outcome. These can be broken down into small bite-sized action chunks. Continuing with the goal of expanding your business, you would list all the activities for each of the two major outcomes. For example for finding new clients you would have things such as building your prospect list, networking, phoning potential prospects, increasing your web presence, offering seminars or podcasts etc… Think through all the things you do to move you towards each major outcome.

Step #4 – Limit the list to the critical activities
Once you have your list of activities you need to reduce the list to only those activities that are absolutely critical for achieving your goals. These are the things that must be done – your ‘A’ priorities. To find out if one of the activities you have recorded is critical or not, ask yourself what would happen if you stopped doing it. If you quit doing one of the critical activities you will quit moving towards your goals. If you quit something that is not critical you may miss it but it won’t prevent you from reaching your goals. Often the critical activities are not the easy activities. They require stepping out of your comfort zone. For each goal you should aim to have between 4 and 8 critical activities.

Step #5 – Take action on the critical.
After you have identified the critical activities you need to take action on them. Reduce the time and focus you give to the non-critical activities. By now you have likely realized that some things you spend time on are not critical. Non critical activities for me include cleaning my office, surfing the web endlessly, communicating with friends on Facebook, etc. Certainly there are times where these activities are appropriate and even needed, however that is not when I am working towards my goals. When you have set aside time to focus on your business or other goals only do critical activities. To do this you may need to block out distractions. This might mean closing your email boxes, shutting of your twitter tweets, and perhaps even turning off the ringer on your phone. Get rid of the non-critical things that might distract you from the critical.

Step #6 – Do this for each goal
Likely you will have more than one goal in your life. You may have business goals, work goals, family goals, fitness goals, etc. For each goal area you can work through this process. If your goal is to lose weight, you may identify the major outcomes of eating better and exercising more. From there your critical activities might be: 1. exercise daily 2. cook better meals 3. measure out your servings 4. record everything you eat. Every area of your life has critical activities and time wasters.

By taking the time to work through these steps you can focus on the critical and avoid the time wasters. You will make progress towards your goals much more quickly.

Priority training can help you and your team develop and achieve your 2011 goals in every area of work/life.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on December 21st, 2010 No Comments

STRATEGIES FOR THE STRESSED

Our past surveys show that over 70% of our work related stresses come from workload management issues and an inability to balance work and home.

Here are 8 coping strategies suggested by Dr. Eric Jackson.

  1. Define the problem. Write down the issues that cause you stress. Taking steps to reduce these issues will help you relax in your time off.
  2. Set a goal. Too often, people fall into a career path without understanding why they chose it. Ask yourself, “What do I want to accomplish for the duration of my career?” and set goals to achieve it.
  3. Stay healthy. Exercise, sleep and a healthy diet should be priorities. You can’t keep running without taking time to recharge your batteries.
  4. Make time for your family. It’s not a sign of weakness if you don’t pull an 80-hour week in the office.
  5. Don’t bottle it up. Talk to your spouse/partner and discuss with a trusted friend or executive coach your workload. It can help you frame strategies to reduce the burden.
  6. Look ahead. Don’t waste time dwelling on past miscues. Once you set goals, move forward on them.
  7. Work with your weaknesses. By recognizing your weaknesses, you can work to improve your skills or delegate tasks to people who are strong where you are weak.
  8. Be thankful for what you have. When you get stressed out, stop and ask yourself, “What am I thankful for? That will put things in perspective.”

 Priority will help you develop the skills and competencies to balance your workload and stay in control.

To Learn more about Workload Management click below:

Working Smart with Outlook

Working Smart with Lotus Notes

Working Smart with GroupWise

Project Management

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on December 6th, 2010 4 Comments

OBRG Networking Event Thursday November 25th – Work Life Balance … Is it possible?

We have all heard it before is there such a thing as work life balance? What simple things can you do to grow your business without leaving a negative impact on your health?

Join us from The Okanagan Business Referral Group on Thursday November 25th to find out how to bring more balance in your life.

Hear from five speakers,

Dan Walker-Delisle Chiropractor from Creative Healing on how to make positive changes to improve your energy at work.

Roy Collins/Carmen Sparg from Total Office designing an office that builds creativity and a great work environment.

Ron Finch from Paradigm Health Clinic the benefits of good nutrition on your effectiveness in your life and business.

Chris Rowe of Kelowna Martial Arts on how to physical activity can minimize your stress and maximize performance in all areas your life.

Lyle Isenor from Russell & Associates: Health creating wellness through your employee benefits program.

Tickets are only 29 dollars each and include print material and appetizers, and time to network with other like minded business owners.

Our last event was sold out so please RSVP me back.

Location: Sandman Hotel and Conference Ctr. 2130 Harvey Avenue

Date: Thursday November 25th

Event Time: 2 to 4 pm

Networking: 4 to 5 pm

Complimentary Appetizers and Cash bar provided after the event

To purchase tickets contact:
Cathy Carolei
250-861-4222
carolei@shawcable.com

Partial proceeds from the event will be going to The Access to Employment Program. Check their website for more information here http://www.pimbc.ca/employ.html.

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Posted by on November 19th, 2010 No Comments

THE 10 WORST THINGS TO DO IN A MEETING

By Kate Lorenz *

Meetings have been hailed as the No. 1 time-waster in corporate America, and — unless food is served to offset the boredom — the most tortuous part of the work day.

Who among us hasn’t cringed as the office windbag launched into a self-aggrandizing discourse that was completely off-point? Pitied a meek co-worker who got trounced by the office bully? Or marveled at a colleague’s ability to string together an array of buzzwords that mean absolutely nothing?

Yet no matter how mind-numbing things get, don’t be lulled into thinking that meetings aren’t important. The fact is, they can make — or break — your career. Here are 10 things you should never do in a meeting:

Show Up Late.
Nothing says “I’m disorganized” like walking into a meeting already in progress. Arriving a few minutes early not only demonstrates that you respect your colleagues’ time, but guarantees you get a good seat as well.

Be Unprepared.
If you’ve been given an agenda or materials beforehand, read them. Think of any questions you have or contributions you could make to the subjects being discussed.

Monopolize the Conversation.
When discussion ensues, it’s protocol to let more senior figures contribute first. Once they’ve said their piece, concisely make your points. Don’t drone on — or feel compelled to speak at all if you don’t have anything purposeful to say. As the old adage goes, “Better to be thought a fool, than speak and remove all doubt.”

Make Your Statements Sound Like Questions.
Phrasing your statements as questions invites others to say no, argue or take credit for your ideas. Speak in declarative sentences, such as “Let’s do more research on that.”

Misread Signals.
Try to gauge the needs and mood of those in the room. Listen carefully to what people are saying to discern how receptive they might be to your ideas. You need to make your message relevant to your audience. For example, if everyone is focused on cutting costs and you’re angling for a system upgrade, you’ll either want to stress how the new software will save money — or table your request for another day.

Get Intimidated.
Unfortunately, some of your co-workers may view meetings as a battleground and themselves as verbal gladiators, sparring for the boss’ favor. If you become the victim of a put-down or accusation, calmly defend yourself. If you need to buy time to think, do so with a question that will make your attacker accountable. For example: “Andrew, when did you start thinking I don’t care about our sales results?”

Chew Gum or Ice Cubes.
The smacking, popping, cracking and cow-like chewing are annoying. Plus, it’s rude and unprofessional. ‘Nuff said.

Keep Your Cell Phone On and Constantly Be Checking For E-mail/Texts.
You turn it off in restaurants and at the movies. Turn it off for your meeting. A ringing phone interrupts the presenter and distracts the audience. And whatever you do, never take a call in the middle of a meeting.

Wander Off Topic.
Don’t hijack the agenda. Stay focused on what you and your team are trying to accomplish. If you must digress into unrelated areas, make sure it’s alright with the others present. A good way to handle important issues not related to the topic at hand is to record them on a flipchart and revisit them at an appropriate time.

Skip It.
Sure, you might get more done if you forgo a meeting to stay at your desk and do your actual work. But if the meeting was called by someone higher up in the organization, you’ll miss an opportunity to make yourself known. Remember, in the end, meetings aren’t just about productivity, they’re also about projecting a positive image and building professional relationships.

* Kate Lorenz researches and writes about job search strategy, career management, hiring trends and workplace issues.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on November 16th, 2010 No Comments

THE FIVE PRACTICES FOR EFFECTIVENESS

By Dr. Peter Drucker

All that effective people have in common is the ability to get the right things done – here’s how
The effective executives I have seen differ widely in their temperaments and abilities, in what they do and how they do it, in their personalities, their knowledge, their interests – in fact, in almost everything that distinguishes human beings. But all effective executives I’ve known perform only necessary tasks and eliminate unnecessary ones.

Five practices have to be acquired to be effective:

1. Effective executives know where their time goes. They work systematically at managing the little of their time that can be brought under their control.
2. Effective executives focus on outward contributions.
3. Effective executives build on strengths – theirs and others. They do not build on weaknesses.
4. Effective executives concentrate on superior performance where superior performance will produce outstanding results. They force themselves to stay within priorities.
5. Effective executives make effective decisions. They know that this is a system – the right steps in the right sequence. They know that to make decisions fast is to make the wrong decisions.
Whenever I have found a person who – no matter how great in intelligence, industry, imagination, or knowledge – fails to observe these practices, I have also found an executive deficient in effectiveness.

ACTION POINTS:
Commit these five tasks to memory and practice them: know where your time goes; focus on outward contributions; build on strengths; concentrate on superior performance; and make effective decisions.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on November 11th, 2010 No Comments

TIME MATTERS

TIME MATTERS
By HELEN KIRWAN-TAYLOR

Modern society is obsessed with leaving no moment unused. Wasted seconds are fretted over like empty calories—the daily commute should be spent reading e-mail on your Blackberry; a walk to the shops becomes a Cantonese lesson on your iPod. Time-management experts call this “time layering” and the aim is to blanket your waking hours with overlapping chores.

But recent research suggests that multitasking may be less beneficial—or, indeed, realistic—than previously thought.

Clifford Nass, communications professor at Stanford University, divided a group of 263 university students into two groups—those who liked to multitask and those who liked to concentrate on one job at a time. He then compared focus, memory and the ability to switch between tasks.

Prof. Nass found that those who multitasked were “suckers for irrelevancy—everything distracts them.” He says: “We really don’t know what is happening other than that [the multitaskers] seem to like to be flooded with information. It’s almost like they prefer to scan the environment for new information rather than ponder what they have.”

As the multitaskers’ star has fallen, that of time wasters has risen. Research by John Perry, professor of philosophy at Stanford University, found that when faced with a to-do list, some people move to the second item on the list in order to avoid doing the first, more challenging task.

Having completed the easier task they gain a sense of accomplishment that motivates them to return to the top of their to-do list. The result is that they get two things done while those with laser-guided focus are still struggling with the first task—time wasters appear to come out on top.

Unfortunately, it’s not quite as simple as that. The best time wasters are “structured procrastinators”: their attention is not being distracted by enjoyable activities but by other chores. “They do tasks that are equally unpleasant,” says Prof. Perry.

But that is not to say that genuine idling and daydreaming don’t also have their benefits.

Adrian Monck, managing director of the World Economic Forum and author of Can You Trust the Media?, believes society has given procrastination a bad rap.

“Procrastination is time you have to build into delivery,” he says. “It’s an important unconscious deliberative process. We’re happy to say sleep is important—who wants to be flown by a sleep deprived pilot?—but we’re less forgiving of procrastination.”

And, of course, the concept of waste is subjective—one person’s procrastination is another person’s creative downtime. According to a study conducted by AOL and Microsoft, the average worker wastes 40% of his time surfing the Internet and 23% socializing—or conducting research and networking, depending on your point of view.

Remember the Pareto Principle: most people achieve 80% of their results from 20% of their efforts.

The key is to ask yourself why you are avoiding something. Is it lack of motivation, lack of skills or was the task not worth doing in the first place? When we’re not doing what we should be doing, it’s for a reason. We’re often formulating our thoughts.

It’s never a waste of time to attend training and develop your effectiveness skills.

For more information contact:

David Anderson
Okanagan Training Solutions
Priority Management Interior BC
250 762-5096 / 1-877-762-5096
prioritymanagement@shaw.ca
http://www.okanagantrainingsolutions.com
http://okanagantrainingsolutions.blogspot.com/

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Posted by on November 8th, 2010 No Comments