More demands on your time - that's just a fact of modern life. You may be doing the job of more than one person and facing an onslaught of information, only to realize that ubiquitous, 24-7 technology has only made things worse. How do you stay ahead of the expectation that you should be able to meet all your obligations, old and new? In the face of these increasing pressures, what do you need to do to maintain your peace of mind?
This book is primarily written for productive professionals who have already found a way to achieve positive results. They aren't clueless - time is an important concern and they have been able to manage their affairs well enough to get through school, hold a job, keep a family and enjoy life's benefits. However, if you belong to this group, you may share a concern: how can you be successful in the future, given the hot pace of change you see around you every day? Doing more of the same seems an unlikely answer. So does the conventional wisdom around "time management" and the popular tactic of following one-size-fits-all solutions.
While the book has lots of specific, practical suggestions for new behaviors, at its heart is a four step approach that preserves and builds on the advances that you, as a professional, have already made in your career:
Step 1> Evaluate your current skills against best-in-class standards, discovering strengths and improvement opportunities.
Step 2> Set realistic targets for new behaviors that meet your unique, evolving needs.
Step 3> Create a personalized plan from these new targets that allow you enough time to succeed, by taking small steps.
Step 4> Craft your own habit change support environment.
By the end of the book you will have completed these steps many times, giving you an easy way to improve any skill that's important to your peace of mind. To complete these steps effectively, Perfect Time-Based Productivity takes you through a broad range of new ideas based on recent research and case studies in fields such as psychology, business process management, adult learning, brain science and industrial engineering.
Part One - You discover the concepts needed to shift from attempting to manage or control time (which is impossible) to managing time demands - the "individual, internal commitments made to complete actions in the future." Once these ideas are understood, you discover that every person manipulates time demands in similar ways, subject to the limits of human capacity. However, your implementation is unique because in this area of life, humans are almost entirely self-taught.
Part Two - Using a number of forms provided in the book (and available for download) you perform an evaluation of 7 essential skills: Capturing, Emptying, Tossing, Acting Now, Storing, Listing and Scheduling. Each self-evaluation is the precursor to creating a mini-improvement plan which goes into a Master Plan, made up of small steps, that outlines your improvement journey. It's one that will change your habits, practices and rituals at a pace that preserves your peace of mind.
Part Three - You'll learn about other advanced skills and perspectives needed to be effective in today's world. For example, Flowing - your capacity to be in the flow state defined by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi - is an important skill to master given the pressure to multi-task and become distracted. Also, you'll learn why corporations are struggling with time-based productivity: they don't push for the right tools for their employees and have allowed individual effectiveness to become a matter of chance, versus policy.
The book closes with additional resources for already-productive professionals such as Type A business-people, fans of productivity improvement, project managers and time advisers.
Genre: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General#565,880 in Kindle books store (paid) 67,182 ranks today (updated hourly)
The book was published in November 2014
Introduction
This is a book about you, but only if you happen to be someone who wants to get better at what you do.
You want to make the most of each hour of every day: get better at what we call "time management."
You're not alone – I'm a member of this group, and so are many others. Do you have big dreams of all the things you could do if only you had more time and capacity to fulfill your commitments? Your aspirations call you to further accomplishments, but you find yourself constrained. Perhaps you're frustrated by what you want to do but somehow can't achieve. It appears as if time won't allow you to reach your productive potential.
I imagine that if you’ve picked up this book, you have stopped wishing for more than 24 hours in a day. You have found yourself ready to make the most of the time you do have. Simple enough to say. Quite another thing to do.
It's just not that easy. Most people who pick up a book like this have gotten to the limit of how much they can use their own ideas to improve on their own. Perhaps you have too, and you're actively looking for other solutions.
The only problem is that the solutions available… well, to be frank, they suck. Conventional wisdom steers us all towards three stock answers: buy a new gadget, search out tips and tricks, or just copy someone else's blend of habits, practices, rituals and routines. Sadly, these don't work as well now as they did in the past.
Language | Status |
---|---|
French
|
Already translated.
Translated by Eric Bouchet
|
Italian
|
Translation in progress.
Translated by Chiara Tusa
|
Portuguese
|
Already translated.
Translated by Fabiana Louza
|
Spanish
|
Already translated.
Translated by Alejandro Clavel
|