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Rodger Constandse of Time Thoughts, invites you to reprint this article in your publication, ezine, or on your website.

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    Five Questions That Help You Make the Most of Your Time
    Copyright © 2005, Rodger Constandse

    Questions have the power to instantly change your focus and put 
    you into a productive frame of mind.
    
    These five simple time management questions will immediately 
    direct your attention, your focus, and your thinking towards your 
    top priorities and away from distractions.
    
    Just ask yourself these questions habitually throughout the day 
    and you will start making better use of your time.
    
    
    1. What is the most valuable use of my time right now?
    
    This is a slight variation of a question developed by time 
    management expert Alan Lakein.
    
    The purpose of this question is to shift your focus to what is 
    most important and valuable at this moment. It is a perfect 
    question to ask whenever you are unsure about what to do next, 
    whenever you face an unexpected interruption, or whenever you 
    feel that you are not making good use of your time.
    
    For example, let's say you find yourself with an extra twenty 
    minutes of unscheduled time. Asking yourself "What is the most 
    valuable use of my time right now?" will help you find an 
    important task for the time you have available.
    
    
    2. What am I ultimately trying to accomplish?
    
    The purpose of this question is to focus your thinking on your 
    real objectives and goals; the real reasons you are working on 
    your projects and tasks.
    
    Asking this question habitually will help you avoid getting 
    sidetracked, drifting into trivia, or falling into perfectionism. 
    You can use this powerful question for all your projects.
    
    For example, while preparing a presentation, you can easily get 
    sucked into less valuable work when you start playing with the 
    formatting, or adding bells and whistles, instead of working on 
    the content.
    
    The work seems important because it is connected to your 
    presentation project, but when you take a closer look, you 
    realize that you are wasting your time on details that don't 
    really matter.
    
    Asking this question will help you refocus your efforts on your 
    real objectives and away from trivial matters. If it turns out 
    that the formatting details are important for this project, 
    you'll recognize this as well and give them the attention they 
    deserve.
    
    This question can also help you find and eliminate useless tasks 
    that don't contribute toward your ultimate goals.
    
    
    3. What am I giving up to do this?
    
    Whenever you choose to do something, you automatically reject 
    everything else you could have done during that time.
    
    The purpose of this question is to help you realize what you are 
    giving up in order to undertake a task or project. Once you 
    recognize the true cost of an activity, you may decide that it is 
    not how you really want to spend your time.
    
    Asking this question before you take on a new task or project 
    will help you stay focused on what really matters. It will also 
    help you recognize when you should be saying no to that new 
    request.
    
    You should also ask this question about activities that you are 
    already doing on a regular basis. These could be things like 
    volunteering to do some work for your trade association, chairing 
    a committee, or serving on the board of a community organization.
    
    While all of these things may be valuable undertakings, you may 
    be sacrificing something even more important to do them. Asking 
    "What am I giving up to do this?" may turn out to be a real eye 
    opener.
    
    You probably wouldn't consciously sacrifice time with your family 
    in order to participate in a committee you don't care about, but 
    you might be doing it by default if you don't examine your 
    existing commitments on a regular basis.
    
    
    4. What are my three most important projects or tasks today?
    
    The purpose of this question is to help you make use of the 80/20 
    rule every day. The 80/20 rule states that 80% of the value is 
    contained in only 20% of the items. The top two or three projects 
    and tasks in any given day could account for up to 80 percent of 
    your day's value, so give them the time and priority they 
    deserve.
    
    If you practice weekly planning, you can change this question to 
    "What are the three most important projects for this week?"
    
    
    5. Should I continue doing this?
    
    This is a slight variation of the first two questions, but shifts 
    the focus toward what to stop doing rather than what to start 
    doing.
    
    Deciding to stop doing something that is no longer valuable is 
    often more important than actually deciding to start doing 
    something else.
    
    This is a perfect question to ask whenever you feel you may be 
    wasting time trying to perfect something that should already be 
    done, or when you feel stuck in a commitment that is no longer 
    serving your long-term objectives.
    
    
    Keys to Success
    
    * Make it a habit - At first, you'll have to keep reminding 
    yourself to ask these questions over and over again. However, if 
    you keep asking consistently, eventually they will become a habit 
    that will serve you for the rest of your life.
    
    * Use these three steps whenever you have to make a time 
    management decision: pause to think before you react, use 
    questions to put you in the right frame of mind, and do the right 
    thing.
    
    * Keep asking until you get an answer - Sometimes you won't get 
    an answer to these questions right away; just keep asking while 
    you review your projects and task. The right answer will come.
     
    



    Writer's Resource Box:
    Rodger Constandse is the editor of http://www.TimeThoughts.com , 
    a website providing time management and goal setting resources 
    for personal and career success.
    
    Take control of your time, your goals, and your life 
    with our free course and time management eBook. Visit 
    http://www.TimeThoughts.com and get started today!




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