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Improving Efficiency - Tips and Techniques

Improving Efficiency - Tips and Techniques. Kevin Stever February, 2010. Where does the time go?. How do you keep lists of all your tasks? Do you constantly face challenges of updating the list and keeping track? Does the list go ‘out the window’ whenever a crisis comes?

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Improving Efficiency - Tips and Techniques

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  1. Improving Efficiency- Tips and Techniques Kevin Stever February, 2010

  2. Where does the time go? • How do you keep lists of all your tasks? • Do you constantly face challenges of updating the list and keeping track? • Does the list go ‘out the window’ whenever a crisis comes? • Do you forget things? • Do you live in perpetual crisis? • Does it have to be this way?

  3. What Will I Learn? • What should I avoid? • Multi-tasking • Procrastination • What ARE YOU DOING? • Planning • Tracking • Communications • Next steps

  4. Multi-tasking • “I’m good at it, it’s in my DNA!” • Reality: For each task after the first one, your efficiency drops 10 – 15% • If you are working on 6 simultaneous tasks, you’re only 20% effective overall • Example: Think about texting while driving! • How many things are over-engineered? • Dreaming: We need a webcast with music! Yay! • Awakening: A memo with talking points! Cool! • Reality: Um, okay, I’ll shoot back something from my Blackberry. “GR8, what U say B OK! TTYL XOXO” Why didn’t we just start with the simple answer?

  5. Eat That Frog! • Imagine that the first thing you had to do each morning was eat a live frog! • After that… everything else would seem a whole lot easier! • Use this method to attack your task list! • If you procrastinate, the task won’t get any better, and you’ll be more stressed out Time to eat the frog! Time to eat the frog!

  6. Planning • “But I’m too busy to plan…. I just need to get this next thing done… and then, like after that, then I’ll be able to get organized” • But you never get ahead • And the reason is because you don’t plan • 5 Ps - Prior Planning Prevents Poor Performance • Planning means taking time to think through the changing inputs and priorities that affect your work • Plans are useless, planning is essential. -- Dwight Eisenhower • Planning does not end when the task or project begins, it is a constant activity

  7. Annual Reality • There are only 52 Weeks per year • 4 week long trips to visit programs • 4 weeks vacation? • 2 regional conferences • 1 week trip to training • Annual planning / budgeting meetings • All hands events • Other multi-day meetings • Operational commitments (total up day to day into weekly equivalent) • Allocate your tasks / activities across the year 

  8. Example Individual Plan / Schedule Creating an Annual Calendar can help you keep stay committed to your annual goals.

  9. Example Group Annual Plan You might also put together a high level plan for your overall team.

  10. Keeping track – executing the plan • How is your work aligned with your annual plan? • How many of your tasks do you actually finish on time? • How do you communicate priorities among your team?

  11. Tracking Action Items • Item – what is it? • Priority – High, Medium, Low • Category – what part of your mission is this? • Due Date – when does it need to be done? • Date Complete – when did it get done? • Notes • Complete – Yes, No, or OBE (Overcome by Events) Use a spreadsheet to keep up with task and activities

  12. Example task list as of January 1st: 134 items Results Key issue closure: good  On time completion %: not so good  Closed, Open or OBE? Complete – 25  Open – 98    OBE – 11 (Overcome By Events)  Review your task list periodically • Why is 11% of my task list related to actions I never completed? • Isn’t 11% of a year almost 5 weeks effort? • How did I become so overcommitted?

  13. Tasks vs. Value • Do your tasks follow the 80/20 Rule? • 20% of your tasks usually have 80% of the impact • Those 20% SHOULD take 80% of your time Priority does not always equal “value”, but it may be a good starting point

  14. Checking alignment with your plan • PARs track your actual effort • You can run reports and determine your actual effort across your projects • Compare actuals to the “plan” • Look for variances • Analyze why things changed • Is it timing? • Was the estimate wrong? • Re-plan or take corrective action as needed

  15. Tracking Effort / B2A • Useful: Use PN Fund Codes to track effort Effort / Time(Cost) Tasks / Priorities Task List / Categories • What’s your Budget-to-Actual? • Should you make adjustment? • What should you plan for next year?

  16. We have to multi-task!!! You can change! • “Multi-tasking is a necessity” • FALSE, it is a choice you’re making • It is possible to arrange your work in a more effective and efficient way • Planning • Task list • Priority system • Dedicated time for planning / updates • Communication

  17. Next steps • Write down your task list • If you get above 15, quit (you need to prioritize!!!) • List by category and priority • Hold a short meeting with your team to identify the “must do” items for this week • Defer the rest • Meet again for a short status update • Adjust if necessary • Repeat

  18. Over commitment • No matter how hard you try, there is always more work available than what you can do. • We talk about “work life balance”, but don’t “walk the talk” • Over commitment is caused by: • Not planning • Not having priorities • Seeking perfection when OKAY will do • Not saying “no” when the plate is too full

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