TODAY’S THE DAY! Buy my newest book The Exhaustion Cure: Up Your Energy from Low to Go in 21 Days on Amazon.com today, Tuesday, May 13. Email your receipt to Katie@TheProductivityPro.com, and you will receive a special link to some great, FREE bonuses resources. Contributing to this promotion are best-selling authors Mark Sanborn, Dianna Booher, Chris Widener, and Roxanne Emmerich. This book will help you boost your capacity for personal productivity by increasing your energy level, which will help you achieve your goals in less time.
The Exhaustion Cure: Up Your Energy From Low to Go in 21 Days
Laura Stack Broadway, $13.95 paper (368p) ISBN 978-0-7679-2751-2
With brisk efficiency, Stack (Leave the Office Earlier) breezes through 21 factors affecting the energy or capacity to perform the myriad duties, obligations, responsibilities and activities of daily schedules. In an appealingly simple format, Stack breaks these factors into three categories: physiological (including diet, nutrition, sleep, exercise and metabolism), practices (attitude, relaxation, time management, etc.) and periphery (environment, relationships and stress level), and guides readers through three weeks of replacing “energy bandits” with corresponding “energy boosters.” Her health advice focuses on maximum results in little time; her cures for major energy drains (cigarettes, caffeine, electronic devices, workaholism, perfectionism and procrastination, for example) are practical, and her perspectives on stressful home and workplace relationships are refreshing. She helps readers distinguish between status quo tasks and more fulfilling ones that move them forward, and makes a strong case for focusing rather than multitasking. While her “just do it” approach may not work for everyone, it just might help many clear a path to realizing their dreams. (May)
I like a new service by Catalog Choice, in which you decide which catalogs you want to receive. When you receive a catalog you don’t want, you enter it on your account and select "Decline Catalog." They contact the merchant on your behalf and request that they no longer send you their catalog. Reduce the number of catalogs you receive in the mail! One-stop-shop method keeps you from having to unsubscribe to each one individually—a real time saver!
Pareto is very busy in the sales world. You know the 80-20 rule. In this case, it means that only 20% of salespeople spend 80% of their time on selling activities. Are you in this group? See if you recognize yourself. If not, here’s how you can join the group.
Put your fingers on it fast. Laura Stack is a professional speaker and author of Leave the Office Earlier® and Find More Time. She sees several time wasters that cost salespeople valuable selling time. One of the biggest time wasters is lacking a system to track client history. The system should include notes on conversations that took place, with whom, and when they took place. Stack says, “To be truly organized you should be able to have a prospect call you out of the blue and you should be able to immediately refer back to a conversation that took place years ago.” Without the system, you can’t be effective. You may even frustrate clients who have to repeat themselves and might have to rely on facts that aren’t correct. Stack uses ACT! to take notes while talking with clients on the phone. Many salespeople are unaware that Outlook can be used to track history. The journal feature allows you to take notes and attach those notes to the contact. Stack adds that you can use a manual folder system if you prefer. What is essential is to have a system to aggregate and retrieve client history.
There’s an unexpected time waster—the BlackBerry. It’s hard to use one for taking notes because you can’t type that fast. Stack sees salespeople taking notes on scraps of paper, place mats and even their hands. That haphazard system makes them more disorganized. She suggests, “Understand the features and benefits and decide if it’s for you.” It’s important once you do take notes to enter them into your system as soon as possible so they don’t pile up.
Get to work fast. Another time waster is when salespeople lack a plan or poorly plan their daily activities. It starts by having a system to schedule follow up tasks like telephone calls. If you tell a customer you will call in two weeks, you must follow through. Some salespeople think they can remember everything they promise. That’s far too taxing. Instead, a technology supplied or manual system works well to keep your promises. She says, “People will work with someone who is reliable more than someone they like.” Some inefficient salespeople begin each day thinking, “Who am I supposed to call today?” Stack says that when you come to work each day you should already know whom you’re supposed to call and what you’re supposed to do. If you work in inside sales, your planning can be the last task of the previous day. If you do a lot of driving, a week out is sufficient and more time is required for air travelers. In addition, at the beginning of each month Stack recommends reviewing activities for the coming month.
Work on selling. Stack sees many salespeople wasting time on activities that take them away from selling. One activity is constant email checking which she suggests reducing to once per day. She sees salespeople who take notes on spiral notebooks only to waste time flipping back through the notebooks to locate a particular piece of customer information. She often hears complaints about completing reports that are time wasters. Yet when she asks, “What have you done about it?” she often gets the response, “Nothing.” Stack reports, “If leadership knew, they would care as it’s directly impacting the profitability of the sales force.”
You may think you don’t have time to plan your selling. You really do. Stack says, “Organization is an enabler. Once it’s in place, it allows you to make more sales. It’s a launching pad to reach more sales revenue.” Sounds like it’s time to take the leap and join the 20% that are selling more effectively.
Maura Schreier-Fleming works with business and sales professionals on skills and strategies so they can sell more and be more productive at work. She is the author of Real-World Selling for Out-of-this-World Results which is available at www.BestatSelling.com. She founded her company Best@Selling in 1997. You can reach her at 972.380.0200 or info@Bestatsellling.com.
It always amuses me how many people get inspired to get organized come the New Year. It’s as if 1/1 somehow had a magical connotation.What was wrong with 4/16 or 11/8?For whatever reason—POOF all of a sudden you’re ready. But, hey, at least it’s getting done, so bring it on.
What you don’t want to happen, however, is a massive shopping trip to buy bins, baskets, gadgets, etc., if you have no plan on how to use them and implement your system.Your new organizational tools can now create more piles and even more clutter. Clutter is not always a problem that can be solved by bins.That can make it even worse.
Here’s how I would systematically declutter an area.Get five sturdy boxes.Label them:
1. Put Away—items that are out of place and should be put away
2. Give Away—items that are in good repair that you no longer want, need, or use.Give to charity, sell, or swap items
3. Store—items that are going to be used again in a reasonable amount of time, but you don’t use on a regular basis
4. Toss—items that are broken, old, worn, or in bad repair
5. Belongs here—will go back into the room, drawer, closet, or cabinet you’re organizing
THEN (and only then) determine your storage solutions for item 3.
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Then take one item out at a time and put it into the appropriate box.If you’re going to organize for 1 hour, set an egg timer for 50 minutes.When it buzzes, use the last few minutes of your organizing session to put items away, put the charity items in the car, throw out the trash, or put boxes into storage.The time investment made in getting organized will repay you over and over in reduced stress, decreased frustration, and more time to spend with friends and family.
Ever want to buy healthy food at the supermarket, but you didn’t have time to look in your recipe books and can’t think of what to buy? Get tired of writing the same basic items—eggs, bread, milk—on your list again and again? Keep your kitchen well stocked by hanging a pre-printed shopping list on your fridge. Print a stack of copies at the Self magazine site. Stick one to your fridge each week and check off things as you run low on various items. Then use the list to trigger your thoughts on buying healthy foods for lunches and dinners for the week.
This is hysterical. Have you ever been sitting in a boring meeting, wishing you had a reason to excuse yourself? Or on a disasterous blind date, looking for an escape? Before a potentially draining engagement, visit PopularityDialer.com. Schedule a free call to your cell phone at a designated time and specify a conversation: boss, cousin in need, friend, etc. The recording actually pauses for your end of the conversation. You’ll be out of there in no time.
I just received a sample product from Cocoa Living called Jot-It, a desktop writing board. Pretty neat concept. Takes the place of putting sticky notes all over the place. If you’re the type that writes on scraps of paper, a corner of your desk calendar, or the bottom of the whiteboard hanging on the wall, this could work for you. It’s essentially a whiteboard on an angled desktop frame where you write notes to yourself, things to do, a phone number to call, etc., and then erase them with the built-in Expo marker eraser when you’re done. The clear top lifts up and allows you to put one of several lined templates underneath to keep things neat. While I wouldn’t use it personally, since I capture notes in my DayTimer(R), it would be good for a "scrapper" to keep all notes in the same place. It’s a bit large for my tastes, but if you have a large surface next to your writing hand, it could be really handy. Good for people who don’t have large to-do lists and whose workflow allows them to complete tasks the same day they are received.