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Time-Saving Tips for the Holidays
When was the last time you had a really relaxing
holiday? I don’t mean that peaceful thirty-minute aftermath that follows a
successful dinner party or the kids’ gift-opening extravaganza. I mean a holiday
that is relaxing, from beginning to end. That includes travel, dinner
preparations, and shopping. All it will take is a little organization and
advance planning. Here are some tips to get you started.
Plan your travel now. Need to be out of town to see family or friends? If you
haven’t already made arrangements, make it a priority. Especially if you plan to
fly, the best deals disappear fast. Get online and start shopping around as soon
as you know where you need to be and when. Once the arrangements are made, start
getting things squared away with work. Whether you need to request time off,
reschedule a recurring meeting, or just let your employees know that you’ll be
gone, do it as soon as possible. Depending on where you work, getting holiday
time off can be competitive. Especially in this case, the early bird tends to
get the worm.
Mark your calendar. Sit down with your DayTimer® and plan backwards. If you want
your holiday cards to go out on December 20, when would you need to buy the
cards, get the stamps, write the newsletter insert (if you do one), and start
addressing in order to make that happen? Think backwards through the entire
process and write the individual steps down on the to-do list for each date.
Same with your holiday meal, gift shopping, and tree decorating. When would you
like to be done, what are all the steps, when would each need to start, and
write them down.
Make a budget. Unless you’ve got more money that you know what to do with, it is
easy for the holiday season to turn into a financial headache. Ninety-nine
percent of that stress can be eliminated by thinking ahead and making a budget.
Financial sanity doesn’t come from having a ton of money; it comes from spending
it wisely. Decide how much you’re going to spend and stick to it. Letting
yourself creep over your budget probably isn’t going to make you a hero in the
gift department, but it might cost you a gray hair or two when it comes time to
sort out the holiday bills. How many times have you charged expensive items and
spent five months paying for them? See if you can break tradition this year by
drawing names or just sending cards. Tell the people you’re not buying for that
you’ve pared down your gift list out of necessity and ask them not to buy for
you as well.
Avoid the shopping marathon. Unless you really do enjoy the “shop ‘till you
drop” marathon mall sessions, skip the all-day shopping trips. If you start now
(or better yet, six months ago), you’ll be amazed at how much you can get done
by picking up an item here and there while you’re running your everyday errands.
The secret is to sit down, make a list of the people you need to shop for, and
keep it with you. Ideally, your list will include one or two gift options for
each person, too. Keep your list with you and cross off a few people every week.
Also keep your eye out for stocking stuffers and similar small items. And as for
that whole Black Friday thing – if you don’t enjoy it, skip it! Unless shopping
is in your blood, the money you’ll save probably isn’t worth the aggravation.
Wrap as you go. Don’t put all of your wrapping off until the last minute. As you
pick things up, go ahead and wrap them as soon as you get a chance. Wrap a
couple extras for a guest who shows up unexpectedly and gives you a gift. It
helps to have a dedicated wrapping area cornered off that is well-stocked with
all the essentials – wrapping paper, scissors, gift tags, tape, etc. The easier
you make it for yourself, the more likely you are to get it done.
Simplify, simplify. No matter how cool your friends and family might play it,
you are NOT the only one who gets stressed out around the holidays. If the
stress of preparations is getting out of hand, don’t be afraid to propose a
simplified pot-luck dinner instead of a more elaborate affair or a gift exchange
instead of shopping for everyone individually. Even if you just try this
approach with a small group of friends or extended family, it’ll be at least a
small relief for everyone involved. When it comes to reducing you holiday
workload, every little bit helps.
Make friends with the Internet. More and more shoppers are finally taking the
plunge and skipping the traditional brick and mortar stores completely. Internet
shopping has come a long way in the last few years and you might be surprised at
how simple it has gotten. You can easily compare prices and can generally find
good deals on shipping that will guarantee arrival in plenty of time for the big
day.
Play your cards right. Many people take one look at that mound of Christmas
cards and can suddenly think of three or four other things that require their
immediate attention. We love getting cards but hate the prospect of doing ours.
So we procrastinate until December 22 and pull another 2:00 a.m. shift to get
them in the mail by Christmas. So, I look at my cards as a process. Breaking the
project down into smaller pieces makes it seem more manageable. You can even
begin now! The first thing I do is create the labels. Second, I stick them on
the envelopes with a return address label and stamp. Next, I write the family
newsletter and get it copied onto the special paper. Finally, I set up an
assembly line: (a) add a salutation to the card such as “Dearest X Family,” (b)
sign our names, (c) enclose the newsletter and a picture, and (d) seal the
envelope with a sticker. No licking for me! If you prefer to hand-write your
cards, the trick is to write five each day, starting the day after Thanksgiving.
Take some with you wherever you go, in case you find some free time: at the
doctor’s office, waiting for a meeting to begin, or picking your child up from a
lesson.
Cheat. Unless you really enjoy preparing mass quantities of food from scratch,
there’s no reason not to take advantage of a short-cut or two. Particularly when
it comes to the dessert menu, there are plenty of quick and easy mixes that can
help you shave some serious time off of your meal preparation schedule. Just go
to the grocery store and find a few easy-to-make offerings or buy something from
the deli. For a special touch you can dress your desserts with extra holiday
sprinkles or a squiggle of chocolate sauce across the plate for a very
restaurant-looking presentation.
Give yourself the gift of time. How about purchasing a few months of
housekeeping instead of clothes? Purchase a gift certificate to a restaurant so
you don’t have to cook. Have the veterinarian groom your dog instead of doing it
yourself, being soaked, and making a mess. Buy a book on tape to listen to in
the car on the way to work. Purchase a cell phone and eliminate phone tag by
forwarding your calls when you leave the office. Have your groceries delivered
once a week for a month (less than the cost of a blouse). Hire a teenager to do
the major cleaning required before houseguests arrive.
Remember your priorities. Take shortcuts where it really doesn’t matter: buy
cookies instead of baking them or barter a task you don’t like for one you do. I
know two women who trade chores at holiday time. One hates to bake; the other
hates to do crafts. So one woman decorates the other’s home and wraps her
presents beautifully; the other does the meal preparation and holiday baking for
the other! Cut out as many social engagements as possible if you want more
family time—you can’t go to a school musical when it’s more convenient. Kids
appreciate happy and relaxed parents more than perfect decorations.
Get moving! However you choose to get a head start on the holiday season, you
won’t regret putting in the extra effort early on. Keep yourself motivated by
thinking about how nice it will be to cruise through the end of December
stress-free and full of holiday spirit. You might make a date with yourself to
visit the mall on the last weekend before Christmas—just so you can observe the
mayhem you successfully avoided by being so productive!
Make it a productive day! ™
(C) Copyright 2007 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.
This article may be reprinted provided the following credit line is present: “© 2007 Laura Stack. Laura is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc. and the bestselling author of Find More Time and Leave the Office Earlier. She presents keynotes and seminars on time management, information overload, and personal productivity. Contact her at 303-471-7401 or www.TheProductivityPro.com.” The link to Laura’s website must be active.
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Ask the Productivity Pro® |
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Q: Dear Laura,
I attended your webinar Friday with a colleague and we both enjoyed it. I like
your energy and your spin on things. I’m looking forward to reading one of your
books soon. Thanks for all the tips; it was a great and worthwhile experience. I
asked my question too late (I submitted it as you were saying you would take one
last question) so I decided to email it to you.
To give you a bit of background, I have been at my current position for just
over 1 year. Before this I skipped around from job to job and jumped into this
head-first. I did not finish college and do not have any professional training
as an administrative assistant. Before me, my boss had never had an admin. He is
famous in the world of solder and has an extensive travel schedule.
Do you have any suggestions on how to communicate with your boss who is never in
the office? My boss is constantly traveling around the world and can not always
respond to emails or voicemails. It's hard to communicate all the information in
the 15 minutes we might get every other day. He is constantly traveling from
China to San Francisco to Europe and back. It’s hard to catch him at a time
where I’m not sleeping or he’s not at a meeting. When he does get a chance to
answer the phone he is normally in a taxi and doesn’t have the information in
front of him. When he comes back from a 2, 3 or even 4 weeks on the road there
is so much information to catch him up on that we spend hours on end going
through it. He normally gets pulled away to a meeting and then we still have
questions unanswered. Since I do not have a technical background I can not
answer the technical questions that he receives. Our department consists of less
than 20 chemists and technicians. I try to delegate some of the questions to
them, other than that I don’t know how to handle this. Any ideas?
Thank you,
Lara
A: Lara,
Rest assured that this is not just your productivity challenge; it’s his as
well. He is partially sabotaging you in your efforts to help him. We’ll need to
pull him into this discussion as well. If you “finally get a hold of him” and
“he doesn’t have the information with him,” there’s not much you can do. He
needs to ensure he has shared his travel schedule in detail with you and
established set check-in times on a regular basis (even from your home
periodically—use comp time). Make sure his cell phone is able to connect
internationally anywhere he is going. He should get into the habit and
discipline of telling the taxi driver to put his briefcase on the seat with him,
so he has the information you need for your calls readily available. Be
organized before you call, so you can ask your questions quickly. The most
important thing is that you can communicate when you can’t speak “live.” He
needs international service on a handheld such as Treo or Blackberry, so he can
check and respond to your emails, which you can receive when you get to work. He
should have you check his email for him on his main email account and forward to
a different email account the ones you can’t handle. That way you can keep up
with printing documents and handling requests yourself, so you don’t have so
much to print and organize when he returns and unloads on you. Find out the
location of the hotels where he’ll be staying, so you can fax a list of
questions over to him if necessary, which the hotel can print and have ready for
him on arrival. Most important is finding a hotel with Internet access and
getting him to log in and handle things regularly, so your clients aren’t
waiting “while he’s out of the country.” With the Internet, that’s just not a
good excuse anymore. I fielded your question to my colleague and friend, Terry
Brock, a guru on using technology to build relationships (www.terrybrock.com),
who suggests “You can use audio (MP3) to respond quickly. The boss can give a
quick summary of important things that need to be done into a digital voice
recorder. Then it can be listened to at a convenient time by the staff.”
So plan ahead and plan often! Create a checklist that you fill out for him
before every trip. Before I leave for a speaking engagement, my assistant Dana
has completed my checklist and made sure we have everything we need to stay in
touch while I’m gone and organize the trip. I can sense your frustration but
wonder if you have communicated with him the extent of the productivity drain it
places on you. Put a high priority on having a heart-to-heart next time he’s
back in the office. Terry says, “The first and most important aspect (of this
situation) is not technological. The boss must be willing to listen and hear. If
that condition doesn't exist, then no matter what technology is deployed, it
will be a waste. The boss must devote serious, uninterrupted (read, "Turn the
@$!# cell phone off!") time to hear what the staff has to say.”
Productively yours,
Laura
Submit your questions at
http://www.theproductivitypro.com/r_asktheexpert.htm
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Laura Stack, MBA, CSP
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Message from Laura |
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I’ve always struggled with creating a paper planner
that meets my needs and couples well with my handheld device. I’ve had to patch
together bits and pieces of different systems to create the perfect planning
method that works for me. So now I have some exciting news! I’m thrilled to
announce that Day-Timer®, the original American time management company, has
partnered with me to manufacture my own exclusive line of The Productivity Pro®,
Inc. DayTimer® planning system! Now you will be able to order the EXACT system I
use and have demonstrated at my seminars over the last 15 years (that many
people have coveted but struggled to duplicate). I have designed my own binder,
calendar, daily pages, notes, tabs, index, and inserts. The start date is July
2008, and you will be able to order it in April 2008. It’s very compact (the
Portable size fits right in your hand, purse, or briefcase). The binder is made
from gorgeous, smooth black Nappa leather with room for business cards. The
colors rotate quarterly, so you can easily see when you need to achieve your
goals. The theme is neutral and muted, so it appeals to guys and dolls:
burgundy, blue, brown, and green. The lines are straight, efficient, and
uncomplicated: nothing frilly here! Every day and month features a new
productivity tip written by me. I designed it for people who carry handhelds,
which as you know are horrible for taking notes. The 2-page-a-day format allows
ample room to record to-dos, calls, and errands. There is no calendar on the
daily pages to take up valuable space. The monthly calendar gives you a broad
view and has more writing space than many larger sizes. The A-Z tabs double as
an address book and filing system. If I do say so myself—the proof sheets are
AMAZING—Day-Timers® designers are so talented. I can’t wait for you to be able
to get your hands on it and become more productive than ever before. Stay tuned
to this newsletter, my site, and my
DayTimer® page.
Here’s something fun! Check out my new
YouTube channel with
lots of great videos of me talking about productivity.
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Time Tips and Traps Offered by Subscribers |
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To be featured in this column, send your productivity tips to
Laura@TheProductivityPro.com.
I will include your contact information, or you may remain anonymous.
I love this site:
http://www.seejanework.com/
I want to share something that we have done here to help us deal with sales
calls. I work for the President/CEO and get so many sales calls every day, you
cannot believe it. We had an extension set up that goes directly to voice mail
so when I get a sales call asking for my boss (you can always tell it’s a sales
call), I just say one moment (they think they are getting through), and they are
immediately directed to our message that states “Thank you for calling AGA
Medical Corporation. If you would like to mail us information regarding your
company, our address is… or, if you prefer to fax your information, our fax
number is… Thank you for calling… I love it!!
They may call me back but…they go right back into my magic mailbox. Maybe
something to share in the future. It works great because I don’t have to waste
my time getting them off the phone.
Heather M. |
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Hot Links |
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Mastering Time Management Can Double Or Triple Your Productivity
American Chronicle - Beverly Hills, CA, USA
The same is true of sales skills, particularly time management. Six proactive
steps to time management can transform your day, which take five minutes to do.
Too busy organizing to be productive
Globe and Mail – Canada. The
productivity-obsessed swap tips online and around the office about filing
systems, checklists and time management.
Too Much Information? Ignore It
New York Times - United States
”Tim basically takes all of the time management and personal productivity
theories of the last 20 to 30 years and pushes them to 11.”
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Laura in the News! |
Personal Journal Update
Wall Street Journal – USA
Workplace productivity coaches, such as author Laura Stack, are expanding into
the domestic realm.
GET HOME QUICKER
"Don't focus on 'catching up,'" says Laura Stack, president of "The Productivity
Pro"® and author of "Leave the Office Earlier." "You will never catch up. There
will always be more things to do than there is time to do them. |
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Reprint Information |
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© 2007 Laura Stack, MBA, CSP. All rights reserved. Portions of this newsletter may be reprinted in your organization or association newsletter, provided the following credit line is present:
"© 2007 Laura Stack. Laura is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc. and the best selling author of Leave the Office Earlier and Find More Time. She presents keynotes and seminars on time management, information overload, and personal productivity. Contact her at 303-471-7401 or www.TheProductivityPro.com."
The link to Laura's web site must be active. |
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Letters to the Editor
Hi Laura,
First, let me say that today's Webinar hit home! You were right on target with
me when you talked about being in a "high traffic area."
As a Professional Admin and a small business owner myself, I always look for
ways to manage my personal workload and that of others who I am charged with
assisting. I forward to browsing through your website and would ask that you
please forward the Word document version of both today's handout and the
Interviewing Questions.
In addition, I would be very interested in finding out more about the written
material listed on the handout, "Leave the Office Earlier" and Find More Time."
Are these actual books available for retail or are these articles and where can
I purchase or download them from?
Thanks again for your kind assistance ~ we had cookies and brownies while we
were viewing in your honor, LOL!
Enjoy your weekend.
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