Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (R) Leave the Office Earlier
a news"E"letter from The Productivity Pro - Laura Stack
Number 134:: July 2010

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In This Issue:
Message from Laura
Feature Article: How to Empower Your Employees…and Yourself
Educational Resources
Time Tips and Traps
Ask the Expert
Laura's Blog
Hot Links
Piggyback Pricing
Words of Wisdom
Laura in the NEWS
Book Laura
Where in the World is Laura?
Subscription and Contact Information
Reprint Information

 


 

Buy The Exhaustion Cure at Amazon.comA holistic approach to increasing your get-up and go, from the productivity expert whose previous books showed people how to Find More Time and Leave the Office Earlier. If you want to be productive but are just too tired all the time, you need to read this book! Laura Stack combines invaluable insights and practical advice in this guide to becoming more energetic and more productive in every area of life. Stack describes the factors that contribute to low energy (the "energy bandits") and explains how to reduce their effects and build up or renew sources of positive force (with "energy boosters").

Available now from Amazon.com and at better bookstores everywhere.

 


 

Buy Find More Time at Amazon.comFind More TimeYou can't add more hours to the day, but Laura will help you make the most of the time you have and get things done. Available now from Amazon.com.

Leave the Office Earlier, Leave the Office EarlierLaura shows you how you CAN get more done than you ever thought possible and still get home to your real life sooner.Available now from Amazon.com.

More of The Productivity Pro's Resources

 


 

Featured Educational Resource from The Productivity Pro®
eCourses! 8, 10, and 21-day eCourses, delivered right to your inbox! Now only $7.99.  

 


 

Words of Wisdom
"We cannot work for others without working for ourselves." --Jean-Jacques Rousseau

"Only by releasing the energy and fire of our employees can we achieve the decisive, continuous productivity advantages that will give us the freedom to compete and win in any business anywhere on the globe." -- Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric

"There's a basic philosophy here that by empowering workers you'll make their jobs far more interesting, and they'll be able to work at a higher level than they would have without all that information just a few clicks away.”-- Bill Gates, on Microsoft's corporate culture.

"People will work hard when they are given the freedom to do the job the way they think it should be done, when they [can] treat customers the way they like to be treated. When you start taking away their incentive and start giving them rules, boom, you’ve killed their creativity."-- James F. Nordstrom (department store founder)

"Anyone restructuring a company that does not take this new employee empowerment into account is not dealing with the future but is merely streamlining the past." --William H. Davidow and Michael S. Malone, The Virtual Corporation

" If people have total control over their business, they will have the best possible emotional involvement." --Pat McGovern, CEO of IDG

 


 

Laura's Blog

Subscribe to feed:http://blog.theproductivitypro.com

 

Recent posts:

Time Management: How to Say No Without Saying NO

Workplace Productivity: Protecting Yourself From Drop-In Interruptions

Increasing Productivity: Reducing Your Reading Pile: Productivity Minute Video
 

Performance Improvement: Daily Routines and Morning Rituals

Time Management: Social Media Un-Productivity: How to Avoid Addiction

Work Life Balance: Beating the After-Work-Low-Energy-Blues

Video: What You Should Do First Thing in the Morning
 

 

Laura's Demonstration VideoView Laura's Demonstration Video


Hot Links

 

Jobs that Allow Work-Life Balance

Five Ways to Bug Your Boss - and How to Stop

Microsoft Delivers the Future of Productivity With Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010

Work Smarter, Not Harder: 5 Office Efficiency Tips

 


Where in the World
is Laura?

These are all private client engagements with Laura Stack. At this time, Laura does not offer open enrollment seminars to the general public. If you’re interested in bringing Laura to your organization to present a training seminar for your employees on the day prior or the day after one of these engagements below, please contact John Stack for special “piggyback” pricing.

 

August 2010

3-5::Indianapolis, IN

9::Denver, CO

10::Philadelphia, PA

11-12::Kansas City, Missouri

20::Luke AFB, Phoenix, AZ

23::Denver, CO

24::Sterling, CO

25::Denver, CO

28::Albuquerque, NM

30::Sioux Falls, SD

 

September 2010

11::Cologne Germany

16::Atlanta, George

18::Birmingham, AL

24::Flint, Michigan

27::Denver, CO

 

October 2010

4-6::Hot Springs, Virginia

7::Englewood, CO

9::Nashville, Tennessee

19::Palm Desert, CA

23::Adelphia, ML

25::Denver, CO

29::Philadelphia, PA

 

November 2010

4::Colorado

11::Colorado

12::Virginia Beach, Virginia

15::Denver, Colorado

16::Detroit, Michigan

18-21::Scottsdale, Arizona

 

December 2010

13::Denver, Colorado


Visit Laura's Calendar On-line for her complete availability.

 


Laura in the News!
International experts - people to listen to - Ecademy
10) Laura Stack (USA) The "productivity pro". Shows companies how to be much, much more productive. I hope you get the chance to see some or all of them "live." Alan Stevens, President-Elect, Global Speakers Federation.

YouTube - SHRM10 Interview Series: Laura Stack
Laura Stack, Founder of The Productivity Pro, Inc., discusses the red flags of overdoing it on social media.

The Top 50 Productivity Blogs To Watch in 2010
The Productivity Pro Laura Stack blogs about Time Management, Getting Things Done, and How to Be More Productive. ...

Employees Create the Space for Productivity by Reducing Timewasters
By admin
In her book, Leave the Office Earlier, the Productivity PRO® Laura Stack, provides these tips that improve performance results of each and every employee in the organization: 1. Eliminate the cause of most problems and avoid crises.
Subscription and Contact Information
Phone: 303-471-7401
Email: [email protected]
Web site: www.TheProductivityPro.com
Address: 9948 S. Cottoncreek Drive Highlands Ranch, Colorado80130

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Feature Article:

How to Empower Your Employees…and Yourself

 

TIn the high-octane world of modern business, you hear a lot of theories about what it takes to increase employee productivity. Empowerment is one of the philosophies discussed most often, especially as it relates to the corporate team environment. The idea is simple enough: by implementing practices that help employees feel confident, capable, and in control of the outcome of their work, they feel empowered to do that work effectively and without excessive oversight or micromanagement. Ideally, this ensures commitment to the company's core mission and vision, which results in greater productivity over the long term.

That's the theory, anyway. But as any scientist will tell you, all that really matters is how well a theory stands up to testing. If it's a dud, a few experimental runs out in the real world should soon put it to rest.

So: how does the employee empowerment schema fare? As it turns out, empowerment really does work—like gangbusters. Real-world experimentation has repeatedly proven that the best employees are those who "own" their work; that is, those who feel they have a say in how they do their work and are fully engaged in the outcome. Empowered employees aren't just proud of their work, they're more productive than their disempowered colleagues. In general, they're also more satisfied, so they bring in more business by making customers happier, which translates into greater profits. This holds true in both the individual and collective senses. From a hardnosed financial perspective, then, employee empowerment is a good business.

Now: before I talk about what you can do to implement employee empowerment in your company, let's look at what empowerment isn't. Even when they're willing to consider the strategy, managers often develop a false idea of what empowerment actually is, and end up shooting themselves in the metaphorical foot when they try to implement. For starters:

• Empowerment isn't a right, it's a privilege. Individuals should be fully empowered by management only when they prove that they can do the job and display the proper initiative. On the other hand, the opportunity to become empowered should always be a right.

• Empowerment isn't always assumed by the employees, no matter what management may think. If your employees aren't taking the initiative to own their jobs, then they don't feel empowered to do so. Why? Probably because you haven't made it clear that they are.

• Empowerment isn't a bunch of motivational posters or empty slogans that management pays lip service to but doesn't really follow.

• Empowerment isn't a blank check to do anything the employee wants. Management must set explicit boundaries within a strategic framework, so that employees know and understand which decisions they can make without management approval.

• Nor is empowerment management by consensus. A business isn't a democracy. When properly implemented, empowerment gives workers the authority to do their jobs—not the management's.

What "employee empowerment" boils down to is a philosophy that allows people to make decisions about their work, within certain broad guidelines. Simply put, it lets employees think for themselves. Now, some observers claim that empowerment comes from the employee, and to a certain extent that's true. However, I believe that true workplace empowerment comes from the employees and management working in tandem. The employee has to be willing to show initiative and take control of their work, yes; but the management team has to be in a position to encourage and allow employee empowerment, or it will never occur.

Which brings me to a critical point: management can have a regrettable tendency to express a commitment to the concept of empowerment, without actually making it an effective part of corporate culture. Many of us have seen productivity initiatives fizzle, because management is somehow under the impression that a few catchy slogans and a coffee mug (or worse, some atrocity like an "empowerment rock") is enough to actually empower employees to buy into the company's mission and vision and take ownership of their work. Worse, some companies send their employees to productivity training as a matter of course—and then just as routinely ignore the employee attempts at self-empowerment that productivity teaches. That's like pouring money down the drain. It's hard to say why companies would waste resources this way, though it may stem from an unwillingness to give up control to the employees, or from a fear of losing certain privileges. More likely, it's due to a deep-seated belief that the employees can't actually do their work properly without constant oversight.

Whatever the case, if you're washy-washy about empowerment, you're unlikely to see a significant productivity increase when you try to implement it. Even in these uncertain times, the most you'll see is employees who do only what they have to in order to get by. Don't underestimate your employees: they're keenly aware of what you think of them at all times, and a halfhearted empowerment effort will go over like a lead balloon. The ironic thing here is that employee empowerment isn't all that difficult or expensive to implement. Delegation of tasks to particular individuals, encouraging employees to focus on specific, reachable (if occasionally difficult) goals, consistent training, and employee coaching are all ways that a manager can effectively empower his or her employees.

All this does take some work on the part of management, of course—and it's here, unfortunately, that the process breaks down. Too often, managers are unwilling to put in the effort necessary to achieve the level of empowerment that can make productivity take off like a rocket. That's too bad, because direct involvement and supportive communication on the part of management are two of the foundations of employee empowerment.

First of all, you have to make your employees understand what you're trying to achieve. You can't do that by just ordering them to do this or that, without providing an explanation…well, you can, but that's the military way (as my father the Colonel would say)…and employees aren't soldiers. They haven't been through the intensive training that the military uses to break down the individual and rebuild him into the type of soldier they need. So help your employees understand what you're trying to do. Explain the company's mission in a simple, straightforward way. It can be as simple as, "We're trying to make the best tires in the world," or "We're world leaders in software technology, and we want to stay that way." You don't have to ramble on about "leveraging our core business" and "optimizing quality-driven geo-targeted bandwidth," or "gap analysis," even though all that may be integral to your business strategy. Just give it to them straight. They'll appreciate that.

Managers also have to be willing to give of themselves, in the sense that they have to a) provide assistance that's appropriate to the problems faced by the employees, b) carry out any requested assistance competently and completely, c) encourage employees, and d) provide information or express concern in a way that neither embarrasses the employee nor causes them to lose face (hence the old saying, "Praise in public, criticize in private"). They should also be willing to correct the employee along the way—again, in a respectful way, if possible. Treating employees the way you want to be treated is essential, because nothing can match motivated people who really care about their jobs and know that you care about them. A recent Global Workforce Study conducted by Towers Watson reveals that employee confidence in their leaders is at low ebb as of mid-2010; therefore, a willingness to make your commitment to empowerment obvious to your employees offers more of an advantage than ever.

And let me be clear: empowering your employees to do their jobs confidently and without excessive oversight isn't an altruistic move, although your employees may think so. When properly handled, employee empowerment is a win-win situation all around—because in addition to making employees more productive, it also makes you more productive. By tapping into the knowledge and energy of your employees, you not only take advantage of the "many heads are better than one" thesis, you get to focus on your own most profitable tasks—the reason you're getting paid the big bucks in the first place.

At your level, tasks like marketing, inventing, and hiring top-notch employees are a whole lot more profitable than running around putting out brushfires or doing menial tasks. What's more productive for you: planning a marketing blitz that could bring in a million bucks, or helping your intern photocopy a report, because you're not convinced he can do it correctly? The choice is a slam dunk…or it should be. After all, what would you rather do: minimum wage work, or something that's worth hundreds, and potentially thousands, of dollars an hour for the company?

If your employees seem unwilling to take initiative to empower themselves, find out why. If it's obvious that they don't have the training they need to do their work with confidence, then train them! They need to be confident not only that they're allowed to do the job, but also that they can do the job. That's another foundation of workplace empowerment.

Uncertainty hampers both empowerment and the productivity that comes with it. Basic education isn't enough; it's crucial, but it just prepares a person for their career. New employees need hands-on training, so that they can gain experience in handling the specialized aspects of particular tasks. Your only other option is to toss 'em out there to sink or swim as best they can. This approach to "empowerment" is inherently wasteful, not just because it limits the development of their personal competency at particular tasks (and thus their productivity), but also because it blows a hole in your team's productivity levels, too. Even if the individual learns to swim, it'll take a while; and if they sink, you're back to square one.

Once an employee has enough training that their ability to do the job is unquestioned, you'll have to remind them that they are, in fact, empowered to do that job. In other words, start delegating tasks to them, and make them aware that it's up to them to get the job done. You can't do everything, and you shouldn't try—or you'll end up with that lack of initiative that so many managers complain about. Never let your employees think they have to consult you before they do even the smallest tasks. Just put stuff on their plates and let them get it done. Large products require discussion and the setting of deadlines, as well as steady monitoring, but don't hover. Size up your team, learn their skill levels and natural talents, and then hand off tasks to the appropriate individuals so that projects can be completed on time.

Recently, I expressed frustration to my office manager, Becca, about the inefficiency of correcting simple typos we found on our website: send an email to our IT guy, provide the link and the correction, and wait. She was taking college courses in IT and had created some simple websites in class. So I asked her if I purchased a web editing software package, would she feel comfortable making the changes. She spent time learning the package, and we specifically discussed her taking the initiative to make changes whenever she saw errors or needed corrections. I am now happily freed of this time-sucking task, and she is enjoying her newfound skills.

Making people responsible for their tasks will stimulate them to succeed, so be sure to set goals and deadlines for your employees. The goals should be reasonable, though they might be a bit difficult to achieve; as a result, the employee will have to stretch, which will result in increased confidence and, ideally, a heightened sense of empowerment. Don't make the goals excessive; that can lead to frustration, poor productivity, and an erosion of the sense of empowerment. The intelligent manager takes a person's abilities into account and doesn't overburden them. On the other hand, a little encouragement can result in a significant increase in productivity; and to some extent, increased productivity and empowerment feed off each other.

Finally, if you want your employees to continue to feel empowered, reward them for their productivity. Otherwise, you're telling them you don't appreciate their contributions—and down goes productivity, because what's the point of working hard? For some, a verbal "pat on the back" will do, and such recognition is the least that you should offer. For most people, though, money's a prime motivator. A nice bonus or a gift card is always appreciated!

Make it a productive day!
(TM)

(C) Copyright 2010 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.

 


 

Book Laura

 

Have Laura speak to your company, conference or organization. How do you know if Laura would be perfect for your next event, meeting, or training? View the "Laura Stack Is Perfect For This Group" fact sheet.

 


 

Time Tips and Tricks
To be featured in this section of our newsletter and get a free eBook with our thanks, send your productivity tip or trick to [email protected] with “Tips and Tricks contribution” in the subject line.

Most discussions of employee empowerment focus on achieving buy-in, making the workplace more enjoyable, or giving people ownership of their work. All those points are critical, but here's one that tends to be overlooked: do your employees feel empowered to take enough time off?

Here's what I mean. In the overstressed, go-go-go world of modern business, workers often ignore the one productivity tool they rely on the most: themselves. When you overwork a tool, what happens? It breaks—or at least becomes less productively useful. The same is true of people.

If you want your employees to be truly productive, make sure they know that they're free to take the minimum time they need to relax. Most business pros think they have to work 14 hours a day, multitask constantly, and ignore their families to get ahead—because that's what mainstream corporate America has taught them. And if you don't tell them otherwise, they'll keep doing it.

There are times when it'll be necessary to work long hours, but that should be an exception, not the rule. Make sure your people know they can regularly take holidays and weekends off, and that a vacation is required every year. You'll end up with more productive workers if they're not worn to a frazzle.

Once you've made your employees aware of all this, start practicing what you preach. Take the time you need to rest and recharge your batteries, and make a habit of it. To quote Tony Robbins, "Those who don't have time for healthy habits now will make time for sickness later."


MAXIMIZING YOUR PRODUCTIVITY BY HONORING YOUR VALUES
By Dr. Joe Rubino

Being productive is a natural state that comes from people doing what they enjoy and honoring their most important values. Productivity and having fun are closely related. When we honor our values, life works.

The corollary is most often true as well. When people are not having fun, they are not honoring their values and their productivity decreases. By following your passions, you maximize your most productive state of mind. Doing what you love is the best way to live your core values. Developing clarity on exactly which values must be honored for your life to work optimally will result in maximizing your personal power.

Your values will continually evolve as you do. When you focus on living from your values, they become honored and satisfied. This allows you to then shift your focus to other evolving values. The key to a life that is satisfying and productive is to identify your key values and make sure they are being honored. Until your life and values are in alignment, life will look like an uphill struggle.

When your core values are honored you step into your power to function at your highest level. The better you understand what values are most important to others, the better you will be able to work powerfully with them.

Dr. Joe Rubino is an internationally acclaimed personal development trainer, life-changing success coach and best-selling author of 11 books available in 23 languages and 53 countries. He is the CEO of www.CenterForPersonalReinvention.com, and has impacted the lives of more than 2 million people providing tools to maximize their happiness, self-esteem, productivity and personal effectiveness. Learn more about Dr. Joe’s life changing self-esteem work at www.theselfesteembook.com and contact him at [email protected].
 
 
 

NEW!  Piggyback Requests

 

We have clients in several cities who would like to split a day of Laura’s training fees and travel expenses (if outside Colorado) with another company or organization in the local area. If you live within one hour of these locations and are interested this shared model, please email [email protected].

Buffalo, NY
Chicago, IL
Dallas, TX
Denver, CO
Houston, TX
Indianapolis, IN
Miami, FL
Milwaukee, WI
Minneapolis, MN
Richmond, VA
Salem, OR
Tampa, FL
Winston-Salem, NC
 

 

Monthly Productivity Webinar:

AUGUST 23: Thirty Best Practices for Scheduling Your Day in Outlook: Maintaining Your Calendar Digitally.

Using software to maintain your schedule can be extremely effective, but if you're not careful, it can turn into a real waste of time for both you and everyone else involved. Try to keep the following factors in mind when scheduling your day in Outlook, Lotus Notes, or GroupWise (demonstrated in Outlook).

 

-Using third-party software to find convenient day/time of meeting for people not at your company.

-Converting emails automatically into appointments (no copy/paste).

-Automatically find open meeting times without comparing calendars.

-Track meetings by projects, team, or committee.

Cost is $29. For more information and to register click here.

Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (r)

Laura Stack, MBA, CSP
Publisher

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August 9: Bonus day for purchases of SUPERCOMPETENT®

Please DON’T buy my new book, SuperCompetent: The Six Keys to Perform at Your Productive Best (Wiley). Yes, that’s correct—don’t buy it—until August 9. If you purchase the book on that day from any online or retail bookstore and forward your receipt to [email protected], you’ll receive free bonus gifts from me and SIX SUPERCOMPETENT SPEAKERS, such as:

• Dianna Booher is providing a free eBook Write to the Point.
• Joe Calloway is providing the eBook Becoming a Category of One.
• Eric Chester is providing the eBook Employing Generation Why.
• Terri Sjodin is providing a free subscription to the Presenters post quarterly e-newsletter.
• Chris Widener is providing his “Totally Motivated” eBook.
• Mark Sanborn is providing you with access to his in-depth Encore Assessment, a regular $25.95 value.

Check out SuperCompetentBook.com and then click on the BONUS icon for offers and instructions on how to claim your bonuses. Buy your copy in any online store and forward your receipt to  [email protected]

1. Amazon
2. Borders
3. Barnes & Noble
4. Booksamillion
5. CEORead

 


ANNOUNCING my new online productivity training LMS portal, theproductivityuniversity.com! Call me at 303-471-7401 or email [email protected] to set up a user ID and password for a free preview for your employees.

Now your entire team can experience Laura Stack’s training in the privacy of individual offices! Gain access to 30+ hours of productivity training online for a very low cost per employee. The Productivity University LMS includes these programs:

• 20 hours of Microsoft Outlook 2003 and 2007 videos
• 10 hours of videos in Laura’s “Leave the Office Earlier” series:
- Preparation: laying the foundation for success in work and life
- Reduction: eliminating personal, departmental, and organizational timewasters
- Order: organize your office and your life
- Discipline: putting your nose to the grindstone
- Unease: getting rid of stress and burnout
- Concentration: maintaining your focus among distractions
- Time mastery: controlling your day in an uncontrollable world
- Information management: preventing digital overload
- Vitality: ensuring productivity with proper self-care
- Equilibrium: balancing your career and life


Benefits of online training:

Save Training Expense. Training online can save hundreds if not thousands of dollars associated with assembling a live class. No more flights, hotel rooms and expensive dinners.
Flexibility. No more scheduled training sessions to work around. Courses can be accessed 24/7 from any internet connection. So even those with tight schedules no longer have to sacrifice learning. In addition, students can be signed up by their company or purchase their own courses in the course catalog.
Expand Reach. Being able to offer courses on demand allows you to train those people who otherwise would have been difficult to get to. In short, online training allows you to train more people.
• Retention of Knowledge. Different students learn at different paces. Our intuitive learning platform allows users to pause and review any section at anytime. This creates a less stressful learning environment. Remove stress and you remove a major barrier in learning.
Accountability. How do you know if your students are retaining the knowledge presented? The Productivity University’s learning games and Quizzes will help you assess the knowledge retention of your students…and hold them accountable for learning.
Reporting. Each manager/leader is given access to a tracking feature that will allow you to see who on your team is participating in courses and when.
Certification. Need to prove your people are skilled? The Productivity University creates custom certificates after completion of courses
Survey. The Productivity University’s survey tool allows you to get instant and comprehensive feedback on all courses.
Email [email protected] or call 303-471-7401 for pricing.

 


 

Monthly Microsoft Outlook webinar: July 28, 2010: TIME SAVERS

Topics: Automatic Email Notification, Creating Rules, Rules Wizard, New Item Shortcut, Send/Receive Times, Create Templates for Common Responses, Outlook Template for Letters, AutoSearches, Quickly Jump Around within Outlook, Keyboard Shortcuts, Take a Poll and Tally Results, Specify Which Address Book Opens First, Find Messages with Lightning Speed, Add Groups and Shortcuts in the Folder List, Create a New Toolbar with Favorite Buttons, Add Your Own Menu with Your Favorite Commands.

Outlook version 2003: 9:00 pacific/12:00 eastern
Outlook version 2007: 11:00 pacific/2:00 eastern

Cost is $39 with workbook and recording. For more information and to register click here.

 


Monthly Productivity Webinar: FREE!!!

 

AUGUST 9, 9:00 AM Pacific/10:00 AM Mountain/11:00 AM Central/12:00 PM Eastern: SuperCompetent: The Six Keys to Perform at Your Productive Best. Based on Laura's fourth, upcoming business book of the same title (Wiley, August 9, 2010), you’ll learn how to achieve peak performance in the workplace. The new mantra is "buckle down!" These times are about a return to quality rather than quantity—all of us must learn to be competent—and not just plain, old-fashioned competent, but SuperCompetent®. In this competitive economy, just being able to do your job is no longer enough. Competence is expected; you’ve got to be SuperCompetent to get an edge. Whether you’re an employee, an entrepreneur, a team leader, or all of the above, SuperCompetent will give you proven methods to reach your and your team’s maximum potential and achieve breakthrough results.

You’ll get to your productive best by mastering six keys to peak performance:
1. Activity: the value and importance you place on your work
2. Availability: your ability to master your schedule
3. Attention: the capacity to focus intently and concentrate on tasks
4. Accessibility: the ability to organize the inputs and outputs in your life
5. Accountability: the extent to which you take personal responsibility for your actions and outcomes
6. Attitude: your motivation, drive, and proactiveness

This webinar is COMPLIMENTARY, thanks to our sponsor, Day-Timer. Click here for more information and to register.

Reprint Information
All Articles (C) 1999-2010 Laura Stack. All rights reserved. This information may not be distributed, sold, publicly presented, or used in any other manner, except as described below.

Permission to reprint all or part of this article in your magazine, e-zine, website, blog, or organization newsletter is hereby GRANTED, provided:

1. The ENTIRE credit line below is present,
2. The website link to www.TheProductivityPro.com is clickable (LIVE), and
3. You send a copy, PDF, link, tearsheet, etc. of the work in which the article is used when published.

This credit line MUST be reprinted in its entirety to use any articles from Laura Stack:

© 2010 Laura Stack. Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, author, and professional speaker who is dedicated to building high-performance SuperCompetent cultures by creating Maximum Results in Minimum Time® through increased productivity. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time management training firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations. Since 1992, Laura has presented keynotes and seminars on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today’s workplaces. Her books include SuperCompetent (Wiley, 2010); The Exhaustion Cure (Broadway Books, 2008); Find More Time (2006); and Leave the Office Earlier (2004). To have Laura speak at your next event, call 303-471-7401. Visit www.TheProductivityPro.com to sign up for her free monthly productivity newsletter.