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In Leave the Office
Earlier, Laura
shows you how you CAN get more done than you ever thought possible and still get
home to your real life sooner.
The New York Times calls Leave the Office
Earlier, "...the best of the bunch."
Order this indispensable tool for the overworked and time challenged at Amazon.com
and receive 20% off its retail price.
More of The Productivity Pro's Resources
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Where in the World
is Laura? |
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July
22 :: Denver, CO :: 7:30 AM
26 - 27 :: Denver, CO :: 1:30 PM
August
1 :: Orlando, FL :: 8:00 AM
10 :: Denver, CO :: 9:00 AM
11 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
16 :: Akron, OH :: 10:00 AM
24 :: Denver, CO :: 9:00 AM
25 :: Denver, CO :: 9:00 AM
27 :: Denver, CO :: 12:00 PM
September
15 :: Salt Lake City, UT :: 8:30 AM
16 :: Denver, CO :: 8:00 AM
20 :: Boston, MA :: TBA
21 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
23 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
October
8 :: Los Angeles, CA :: 10:45 AM
11 :: Elkton, VA :: 8:00 AM
21 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
26-27 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
29 :: New Orleans, LA :: 8:30 AM
November
3 :: Denver, CO :: 9:00 AM
9 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
15 :: Denver, CO :: TBA
18 :: Denver, CO :: 8:30 AM
19 :: New York City, NY :: 9:15 AM
Visit Laura's
Calendar On-line for her complete availability.
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| Reader
Survey |
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Last month's survey asked, "What do you do
(besides close your door or leave your office) when you HAVE to get 30 minutes
to yourself to crank out paperwork or complete a project?" Our thanks and
an autographed copy of Leave the Office Earlier goes to Shelley
Hitt for giving us the following best answer:
"Put various signs on the door, e.g. come
back later, GO AWAY with a funny face; put a stop sign on my closed door; post
a time when I will be available again; go sit in someone else's office who is
away on vacation; come in early."
Shelley, please contact us with a shipping address
for your signed book!
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(C) 2004 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:
"Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP, is "The Productivity
PRO!"(R),
helping people leave the office earlier, with less stress, and more to show for
it. She presents keynotes and seminars on time management, information overload,
and personal productivity. Contact Laura at 303-471-7401 or Laura@
TheProductivityPro.com."
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Subscription Information |
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"The Productivity PRO!"® news"E"letter is a monthly
electronic newsletter distributed to our clients, human resource personnel, and
colleagues to help them leave the office earlier, with less stress, and more to
show for it!
To subscribe, go
here. If you no longer wish to receive the newsEletter, follow the instructions
at the bottom of this post.
Don't miss an Issue:
To ensure your newsletter gets to you, please add it to your address book or contacts
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My monthly newsletter is sent out with the subject beginning "The Productivity
PRO!"(R)
news"E"letter.
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| Feature Article |
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How Bosses Should Work Effectively with Their
Assistants
Oh, lucky one, ye who hath someone to helpeth them.
I recently received a call from a reporter at Entrepreneur
magazine, asking me for a tip on how bosses could work more effectively with their
assistants. "Just one?" I lamented, "There are so many important
things to consider!" The magazine's lack of space is your gain, as my fingers
are itching to share some great ideas of what your assistant can do for you:
- Make an initial pass of your email. Instruct
your assistant to sort your email using the following criteria:
- Delete those of no value. Blacklist, unsubscribe,
or use filters to halt continued receipt of that mail.
- Forward messages belonging to someone else or
those that should be completed by another department or function.
Respond to those to which you know the answer and don't require input. Delete
or file the original.
- File information-only (no action required) updates,
bulletins, or reading material in project-specific folders. You can print these
and take them with you on plane rides.
- Pass along (to a separate, action-only address)
those messages requiring your specific action.
- Interrupt you only when appropriate:
Type 1 issues are those that require your
input specifically. The world will stop until you are available to discuss it.
These are legitimate; interrupt me when necessary.
Type 2 issues need only a quick "yes"
or "no" answer and require just a little interaction. Have your assistant
"save up" these issues and check in with you once a day for five answers
instead of five interruptions with one thing apiece.
Type 3 issues are those that could be answered
by someone else; you're not the only person in the world who can help. Educate
the visitor on the appropriate resource and don't bother me with it.
Type 4 issues are already answered in print
somewhere-like a procedure, guide, or employee manual-and don't require your assistance.
People ask these types of questions when they're being lazy. Tell people clearly,
"Please don't bother me with Level 4 issues." They are a waste of your
time, and I will become involved should this continue, to ensure it stops.
- Schedule appointments for you.
Designate fixed office hours, when you will be available for ad-hoc meetings for
mentoring, vendor calls, employee relation issues, etc. Block out these days and
times on your calendar. Give your assistant access to your calendar and have him/her
schedule real time. Or print them out and have them available at the reception
desk, so your assistant can write in times and dates with visitors. Your electronic
calendar is updated from the paper copy. Copy your assistant on any email, in
which you mention an appointment to someone. Train your assistant to immediately
follow-up and make the appointment according to the constraints outlined in the
email.
- Attend meetings for you.
Push the value of the meeting down to the lowest common denominator and send your
assistant if at all possible in your stead. First, think about the length of the
particular meeting you've been invited to. Second, think about the cost of that
meeting, given your salary level. Third, think about the opportunity cost, in
terms of what you could do instead of attending the meeting. Fourth, think about
whether your assistant is capable and knowledgeable enough to sit in the meeting.
Fifth, contemplate whether you've given him/her enough authority to be able to
take an agenda item off the table. It's very frustrating for meeting attendees
to hear from your delegate, "I'll have to check with so-and-so and get back
to you." They would much rather hear, "I can absolutely ensure that
will happen and can have the results to you by (x) date."
- Take over some of your work. Are
you working on activities that have pressing deadlines, but aren't high value?
Do you look at some of the tasks consuming your time and think, "Why in the
world am I doing this?" You should consider delegating the following types
of work:
- Decisions you make most frequently and repetitively
- Assignments that will add variety to routine work
- Functions you dislike
- Work that will provide experience for employees
- Tasks that someone else is capable of doing
- Activities that will make a person more well-rounded
- Tasks that will increase the number of people
who can perform critical assignments
- Opportunities to use and reinforce creative talents
- Recurring matters
- Minor decisions
- Time-consuming details
You should always retain broader management duties
such as overall planning, policy making, goal setting, and budget supervision,
as well as work that involves confidential information or supervisor-subordinate
relations.
Please write to me at Laura@TheProductivityPro.com
to share other ideas of what your assistant does for YOU and how he/she has helped
you become more productive. I will post your name and suggestion in the next edition.
Make it a productive day!
™
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What's Your PQ
Join the hundreds who've already discovered their
Productivity Quotient by taking the PQ quiz here.
This assessment is the heart of Leave the Office Earlier and will provide
valuable insight in helping you improve your own productivity AND quality of life.
Receive a free, downloadable copy of 111
Ways to Increase Your Personal Productivity along with your score and
a brief evaluation. |
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| Hot Links |
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E-MAIL comes under attack. The Advertiser
- Lafayette, LA, USA. It costs companies nearly $2,000 per employee a year in
lost productivity, double from a year ago, Nucleus
Research says. -more-
A Workplace Without Friends Is an Enemy,
Washington Post - Washington, DC, USA. The more engaged in work the employee is,
the more productive
and a good friend goes a long way in multiplying one's
productivity. -more-
PHONE can be ally in time management, Albuquerque
Tribune, Albuquerque, NM, USA, by Liz Davenport. Since a vast majority of communication
is tone of voice and inflection, it is more communicative than the written word
(i.e., e-mail). -more-
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| Words of Wisdom |
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By all means, let us simplify the means of controlling
time and the myriad details of our lives, but let us vigorously preserve our responsibility
to direct our lives toward human accomplishment, rather than the pure accumulation
of information. -- Paul Rice, Timesource
The Ignisecond, n.: The overlapping moment
of time when the hand is locking the car door even as the brain is saying, "my
keys are in there!" -- Rich Hall, "Sniglets"
The best time for you to hold your tongue is the
time you feel you must say something or bust. -- Josh Billings
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| Featured
Seminar |
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VITALITY! Ensuring Productivity with Proper
Self-Care
Vitality refers to your wellness. How healthy are
you? How much energy do you have throughout the day to accomplish the things you
want to do? Recent studies have revealed we have the potential to dramatically
impact our productivity by paying closer attention to our behaviors around health.
In other words, we eat too much, drink too much, don't exercise enough, work too
much, and don't sleep enough to be productive. Some studies suggest that upwards
of 70 percent of doctor visits are prompted by our own choices in these areas.
This chapter will guide you in making the choices necessary to give you vitality
and productivity every day!
Course Objectives:
- Get adequate sleep each night, so you're not
sleepy during the day.
- Get sufficient exercise.
- Practice healthy eating habits.
- Use all your allotted vacation time each year.
- Pamper yourself on a regular basis.
- Monitor the noise level in your office, so it's
conducive to productivity.
- Ensure that your workspace is comfortable and
ergonomically correct.
- Take a lunch break every day.
- Drink the proper amount of water each day.
- Reduce or eliminate all unhealthy addictions from
your life.
*Schedule
this seminar by September 1, 2004 (to be held on ANY date) and receive a 10% discount
for mentioning this newsletter.
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Laura Stack, MBA, CSP
Publisher |
| Message
from Laura |
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I hear you! My first book,
Leave
the Office Earlier, focuses on the workplace and teaches professionals
how to leave the office on time, every time. But you wanted more. "Great!"you
told me, "I''ve used your systems to get my work life in order. Now what
about my home life?"
My next book will pick up where Leave
the Office Earlier left off. Now that you're more productive during your
workday, this complementary book will teach you how to work "the second shift."
Yes, personal productivity techniques
are just as important on the home front as they are in the work place. You can
create a fulfilling, productive life...or just wander through it aimlessly, never
quite satisfied with what you're able to accomplish. If you're thinking, "Ugh,
I work hard all day! Why would I want to be productive at home?"I understand
your anxiety. It's hard to think about productivity at home, especially in today's
"do more with less world."
But understand this-productivity isn't
your enemy-in fact, it can be your friend! Without it, you will take on too much,
have late nights and little sleep, high stress levels, a cluttered home, and missed
deadlines. With proper productivity techniques, you can realize your loftier life
goals, gain clarity with your values, have more free time, feel a sense of control,
and change your life for the better. Productivity gives you a purpose in life,
structure to your day, direction for your time, and reduced frustration. It allows
you to put your head on the pillow every evening with a sense of accomplishment.
I'd
love to hear from you. What kind of questions would this book answer
for you? What challenges do you face on a daily basis trying to get everything
done? What areas of your personal life do you feel you're sacrificing? What chores
and projects never seem to get done? I'd appreciate any and all input you wish
to provide on the content you'd like to see addressed in a personal productivity
book for the home front. Thank you, as always, for your friendship and support.
View
Laura's Demonstration
Video
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Time Tips & Traps |
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My father saved baby food jars from
when we were infants and meticulously labeled each jar with the type of bolt,
nail, screw...or 3-inch piece of string...it contained. He kept them all in drawers
in a huge wooden workbench. He never used some of the items he kept...hey, but
at least he had it if he needed it. In college, my microwave timer broke. My dad
repaired it with a bathroom timer he had kept...for 15 years. He said, "See!
I knew that would come in handy some day!"
Title your files with a noun as the
key word not an adjective: Checks-1994 rather than Old Checks. You will
more logically look under "c" instead of "o." Instead of using,
"How to negotiate contracts," use "Contract Negotiations."
You can title them by subject, by name, customer, project, numerically, geographically,
or chronologically-whatever best fits your needs. For example, if you were conducting
a series of Western Region customer surveys on your organization's customer service,
you would probably label the file using the broadest heading, Surveys. Then break
the file down with secondary information, such as Surveys, Customer Service, Western
Region. Ask yourself, "What is the file about?"
Some of my seminar participants have had
success with a phone log. It's basically a spiral notebook that allows them to
keep all phone information in one place and maintain a historical record should
you need it-such as providing "proof" that you notified someone.
Create your own phone
log - a news"e"letter bonus here.
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