Posts Tagged ‘time management’

I’ve Been Published!

Posted by Selene M. Bowlby

on October 29th, 2007 / Add Comment »

I’ve Been Published!

I recently came across the Work It Mom! web site. It’s a great resource for business moms - a networking site where you can ask and answer questions, post in forums, read blogs, etc.

They also allow you to submit articles to be posted on their site. This can be a brand new article, or one you’ve previously written.

Well, I submitted my Time Management: Setting Deadlines post - and within a matter of minutes, it was published here.

Can I tell you that made my Monday! I’ve found a ton of great information on this site, and hopefully a little bit of traffic too. Definitely give this site a look if you have a chance. My favorite feature is their question / answer area.

Oh, and if you happen to already be a member, or if you join up… can you rate my article?

Pwwweeeeaaaasssseeeeee? (as my daughter would say)

Thanks in advance!

Category: Productivity
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Time Management: Setting Deadlines

Posted by Selene M. Bowlby

on October 22nd, 2007 / 1 Comment »

Time Management: Setting Deadlines

The number one bit of advice I can offer? Be REALISTIC!

I cannot stress enough how important it is to be realistic when setting deadlines for yourself and especially for clients. I have a new prospect and had to fight hard to resist the urge to tell them that I’ll have a proposal for them prepared within a few days. That’s normally what I would have done - then I’d end up spending the next two days up all night working on it - stressing over it - just to meet this short deadline that I gave myself. But why? What’s the point in the added headache and stress?

Don’t Sell Yourself Short

Build in enough time so that you can get the work done comfortably. Now, don’t tell them it’ll take two weeks to do something that would only take four days, for example. But if you know it will be tight to get something ready by the end of this week, for example, give yourself a couple extra days over the weekend, and say you’ll have it first thing Monday morning.

I was just drafting my response to this potential client, and I can’t tell you what a HUGE drop in stress I literally felt when I changed the line from “I can have the proposal ready for you on Friday” to “I can have the proposal ready for you by Monday.”

In the working world, that’s only one business day later. In real life, that gives me the entire weekend to work on it to get it just the way I want - to hopefully turn this prospect into a client. I’m sure that if you took my blood pressure, there must have been a big reduction in a matter of seconds as I changed that line above. Just thinking of everything I need to accomplish this week PLUS a completed proposal…. now, I’ve bought myself a few extra days, which is great!

Extended Deadline Does NOT = Time to Procrastinate!

Now, of course, don’t set an extended deadline just so you can procrastinate, lol. I admit I’ve done this several times in the past. That was (hopefully) the “old” me. The “new” me knows the value of time - and as we all know, “time is money.” So I will still work hard on the proposal this week by reviewing the information the potential client gave me, researching related web sites to come up with several options that might work for them, etc.

But, just knowing that I don’t HAVE to get it fully completed this week makes all the difference in the world to my frame of mind. And hey, if I get it completed before Monday - even better! I’ll email it to them as soon as it is ready.

I think your client or potential client would be much happier to have you meet the deadline that you set for the particular project or milestone rather than be late. It certainly does not make a good impression to have that day come and go, and you ending up having to tell them “I’m sorry, this won’t be ready as planned…”

More likely than not, you will look that much better in their eyes if you are able to come in ahead of the deadline, as well. To make sure that you can do this, setting realistic timelines for yourself is important.

Category: Productivity
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