Time is not an infinite resource. If you waste even one hour, you cannot recover it. You cannot replace it. Time is perishable.
It is simply gone forever.
Take time to practice being conscious of how you ‘invest’ your time. Consider the actual number of minutes you spend engaging on your work and activities throughout the day. Ask yourself:
- Am I fulfilled?
- Did my activities serve my goals and me?
- Did I invest in myself?
- Was my time on task meaningful?
- Did it deliver a daily impact?
- Was I able to drive my business forward?
- What was the ROI of my time?
If your ‘self’ is lagging, and not delivering measurable outcomes, perhaps it is time to evaluate:
- Priorities
- Focus
- Goals
- Time Blocking Strategies
- Desired Results
It can be tough to take time alone to look at your actions and accomplishments, but when you start to uncover your weaknesses, you open the door to important growth. This evaluation leads to a deeper understanding beyond just managing your time. There’s more to your life than just the time. In “It’s Not About Time,” David Allen referred to this as self-management.
“The savvy know self-management is really an issue of what we do with ourselves during the time we have. Self-management is about knowing what to do at any given moment. It’s dealing effectively with the things we have to do to achieve our goals and fulfill our purpose.
Managing yourself can provide more understanding than just focusing on time management. What we value is what we dedicate more time to. You will naturally focus more on and invest time in what matters most to you, whether it’s family, work, health, social life, sports, or technology. By examining how you spend your time, you’ll discover what truly matters to you.
Weigh the return on investment of the time you are spending on an activity or project. Is it the best value of your time? Is it a diversion tactic to avoid a difficult project? What are you getting out of it?
Self-discipline accompanied by self-management help to drive your time more effectively and efficiently.
A moment lost, is gone to the ether.
Be mindful.
In an article by Anthony Iannarino, “Return On Time Invested,” he suggested measuring each activity, the time you spent, and the return. If there was no return on your time, then you must realize that that task or activity is not worth doing. A better use of your valuable time is to focus on those activities that produce a desired, profitable and rewarding outcome.
Leveraging your time and effort is a fundamental strategy for success. You can:
- Eliminate unnecessary activities
- Prioritize so you focus your energy on those tasks that provide the highest rate of return
- Set long and short term goals with action steps, motivating you and keeping you on target
- Learn how to effectively delegate
- Outsource non-core tasks/projects
Let’s close with a quote from Jack Canfield,
Most entrepreneurs spend less than 30% of their time focusing on their core genius and unique abilities. In fact, by the time they’ve launched a business, it often seems entrepreneurs are doing everything but the one thing they went into business for in the first place.