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Wed, Nov 4, 2009 13:44 EST
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Posted by: Epi Torres in Best Practices Topic: IT Organization Management
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Time Management is one of the most common challenges people face in today’s businesses. As CEO of Remote DBA Experts, I face this challenge on a daily basis. IT executives are often pulled in so many directions—most of which are outside your control. Demand often outstrips the supply of your time. Calendars, in-baskets and task lists are full with no end in sight, especially lately as most of us have been forced to accomplish more with less!
So what can you do to seek relief from the stress caused by this situation? How can you find the time to accomplish what you are supposed to?
The first approach I suggest is to assess where your time is going. If you keep good records, you can go back and study the patterns of your time spent over the last few weeks as long as it was reflective of your normal routines. Otherwise start keeping a journal of time for the next few weeks (one or two of them). Once collected, analyze the data for patterns.
The next step is to identify your top responsibilities, roles and associated goals and determine the amount of time you have been spending on them. This exercise will allow you to see if you have been operating in alignment with your top priorities or not. It will show you who and what has been dominating your time.
There is only one way to accomplish goals and key responsibilities and that is to spend time doing things that have an impact on them. Without alignment there is no accomplishment!
The second approach I suggest is based on a theory I learned from a book by Dr. Ichak Adizes. In his book, he identifies four “Management Style Prototypes” that have helped me rebalance tendencies in myself and others that waste time.
Management styles are assigned according to four dimensions including a manager’s priority, focus, speed and process preferences. For example, the “Integrator” style is a person who tends to follow an unstructured process, tends to pay more attention to “the process”, tends to have a global (big picture) focus, and tends to act slower. According to Adizes, to be successful, businesses should build management teams with individuals representing all the styles.
I agree with Dr. Adizes that we all have tendencies (habits) that make us fit in one of the four quadrants. However, I suggest that increasing our self-awareness of our tendencies can help us become more balanced. Thus, we can apply the most appropriate style to each specific situation we face. In my experience, when I rebalance these dimensions I become much more productive with the use of my time.
So what I recommend you do, in order to rebalance yourself, is to ask yourself the following questions:
Do this in context of your key roles, responsibilities and goals and you will see how you will be able to shift and align your time much better and accomplish more!
In order for this method to be successful, it is critical that you have a clear understanding of your role, responsibilities and goals before you assess anything.
The Adizes framework is truly amazing, and it has guided my work as an entrepreneur and a strategist in so many ways! He was once called the Best Kept Management Secret in America by Ken Blanchard. How very true and how very unfortunate that is - for America...
Yeah, I agree with you. Market systems experience both the effect of recession and crisis. Should there be government intervention at all during a recession? The debate rages. Some believe that government should do nothing, and scale back as far as possible, especially taxation, so that the market can take care of itself. Others believe the government should launch huge works projects, or works projects that pay as little as possible, so that there's at least a fall back. However, government butting in on every action does no good save for those doing the butting, and for every action has a consequence. If there's too much government intervention for debt relief – we cripple ourselves to save ourselves, and empower the wealthy over the working.