Three Ways to Be More Productive

Many people can find it challenging to constantly remain productive. Nobody can be firing on all cylinders all the time, but this doesn’t mean there aren’t ways you can optimize your productivity. Here, we’ll review three general approaches to improve your productivity, with examples describing how to enact each.

  1. Prioritization

One of the keys to productive work is to work smarter, not harder. By identifying what is most pressing to accomplish or otherwise needs to happen first, you can inherently increase your productivity.

Ignore Inspiration
One of the biggest causes of procrastination is taking in a project in its entirety. Seeing the entire scope of an undertaking can be intimidating, which often makes people feel as though they need to be “inspired” before they’ll be able to accomplish anything.

This is untrue, but can be a difficult impulse to resist. If you catch yourself falling back on this excuse, try focusing specifically on a certain aspect or piece of your greater responsibility. Once this portion is completed, you’ll most likely be motivated to continue. In essence, don’t wait to be inspired, inspire yourself through what you accomplish.

Leverage Prioritization Strategies
Another common cause of procrastination is indecision as to what aspect of a project to tackle first. Again, identifying the most important or pressing activity makes it much easier to make this decision, and there are a few ways that you can do so.

One way is to leverage something called the Eisenhower Matrix. It can be used to sort tasks based on their urgency and importance, advising you on how a task should be approached. This tool can help you avoid spending time on activities that aren’t as high of a priority as others, optimizing how you spend your time. The Pareto Principle, or the 80/20 Rule, is another means of spending your time more intelligently. By identifying the most important 20 percent of their tasks and minimizing the remaining 80 percent, many people use this principle to spend the most time on their most impactful activities.

Save Distractions for Later
We’ve all experienced that moment where, in the middle of one task, we suddenly have an idea for another. While this new task may be valuable or important, it can also hurt your operations by interrupting the one you’re engaged in at the moment. Many people resolve this dilemma by creating a distraction list. Rather than suspending what they’re working on, these people simply take a moment to jot down this idea for further consideration after their task is done. This means they aren’t jumping between unfinished tasks each time a new idea pops up.

  1. Preparation

Once you have your tasks organized properly, you need to ensure you’ve properly made preparations to attend to them. Some of these preparations may sound counter-intuitive, but are no less crucial to your efforts.

Make Sure You’re in Order
If you aren’t ready to be productive, you aren’t going to be. Therefore, you need to be taking care of yourself and your technology. You need to be healthy and rested to reach your potential, which means that self-care is a must. This also means you should be strategic in how you approach your responsibilities. If you know you tend to have a period of low energy in the late morning, it’s probably beneficial to avoid scheduling intensive tasks for that time. In addition, be sure you’re up-to-date on how things are done. The more knowledgeable you are, the more efficiently you’ll be able to make decisions, and the faster processes will move along.

Expect to Be Interrupted
You should anticipate other things to interfere with your established work schedule. What if another task pops up or a task takes longer than anticipated? Taking these kinds of challenges into account will allow you to figure out a solution preemptively, or at least a plan that allows you to adjust and adapt.

Learn from Everything
We’ve all been taught the value of learning from our mistakes, which includes examining situations in which things went wrong, identifying why and avoiding those circumstances in the future. However, this is only half of what you should do to optimize your productivity. You also need to identify why your successes were successful.

Once you have completed a project or process, take some time to examine it. What about it worked well? How could that be made better? Was every aspect necessary? Could some of it be eliminated or streamlined? Doing so will allow you to further optimize your procedure to be even more productive the next time.

  1. Cheating

In fairness, these strategies aren’t “cheating” so much as they are methods of working smarter. This way, you can make sure your tasks are accomplished without expending more resources than they need.

Subdivide Your Tasks
Remember the prioritization strategies we discussed above? This is a similar activity, in that you take a larger concept and divvy it up into each step that needs to be completed. Instead of putting them into a matrix or focusing on a specific set of them, the idea here is to simply make your tasks appear more achievable.

Leverage Shortcuts
There are a lot of ways your technology can offer an easier way of doing things. Naturally, keyboard shortcuts are one example of this, but so is automation. Any time you can save by having your technology handle something is time you can then spend being productive elsewhere.

Eliminate Inefficiencies
How much time do you spend debating your options for truly inconsequential decisions during the day? Chances are, it’s more than you’d like to admit. Many of the choices we’re faced with aren’t all that impactful. Eliminating as many of these choices as possible will allow you to reserve your decision-making skills for the times you really need them.

Email is another notorious source of lost productivity, simply because people don’t use it as efficiently as they could. It’s too common for correspondence to take far longer than anticipated. Ironically, this is often because the people involved are trying to be brief.

Instead of cutting corners on your next email, invest a few minutes into including more specifics. Don’t just say you want to meet, identify the topics to be discussed. Don’t leave the time of the meeting open-ended, offer a few availabilities. While it takes longer to write, one email written this way will keep you from having to read, write and send a few more.

Finding Your Groove
There are many aspects to consider when you’re trying to be more productive, and some may be more effective for one person over another. A bit of experimentation will help you to land on the approach that works for you.

Advisors Tech can help by providing the solutions that enable some of these methods. Reach out by calling 844.671.6071 to learn more about these solutions.