Posts Tagged ‘time management’

Taking applications for speakers for a series I am doing, “FREEDOM! Emancipate yourself from your webmaster” Series. The goal is to get expert users to give strategies to entrepreneurs on how to get their message and content out on the internet professionally, Quick, EZ, and often, without waiting for the webmaster or web guru to get back to you.

The frustration a lot of my clients come to me with is something like this…”I need to advertise to my list about an event in a few days, hours…(whatever) and I can’t get my website to do what I want, the web person can’t get to it, I don’t know what to do, I am tired of paying for something that should be easier etc…”

So if you use or have a method/product/tool that makes it Quick and EZ for anyone to update content, build a list, get their message out, I want to talk to you!

Before submitting think about these questions:
1) Can I speak intelligently for 30 mins to an hr on the topic?
2) Can I give step by step strategies that will make it easy for the audience to duplicate.
3) Does it meet the Quick, EZ, Often criteria?
4) Can almost anyone that is a DIY person do it right off the bat or with a little coaching, or a checklist do it?
5) Do I have real life success with it already or is it just a theory at this point?

Examples: How to use Twitter to get the word out. EZ article marketing, Wordpress, Facebook, Linked In, DIY salespages, You tube, the list is endless.

To be considered for this series please submit:
Your topic- What you plan to show, promote, talk about.
Do you already have a presentation?
Do you want an interview format?
What have you used this method for and what were your results?
What are real life examples of how it is EZ, Quick and Repeatable for YOU as you market your biz?

This will be either a presentation you can give any time at your convenience or we can make it a scheduled call if you prefer.

Can’t wait to hear from you!

Susan Snyder
PCS Training
http://www.pcstraining.net
susansnyder@pcstraining.net

How much knowledge can you gain in a year?

One of the great joys of my life is mentoring. I meet with college students and help them figure out strategies to get through the hoops of getting that college degree. The last couple weeks have brought up a common theme that you as a business owner, virtual assistant or for that matter a human being can relate to:

“I feel like I have no time to….fill in the blank.”

Whether it is studying, learning a new skill, getting more information on a topic you are interested in or any number of items on your to do list, we all seem to have that problem.

The truth is you have the same amount of time as many other people that “rock it” every day; the President, George Clooney, Bill Gates, Edward Cullen…oh ya he’s fiction. The point is we all have the same amount of time and it is what we do with it that counts.

So if you really do feel like you have “no time” for your goals,
it’s time to get creative.

One thing I noticed as I talked to several students is some of them have a lot of drive time.Take for example if you drive 25 minutes one way to work M-F, that
is 50 minutes a day or about 4 hours a week. So what could you do with an extra 4 hours a week to learn something new? That is a whole afternoon or evening to do something else.

One thing you can do is what a lot of time management experts call the “Automobile University”. Study in the car. I am not saying to type on your computer or read a book or anything dangerous but to get creative.

One practice I have done for years is listening to books on tape and now mp3’s of seminars and coaching sessions. Sometimes I am truly amazed at how much I can listen to (even without torturing my family).

Let’s look at the numbers. Taking those 4 hours a week multiply that by even 40 weeks per year (you don’t want to be a total nerd after all!), that is 160 hours or 6.5 days! And those would be days without sleep!

To put it in perspective a 3 credit hour college course over 16 weeks is only 48 hours of total lecture time. While that does not include your outside class studies, you get the point. This simple exercise is like getting the content of about three 3 credit hour college courses, and you didn’t even do it all year in our example.

Be creative! You can do a lot with the time you spend driving, even if you commit to only one way. In our example that is 2 extra hours of study a week.

So quit making excuses and start getting creative! It really does work and with the wealth of information both free and what you pay for, there is nothing you can’t learn about and even become an expert in. I have friends that have learned foreign languages, started a new business, and changed the focus of their lives this way.

So here’s to moving forward… and learning all you can along the way.

To your success!
We make it easy for you to get all the information.

What you do with it is up to you!

If I can answer any questions or help you in any way just email me. I am looking forward to your success and helping you build your VA skills!

Have a happy and productive day!

Susan Snyder
Founder/CEO
buildyourvaskills.com
Email me!

PS- Go to http://www.buildyourvaskills.com and look at our current schedule of training. Find one that’s right for you and bring a friend!

PPS- The Inner Circle Coaching Program is filling fast! I have opened up a second group and I am limiting it to the first 25 so you get personal attention! Check it out and start or take your VA practice to the next level. http://www.buildyourvaskills.com/innercircle.html

Sign up for one of our coaching programs and grow your business or learn to work with or on virtual teams.

Want to use this article? You have my permission but you must use the entire article and keep the site links in tact.

Tell me your thoughts.

Do you use this strategy? Will you? What are some other ways you get creative to reach your goals?

Lately I have been trying to figure out how to be much more efficient with my time. Part of the reason is that I am so busy and want to free up some time. Another part is I am looking to bring on more team members and I was interested in what it is that I actually “do” that I could delegate to someone else.

I found out something interesting as I have tracked very closely my tasks over the last month. Did you know about 90% of what you do every day you did yesterday or within the last week? As I think about it now I could have guessed that but you just don’t think about your days that way.

I also found out I spent a lot of time figuring out what exactly I did the last time when a task was either very new, or very involved. That made me realize I needed to get much more intentional about making things easier to duplicate by making checklists or procedures.

Here we go again! You decided to be self-employed or an entrepreneur because you didn’t want the constraints of an operations manual or procedures that were too strict. You want to be “free”. I totally agree. So let’s not get overly corporate and form a committee or anything crazy like that, but let’s just use a little reason and make our work more efficient so we can enjoy a little free time or be able to pursue even more profits with our time.

Track your tasks

Boring I know. I was resistant because I am so busy, it was one more thing I had to do. Believe me though it will be enlightening. You will see exactly what is going on, how much time you are wasting, and how much time you spend reinventing your wheel.

Depending on your personality you can be as detailed as you want or just jot some notes. Keep specific clock time or just jot minutes. Do it a minimum of two work weeks. I did it for a month and it was very enlightening.

Analyze the Results

Now go back through what you wrote down. Make three lists:

1) Repeated tasks with how much time spent and how often they are repeated.

2) Tasks that were just one time but could be delegated if needed.

3) Tasks that will be repeated in the future but are infrequent.

Look objectively at each list. For repeated tasks analyze and prioritize those tasks into a list of what will be the biggest bang if you get it under control.

Make a Plan

With that prioritized list begin working on making a future plan. For each task decide:

1) Does it need a procedure outline?

2) Does it need to be delegated?

3) Does it need to be grouped/scheduled better?

Then work through each of the tasks as you normally would over the next few weeks. As you do the task the next time, act on the decision you made above. You can outline it, make plans to delegate it, or group and schedule it to make it more efficient.

Here are a few things I have outlined with a procedure task and am preparing to delegate to my team:

1) Office Supplies- I spent a lot of time figuring out what toner I needed and where to get it at the best price. This potential sand trap can be taken care of with a list of common supplies and where you got them last time. If you are running to the supply store, check the other items from the same place and pick those up if you need them as well.

2) List of Usernames and Passwords- I know you can relate to this one. I do not advocate writing out the specifics because you are just waiting for someone to find it then. Use a code. For example, I use the same basic username and password for everything but with variations. So I may add a number or a letter to the end. In the documentation I will just put the number or the letter as the password as a reminder. I do the same with the username. I also make notes on special situations with the sites. If you have to do anything special or figure anything out, chances are the next time you visit you will have to figure it out again.

3) Gift lists and birthdays- This is not my forte so I will make a list and remember to check it. Someone gave me a tip of buying and addressing all my birthday cards in one weekend at the beginning of the year. They said to place the mail date where the stamp goes and then put them in order. When the time comes, pop a stamp on it and put it in the mail. No promises but could be a good project for my assistant. (I will sign yours mom…)

The major lesson I learned with this exercise is I can do some simple things without getting too complicated that will help me to be more efficient. I also have more confidence that I can hand a task off if I need to and someone can just jump right in and complete it like I would.

Here’s to moving forward…

Susan Snyder Founder/CEO

BuildYourVASkills.com http://www.pcstraining.net

Go to http://www.buildyourvaskills.com and look at our current schedule of training. Find one that’s right for you and bring a friend!

Sign up for one of our coaching programs and grow your business or learn to work with or on virtual teams.

Want to use this article? You have my permission but you must use the entire article and keep the site links in tact.