Time usually takes on a special meaning during life transitions.
By definition, transitions take us from the familiar to the
unknown. Most people feel they're moving faster or slower than
before. Here are three ways to steer your own time machine.
1. Get lots of information. Then get more.
Information is the unglamorous yet essential key to saving time
and money. Moving to a new town? Your first priority is to learn
what's available and where - and how to take a shortcut to get
there. New job? Learn what's important and what can be ignored.
The biggest time-waster, of course, is making the wrong choice.
Choose a job (or a town) where you're a misfit and you'll
re-invest time and energy making a new move. Back to school?
Often the program that promises a fast track turns out to be a
long detour.
Use my Rule of Six: Ask six people who know the score. These days
you may have to pay for information, especially if you're calling
consultants who sell their time. Often it's a wise investment.
2. Hire help - carefully.
Often you can outsource your biggest time sink. At the simplest
level, you can hire a service to clean your house and yard before
you move. But many people are surprised to learn how many
business owners and corporate executives hire their own support
team when they need to learn a new skill or get a new
perspective.
For instance, a newly promoted senior executive with little
experience in report writing hired me to help him create an
effective document. Savvy business owners invest substantial
sums to learn new skills and to get help when learning isn't a
good use of their own time.
Of course, when you're entering a transition, choosing resources
may present an extra challenge. If you've never hired a cleaner
or a copywriter, where do you start? Best to use the Rule of Six.
Ask six people who routinely hire these resources not just who
they recommend but how they make their choices. And no matter
how carefully you choose, you'll make at least one mistake - the
price of learning, which will still be cheaper than trying to do
it all yourself.
3. Anticipate moving slower...sometimes much slower.
It's inevitable! You can expect to operate at 70-80% of your
usual efficiency following a major life transition - move, career
change, or loss. Working faster may just create more chaos and,
in the early stages, most people haven't learned how to work
smarter. Set up your "To Do" list and your expectations
accordingly.
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Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., is an author, speaker and
career/business consultant.Your Next Move Ezine: Read one each week and watch
your choices grow! Subscribe Here. Time Management Makeover: Click here.
©2005 Cathy Goodwin, PhD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED