Insurances.net
insurances.net » Internet Insurance » The Ten Key Competencies of Personal Productivity by:Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP
Auto Insurance Life Insurance Health Insurance Family Insurance Travel Insurance Mortgage Insurance Accident Insurance Buying Insurance Housing Insurance Personal Insurance Medical Insurance Property Insurance Pregnant Insurance Internet Insurance Mobile Insurance Pet Insurance Employee Insurance Dental Insurance Liability Insurance Baby Insurance Children Insurance Boat Insurance Cancer Insurance Insurance Quotes Others
]

The Ten Key Competencies of Personal Productivity by:Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP

The Ten Key Competencies of Personal Productivity by:Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP

Mike M. was a senior manager for one of my large corporate clients

, but

you wouldn't know he was on the fast track if you looked at his office. He

worked long hours, felt pressured, and was always playing catch up. Mike was

unresponsive to requests and missed key deadlines. His company's upper

management had reached the end of its patience, so I was called in to help

Mike with his productivity. It didn't occur to him that he could lose his

job; he thought his past successes would carry him through. It took us three

months to turn a potential disaster into a triumph. It's three years later,

and Mike still sends me a thank you note each year on the anniversary of our

turnaround sessions.

This situation is not uncommon. I work with hundreds of companies and

thousands of individuals every year. My hands-on coaching experience-plus

thousands of interviews and email surveys-has enabled me to identify the ten

main factors affecting personal productivity in the workplace. The first

letter of each factor spells the word "PRODUCTIVE":

1. P reparation-This competency relates to how well you've planned and

laid the foundation for your daily activities. If you excel in this

competency, you are PROACTIVE, rather than REACTIVE. Most people don't have

well-articulated goals. Perhaps you don't know how to set them. Perhaps

writing goals down seems like too much effort, or you simply haven't taken

the time to write them. It's worth the work to create a plan, because the

goals you set will provide direction for your life and focus your

activities. You must translate your lofty, long-term goals into actionable

tasks you can work on today.

2. R eduction-This competency has to do with how well you eliminate time

wasters in your daily activities. If you excel in this competency, you are

ASSERTIVE, rather than PASSIVE in allowing people to dictate your schedule.

With a finite amount of time available, if you wanted to get more done, the

temptation is to go faster and work more hours. However, productivity is not

about squeezing more into your days. You must reduce "speed bumps"-things

that waste your time. Speed bumps exist at organizational, departmental, and

individual levels. They could include administration, too many meetings,

unnecessary levels of bureaucracy, too much red tape, or unclear priorities.

YOU can also be a speed bump-the causal factor in wasting precious time. You

must eliminate speed bumps, so you can create the space to accomplish the

important.

3. O rder-This competency relates to your level of organization. If you

excel in this competency, you have SYSTEMS, rather than PILES. You can find

what you want, when you want it, in thirty seconds or less. How well do you

control the paper, email, reading material, and inputs into and out of your

office? Order is your ability to sort, filter, and process this information

effectively. It's how tidy your work areas look, inside and out. Being

organized will give you more control over your life and time. You must find

the time and the self-control to start achieving more of the things you want

to do through proper systems.

4. D iscipline-This competency refers to your ability to maintain

consistent, productive behavior. If you excel in this competency, you

complete what you MUST do, rather than what you WANT to do. Are you

persistent in completing your high priority tasks, without getting sidelined

by menial activities? Do you put your nose to the grindstone each day, or do

you only work hard when you're in the mood? Do you have a set of "rules" for

yourself that govern your behavior and activity? Everyone has an "off day."

But if you're self-disciplined, you exhibit consistent focus in your

day-to-day work. Learn to do what needs to be done and exercise restraint

over your own impulses, emotions, and desires. Sometimes working on the

right thing doesn't mean doing the fun thing. You must focus on high-value

output, as defined by your job requirements, and learn to stop

procrastinating.

5. U nease-This competency refers to your ability to handle stress well,

so that it doesn't impact your performance and productivity. If you excel in

this competency, you focus on VALUE, rather than VELOCITY. You're not

running around in a harried frenzy all the time. According to nationwide

office productivity study conducted by Xerox and Harris Interactive in 2003,

most people work over 60 hours a week total, and over 33 percent work on

weekends. The "faster, cheaper, do more with nothing" approach has created a

workplace where workers are always in high gear. This work style reduces

productivity and increases stress. Stress is also a known factor in 70

percent of all diseases, so people must learn to reduce tension. You must be

familiar with stress-reduction strategies, so you can recover when pushed to

the limit every day.

6. C oncentration-This competency refers to your ability to stay on

target and focus on the task at hand. If you excel in this competency, you

are PURPOSEFUL, rather than DISTRACTED. As a child, I remember sitting for

hours at a time, absorbed in my favorite books. My mother would enter the

living room asking, "Didn't you hear me call you?" I would look at her,

confused, as I came back to reality, and answer honestly, "No, mommy I didn'

t." And that was the complete truth! That level of concentration is very

hard to achieve today. With noise, interruptions, instant messages, and

email, so many things competing for our attention in the workplace that it's

often very difficult to concentrate. You must be able to achieve a state of

"flow" and work without breaking focus.

7. T ime Mastery-This competency relates to how well you manage your

activities throughout the day. If you excel in this competency, you focus on

QUALITY of your activities, rather than the QUANTITY. Some people spend more

time planning their vacations than their time. With good time management

comes the rewards of results, recognition, free time, clarify, and focus.

Effective time management brings purpose in life, structure to your day,

direction, reduced frustration, and a sense of accomplishment. In addition,

it reduces stress, since it gives you much more control over your day. You

must run your life, rather than allowing your life to run you.

8. I nformation Management-This competency relates to how well you handle

all the information coming at you. If you excel in this competency, you are

DECISIVE, rather than TENTATIVE. We've become dependent upon computers,

email, voicemail, the Internet, Blackberries, PDAs, cell phones, and pagers.

These devices connect us to the world of work. Today, you must be

technologically savvy and make choices quickly. You also must choose the

best method and medium of communication for the particular message you want

to convey. Technology can undoubtedly improve your productivity, but it can

make you LESS productive if you're not careful. You must use the latest

technologies to your advantage, without letting technology take advantage of

you.

9. V itality-This competency refers to your wellness. If you excel in

this competency, you TAKE CARE of yourself, rather than IGNORING your

physiological needs. How healthy are you? How much energy do you have

throughout the day to accomplish the things you want to do? Do you sleep

enough? You have the potential to dramatically impact our productivity by

paying closer attention to our behaviors around health. In other words, we

eat too much, drink too much, don't exercise enough, work too much, and don'

t sleep enough. No wonder some people can't be productive! Some studies

suggest that upwards of 70 percent of doctor visits are prompted by our own

choices in these areas. You must practice proper self-care, so that are

physically capable of performing at your matchless best.

10. E quilibrium-This competency refers to the proper mix of activities

in your life. If you excel in this competency, you feel BALANCED, rather

than UNBALANCED. Balance is tough to achieve, because you have a real

commitment to your job and to your family. You love your work life and your

personal lives, often with equal vigor, and don't want to give either one

up. Professionals find it difficult to participate fully in one arena

without sacrificing the other, but successful people know high performance

depends on both personal satisfaction and professional achievement. You must

practice lifestyle tactics and make the proper choices that help you to work

at a realistic level.

The more solidly you feel you demonstrate each one of these competencies,

the better the chances that your habits support personal productivity:

- If you said a resounding, "That's me!" after each one, you're probably

a Productivity PRO!

- If you can identify with some but not all of the traits, you may be a

"middle of the road" employee, which means you're not the most productive

person, but you're not the worst. Ouch! Who wants to be average? Really work

on kicking it up a notch!

- If you just shook your head, select one competency every three weeks

and work on systematically improving your productivity. If you are low in a

particular area, reading the corresponding chapter in my book Leave the

Office Earlier will give you specific tools and exercises to improve in that

competency.

Make it a productive day!

About the author

(C) Copyright 2004 Laura Stack, MBA, CSP. All rights

reserved. Portions of this newsletter may be reprinted in your organization

or association newsletter, provided the following credit line is present:

"Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP, is "The Productivity Pro" and the author of

Leave the Office Earlier. She presents keynotes and seminars on time

management, information overload, and personal productivity. Contact her at

303-471-7401 or Laura@TheProductivityPro.com."

TheProductivityPro.com
Best Investment Real Estate Locations by:Steve Gillman What Is Forex Trading? by:David Morrison How to Choose the Right College Credit Card for You by:Richard Keir So How Was Your First Quarter? Today's Activities Determine Tomorrow's Success by:Mark Dembo The 6 Advantages Forex Trading Has Over Other Investments by:David Morrison Book Review: "The Baron Son" (National Bestseller) by:Buck Bradley Are You Correctly Located And Faced For Prosperity? by:Henry Fong Investors Chasing Uranium Mining Stocks, Again: A Favorite Emerges by:James Finch What Makes Your Home Business Succeed? by:Lil Waldner How To Find Debt Consolidation Solutions by:Sanjay Johari Dxinone: The Business of the Future by:Geraldine Lynch Buy Iraqi Dinar: 5 Critical Signs You Should Know by:Catalin Ionescu Like New, Only Better by:Stafford Sterner
Write post print
www.insurances.net guest:  register | login | search IP(18.119.136.235) Wyoming / Casper Processed in 0.008390 second(s), 6 queries , Gzip enabled debug code: 288 , 11377, 973,
The Ten Key Competencies of Personal Productivity by:Laura M. Stack, MBA, CSP Casper