*From:* Khan, Sirajulla G
*Sent:* Wednesday, June 09, 2010 6:58 AM
*Subject:* Time Management



TIME MANAGEMENT

The 80/20 Rule is one of the most helpful of all concepts of time and life
management. It is also called the "Pareto Principle" after its founder, the
Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who first wrote about it in 1895. Pareto
noticed that people in his society seemed to divide naturally into what he
called the "vital few", the top 20 percent in terms of money and influence,
and the "trivial many", the bottom 80 percent.

He later discovered that virtually all economic activity was subject to this
principle as well. For example, this principle says that 20 percent of your
activities will account for 80 percent of your results, 20 percent of your
customers will account for 80 percent of your sales, 20 percent of your
products or services will account for 80 percent of your profits, 20 percent
of your tasks will account for 80 percent of the value of what you do, and
so on. This means that if you have a list of ten items to do, two of those
items will turn out to be worth five or ten times or more than the other
eight items put together.

*Number of Tasks versus Importance of Tasks*
Here is an interesting discovery. Each of the ten tasks may take the same
amount of time to accomplish. But one or two of those tasks will contribute
five or ten times the value of any of the others.

Often, one item on a list of ten tasks that you have to do can be worth more
than all the other nine items put together. This task is invariably the frog
that you should eat first.

*Focus on Activities, Not Accomplishments*
The most valuable tasks you can do each day are often the hardest and most
complex. But the payoff and rewards for completing these tasks efficiently
can be tremendous. For this reason, you must adamantly refuse to work on
tasks in the bottom 80 percent while you still have tasks in the top 20
percent left to be done.

Before you begin work, always ask yourself, "Is this task in the top 20
percent of my activities or in the bottom 80 percent?"

The hardest part of any important task is getting started on it in the first
place. Once you actually begin work on a valuable task, you will be
naturally motivated to continue. A part of your mind loves to be busy
working on significant tasks that can really make a difference. Your job is
to feed this part of your mind continually.

*Motivate Yourself*
Just thinking about starting and finishing an important task motivates you
and helps you to overcome procrastination. Time management is really life
management, personal management. It is really taking control of the sequence
of events. Time management is having control over what you do next. And you
are always free to choose the task that you will do next. Your ability to
choose between the important and the unimportant is the key determinant of
your success in life and work.

Effective, productive people discipline themselves to start on the most
important task that is before them. They force themselves to eat that frog,
whatever it is. As a result, they accomplish vastly more than the average
person and are much happier as a result. This should be your way of working
as well.

Regards

Sirajulla Khan,

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