Hi Tom, I use a whole range of different techniques depending on the circumstances. Being really effective and productive is something you have to make a priority and keep working on. The most important techniques for me:
* Am I sure that I want to be doing this now? Is it really in my best interests, or is it better to be doing something else? A lack of motivation, if not explored, is quite often because there is some other task or project that is actually more important and more pressing. Be sure you know exactly what is the best thing to be doing next and prioritize. * Knowing for sure you should be doing that difficult task now is usually enough, you just get it done. However if you're still stuck, just get started with the aim of doing 15 minutes on it. Remember, with a difficult task, motivation for the task comes *after* you get started, not before. As you get into it, your motivation starts to kick in. Usually you can work longer once you get into it. * If your mind is not clear or you are under particular pressure: http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/050209_under_pressure.html Then the last thing you need is TV, or any other activity that stimulates your over stimulated mind. A clear, uncluttered, fresh mind is what you want. The easiest and most reliable method I've found for attaining that is to go meditate for 15-30 minutes. Its like having a nap but more effective, clears your head, leaves you fresh and ready to get started. A great book on meditation is "Meditation for Dummies". * If you find yourself surfing the web or working on some more exciting project than the one you have determined needs to be doing next, stop yourself as soon as you become aware of it. Your mind is capable of finding all kinds of ways to procrastinate, particularly if you've been working for 15 hours and the last task of the day isn't much fun. Be aware of the consequences of not completing the deadline - e.g. that the time wasted will have to come from somewhere, so would you really prefer to be surfing the net than going out for a drink with your friends or family later? Not only that, but the time you take out will feel better if you've completed everything you intended for the day. There are loads of other techniques that are important, like taking breaks, taking days off, eating well, rewarding yourself when you complete a difficult task - even if you have other things to do, managing your energy levels, rotating difficult and easy tasks, breaking tasks down into small chunks, delegating, saying no when you can't do something, creating deadlines for all tasks, meeting internal deadlines with the same commitment as external ones...but without going into detail, right now I know there are other things I know I need to be doing ;) Kind regards, Kevin Kevin Miller ~ [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ http://www.runrev.com/ Runtime Revolution - User-Centric Development Tools _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
