Showing posts with label time management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label time management. Show all posts

Sunday, February 3, 2013

#SFEtsy February 5th - Scheduling your time


While we're on the topic of getting things sorted out and improved for the new year, I thought it would be good to cover this, much upvoted, topic - how to schedule your time to fit in social media, listings and everything else you need to do as an Etsy seller.

We'll be sharing our own strategies that we've found to be successful as we talk about making time for social media and time-saving apps we've found.

We'll also discuss time-saving strategies for keeping on top of your Etsy store and ways of dealing with more than 1 online store.

Finally we'll think about time-efficiency in our personal lives and ways to make sure the professional doesn't take over the personal.

If you like to use tweetchat.com to follow our chats this is the link tweetchat.com/room/sfetsy

ALSO
Our tweetchats are nearly a year old now (!!) so I'd be really grateful if you could fill out this really short survey so I can get an idea of what you liked and didn't and where to take the chat in the future. I'm considering changing the chat time so it's really important, if you currently attend or would like to attend, that you let me know your time preferences!

You can find the survey here

If you think you might want to help out with the tweetchats I'd love to have more people on board with that - anything from running your own chat (maybe at a different time or once a month) to just helping out a bit. Let me know if you're interested!
Thanks


If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Our Team Captain about joining SFEtsy!

Thursday, August 16, 2012

#SFEtsy Catch Up - August 14th





Suggest a topic for a future chat or vote for topics you want to see here


If you missed our chat on Tuesday (Time Management), don't worry, you can  read the full transcript here. You can also login to create a list of your favourite tweets from the chat.


If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Katy or Steph about joining SFEtsy!

Friday, August 10, 2012

#SFEtsy August 14th - Time Management





Well we just talked about preparing for the holidays well in advance so it seems fitting to follow that up with a chat about general time management.

We'll be sharing our own strategies for effective time management and discussing good ways to ensure we include enough 'me' time for a good work-life balance. We'll also talk tips for staying prepared in case something happens and strategies for dealing with a sudden, unexpected loss of time.

If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Katy or Steph about joining SFEtsy!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Savvy Entrepreneur: Keeping Your Priorities Straight


I had a meeting with a client recently who was feeling so bogged down with all that she felt she needed to do that she was paralyzed to do anything. I can so relate to that feeling. I get it often. My reaction to overwhelm is to shut down, curl up in a ball, and stare at the ceiling, seriously.

Luckily I’ve found a strategy that works wonders for helping me put it all into perspective and get moving again. It’s a simple process that really clears out the clutter in your head and shines a light on where to focus your energy.

First I do a serious brain dump. I write down everything I think I need to do that’s floating around in my head, no matter how urgent it is. The act of writing it down helps to clear out of my brain. I’ve written it down so I no longer need to spend energy trying to remember it.

Then I go through my list and prioritize everything high, medium or low.

Anything high priority is do or die for myself and/or my business, the things that will shut me down if they don’t get done. It’s often things like paying bills, following up with big projects or getting deliverables to clients. You must be honest with yourself, it’s very tempting to make things higher priority than they really deserve. If the business will keep running if that task doesn’t get done, then it’s not a high priority.

Medium priority means the task falls into best practice, something that makes the business better or run smoother, but isn't crucial to its existence. Things like keeping your Facebook page updated, getting photos from your last event on your website, or researching new packaging are definitely medium priorities.

Low priority items are the ones that only you will notice if they get done or not, changing the headline font on your website, reorganizing your workspace, or reading all those blog posts you've been bookmarking.

I make special note of recurring tasks like posting on the blog, sharing these posts on social media, and monthly accounting. These recurring tasks need to get on your calendar. Mark a specific chunk of time every week or month for each of these tasks and schedule it for the rest of the year.

Now that you've got everything prioritized, it’s only the high priority tasks that get your attention when you feel overwhelmed. The medium priority tasks get tackled when you have a little extra time. Yes, that does actually happen.

You also need to get comfortable with the fact that those low priority tasks may never get done. Some may get tackled when you literally find yourself twiddling your thumbs. Others may suddenly get moved up in priority, but many will languish at the bottom of your list for months.

Honestly it's only realistic to think you can accomplish three tasks a day. I know that sounds like a small number, but think about how your days go, unexpected phone calls, urgent emails, you forgot you made a lunch date with an old friend... Things happen that derail you, it's a part of life.

I want you to begin to really follow those priorities, if it's not high, think life or death, you'll be ok if it doesn't get done exactly when you want it to. You will, I promise.

What do you do to keep yourself on track? Do you have a similar system that helps keep you sane when things get really busy?


Genevieve not only writes The Savvy Entrepreneur she is the Co-Founder of Lightbox SF where she empowers creatives to take over the world. Check out the blog or how to work with her.


If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Katy or Steph about joining SFEtsy!

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Savvy Entrepreneur: Finding A Rhythm

Starting the New Year we often feel full of promise and motivation, but then find ourselves falling behind within a week or two and totally back to our old ways within a month. I have some advice I think might help, but it means adding one more thing to your list of resolutions for the year.

This year I want you to listen to your body and mind to find your natural rhythm and promise to work with the patterns that you already follow. I know the New Year is about quitting bad habits and starting good ones, but think of this as neither good nor bad, but celebrating and using your existing habits to make you more productive.

Finding Your Rhythm

With a little self-awareness you can begin to notice what times of day you’re most productive, when you hit a slump and when you need to admit you’ve done all you can. By being aware of when you can focus best and when you’re easily distracted you can plan your big projects and mindless tasks to coincide.

Work With Your Natural Tendencies

If you wake up early bright-eyed and bushytailed, but find your energy lagging by lunchtime, try jumping into a big project right away and save the stuff that needs less attention for the times when feel your energy waning. The momentum of crossing something major off your list first thing might even carry you through your lunchtime slump.

However if you’re more like me and pulling yourself from sleep seems like minor torture, start with the easy stuff. Do a quick check-in of your calendar, to-do list, and email as you sip that first cup of coffee. Give yourself time to get in the work mindset, map out your day, prioritize what needs to be done, but also give yourself a specific point at which you switch gears and really get to work.

I generally focus on getting a lot of little stuff out of the way first off, it sets my momentum for the day and clears out my late morning and afternoon which is when I focus best. Around 3:00 I often feel myself getting sluggish. So not only do I get a snack to boost my energy, this is when I do my major email catching up and the time I check-in with Facebook and Twitter to do my social media marketing. Short attention span tasks are great for me at this point in the day. However when it gets dark I get a second wind so I knock out one more project between 5-7 and sometimes pick it up again after dinner.

Strict But Flexible

If you’ve never really paid attention to your energy levels you might not know where to start. Make note of how you feel throughout the day for a few days in a row. You don’t need to track every hour, but every time you notice a shift in energy jot down the time. Soon you’ll have a map of your days.

Then work out a schedule that makes the most of your energy levels. Test it for a week staying as close to it as you can before you make changes. Do be sensitive to what works and what doesn’t, you most likely won’t nail it the first time around.

Also be forgiving, if you’re a night owl and there’s no need for you to be up and productive before noon, don’t do it. There’s no rule that your workday needs to resemble anything close to 9-5. Instead don’t start work until 2 or 3pm and work into the week hours of the morning. I have friends that schedule in a half hour nap almost every day because they’ve found that their work and mood both benefit from it.

I realize many of you have kids and husbands to work around and this might all seem easier said than done. However, I promise that with a little awareness you’ll find out when you’re most productive and when you’re least focused, then just accept and plan for them.

What scheduling tricks help you stay productive?


I encourage comments directly to this post, but also feel free to email me directly with questions, reactions, struggles, etc. genevieve [at] lightboxsf [dot] com


If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Jen from Mama's Magic Studio about joining SFEtsy!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Prioritizing Helps Keep You Sane

With the workshop coming up this Saturday, my to do list has gotten a little out of hand. So to give myself a bit of a break I'm going to recycle a little material from the Lightbox SF blog. This one is extremely appropriate given my current state and all the goal setting and motivation that happens at the beginning of the year.

Enjoy, I will be back with fresh content next week.


This is the time of year when the to do lists seem to grow out of control. Our work lives get cluttered with holiday sales or the at least the effort to make more of them. We see the end of the year looming and want to get just one more big project completed. And then there's the holidays in general, events, gatherings, and family seem to take over any "free" time you might have had.

I'm feeling the pressure myself just writing about it. However, if I take a step back I realize that much of the pressure is self imposed. That project that I want to get done, I'm the only one who cares that it happens next week. The extra workouts I'm trying to fit in to ward off any holiday pounds, is the stress really worth it? Yet there's still that pressing need to get things done, cross things off the list.

Here's a process my fiancé walked me through a few months ago that has worked wonders to help me put it all into perspective and calm the anxious need to accomplish everything-all-at-once-now!

Priorities, that is the key. I write a list of everything I want to do. (This works well for both personal and work lists, but I recommend keeping them separate.) Then I mark them with a High, Medium and Low priority. If you write your lists by hand try different colors, if you're using a to do software they may have an easy way already built in or again you might be able to color code them.

High, Medium and Low

For this to work you need to be honest with yourself in setting the priority of each task. To do that I use these guidelines: High priority means the business depends on it, money, life or death - paying the bills, following up on contracts, or getting a new product launched, etc. Medium priority means the task falls into best practice, something that makes the business better, but isn't crucial to its existence - keeping your Facebook page updated, getting photos from your last event on your website, or researching new packaging. Low priority items are the ones that only you will notice if they get done or not - changing your picture on your website, reorganizing your workspace, or reading all those blog posts you've been bookmarking. You may want to set up your own criteria, but I find breaking it down this simply really helps.

The I separate the tasks that are recurring like updating your Facebook page, returning emails, and keeping up on blog reading. These recurring tasks need to get on your calendar. Are they things you do monthly, weekly, or daily? Put them on your calendar at a specific time, not just with a general day and block out as much time as you need to accomplish them. You may answer email for an hour in the morning and then again in the late afternoon. You might also write in calendar an appointment to do bookkeeping or pay your bills or whatever else needs to get done regularly, but you always seem to forget about.

Putting Tasks Into Perspective

Now that you've got everything prioritized, I want you to set due dates for the High and Medium priority tasks. Be realistic with how long each task will take and when it absolutely needs to be done. I suggest you give yourself some wiggle room with those High priority tasks.

Those low priority tasks are going to wait until you find yourself sitting around twiddling your thumbs or something happens to move them up in priority. Yes, this means you may never get to them. Take a moment to accept this. If they are really worthwhile tasks you will suddenly see that they need to be raised in priority. Until then, I only want you to glance at them once a month and then put them aside yet again.

Not Too Many All At Once

Honestly it's only realistic to think you can accomplish three tasks a day. I know that sounds like a small number, but think about how your days go, unexpected phone calls, urgent emails, you forgot you made a lunch date with an old friend... Things happen that derail you, it's a part of life.

I want you to begin to really follow those priorities, if it's not High, think Life or Death, you'll be ok if it doesn't get done exactly when you want it to. You will, I promise.

Taking It Day By Day

Every High and Medium priority task should now be at least marked with a due date. Now we need to slot them into your calendar. Some may just be marked on due dates, but others may need to have a couple hours here and there set aside to get them done.

Each morning you should look at the list of activities for that day and sort them again in order of priority, but also take into account how easy it will be to check them off the list. I like to take the first two hours of my day and check off anything, High or Medium priority that takes less than 15 minutes to accomplish. Returning phone calls, sending out emails, looking something up, keeping up with social media, etc. Then I have the rest of the day to accomplish those one or two tasks that will take a few solid hours of my time.

After the quick stuff is done I go straight to the High priority task for that day. If there isn't one then I look at the Medium priorities, what has the nearest due date and which one is going to take the most time to complete. I weigh those to decide what to do next. If somehow I manage to finish everything on my list for that day, then I look forward to either try to cross off another High priority task or get a little bit of work done on bigger project that's only a medium priority.

Always Keep In Mind

This may sound like a lot of work for a to do list, but the idea is simple, whatever is most important gets done first. The more you walk through all the steps it will begin to feel like second nature. The simplicity of it is also my greatest comfort when I inevitably begin feeling overwhelmed again. What is the most important thing I need to do right now?

What do you do to keep yourself on track? Do you have a similar system that helps keep you sane when things get really busy?



I encourage comments directly to this post, but also feel free to email me directly with questions, reactions, struggles, etc. genevieve@lightboxsf.com


If you're an Etsy seller in the San Francisco Bay Area, contact Jen from Mama's Magic Studio about joining SFEtsy!
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