Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (R) Leave the Office Earlier
a news"E"letter from The Productivity Pro - Laura Stack
Number 111 :: August 2008

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In This Issue:
Message from Laura
Feature Article: Laura Stack’s Top Thirty Best Practices for Scheduling Your Day and Setting Appointments
Educational Resources
Time Tips and Traps
Ask the Audience
Laura's Blog
Hot Links
Words of Wisdom
Laura in the NEWS
Book Laura
Where in the World is Laura?
Subscription and Contact Information
Reprint Information

Buy Find More Time at Amazon.comA holistic approach to increasing your get-up and go, from the productivity expert whose previous books showed people how to Find More Time and Leave the Office Earlier. If you want to be productive but are just too tired all the time, you need to read this book! Laura Stack combines invaluable insights and practical advice in this guide to becoming more energetic and more productive in every area of life. Stack describes the factors that contribute to low energy (the “energy bandits”) and explains how to reduce their effects and build up or renew sources of positive force (with “energy boosters”).

Available now from Amazon.com and at better bookstores everywhere.


Buy Find More Time at Amazon.comFind More Time You can't add more hours to the day, but Laura will help you make the most of the time you have and get things done.  Available now from Amazon.com.

Leave the Office Earlier, Leave the Office EarlierLaura shows you how you CAN get more done than you ever thought possible and still get home to your real life sooner.Available now from Amazon.com.

More of The Productivity Pro's Resources


Educational Resources from The Productivity Pro®
Browse the Productivity Store for a variety of resources to improve your personal and professional productivity.

Words of Wisdom
“The workers of the world will soon be divided into two distinct groups: Those who will control computers and those who will be controlled by computers. It would be best for you to be in the former group.” -- Lewis Eigen, 1961

“Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of complaining.” -- Jeff Raskin

“I really cannot give you the formula for success. But I can give you the formula for failure. It's this: Try to please everyone.” -- Bernard Meltzer

Where in the World
is Laura?

These are all private client engagements with Laura Stack. At this time, Laura does not offer open enrollment seminars to the general public. If you’re interested in bringing Laura to your organization to present a training seminar for your employees on the day prior or the day after one of these engagements below, please contact John Stack for special “piggyback” pricing.

 

August
25::Denver, CO

26::Denver, CO

28::Elgin, IL

 

September

5::Adairsville, GA

9::Denver, CO

10::Washington, DC

11-12::Philadelphia, PA

16::Denver, CO
18::Keystone, CO

22::Denver, CO

26::Ft. Lauderdale, FL

27::Miami, FL

 

October

3::Denver, CO

13::Minneapolis, MN

14::St. Cloud, MN

24::Niagara Falls, NY

27::Denver, CO

28::Highlands Ranch, CO

 

November

11::Denver, CO

13::Denver, CO

18-23::Phoenix, AZ

 

December

13::Nashville, TN

 

April 2009

15::Overland Park, KS

 

June 2009

1::Saratoga Springs, NY



Visit Laura's Calendar On-line for her complete availability.


Laura's Blog

Subscribe to feed: http://blog.theproductivitypro.com

 

Recent posts:

 

How to Set Up an Effective Office Space in Your Home

Time is Money: the Sales Professional, the Clock, and the Pocketbook

6 Ways to Balance Evening Commitments With Family Life by Mike St. Pierre

Three indecisiveness phrases, and when (not) to use them - Matthew Cornell

Closing The Loops

Ian’s Messy Desk features Laura Stack


Hot Links
How to grab more time for you
CNN - USA
If you need more convincing, calculate what your time is worth, says Timothy Ferriss, a time-management expert and the author of "The 4-Hour Workweek. ...

Clearing Up a Blurry Work Life
New York Times - USA
What’s a tip-off that a time management or productivity problem might be better treated by a good therapist than a productivity expert? ...
See all stories on this topic

Strong Productivity Defies Trend And Gives Fed Room to Maneuver
Wall Street Journal - USA
"It's a compositional story," said Dale Jorgenson, a productivity expert at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. Productivity, he explained, is "languid" ...
See all stories on this topic
 


Subscription and Contact Information
Phone: 303-471-7401
Email: Laura@TheProductivityPro.com
Web site: www.TheProductivityPro.com
Address: 9948 S. Cottoncreek Drive Highlands Ranch, Colorado80130

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Feature Article:

Laura Stack’s Top Thirty Best Practices for Scheduling Your Day and Setting Appointments

 

1. Determine if you really need to meet in person. How many times have you attended a meeting and asked yourself, “Why am I here?” Hopefully, you’ve started protecting your time from every person who wants a piece of it. If my clients want to meet in person, I charge a consulting fee. For telephone calls, no charge. Ninety percent of the time, a conference call will suffice. Extra travel time and expenses are involved when meeting in person, so avoid it unless dialogue and brainstorming are required.

2. Have meeting requests and responses go to your delegate, not to you. Don’t wade through all the responses; that’s why you have an assistant (if you do). Under Tools, Options, Delegates, select “Send meeting requests and responses only to my delegates, not to me.” Brilliant.

3. Create a private calendar to post appointments you don’t want others to see. We are all used to email folders, where we file email. Most people, however, have never created a calendar folder. A calendar folder IS a new calendar. To create one, follow the same drill for creating an email folder (right-click on the Calendar in the folder list and select New Folder). However, make sure the folder contains “Calendar Items” in the drop-down box. Give your new calendar a name such as “Kids Summer Schedule” or “Laura’s personal calendar.” I kept track of my kids’ summer activities in one, so my husband would know where his schedule was impacted for driving duty.

4. Or, check your appointments as Private when you don’t want others to read the text. Yes, you can! The Private box is a little, tiny box in the bottom right-hand side of your screen (Outlook 2003) when you create a new appointment. People who share your calendar will still see a block and that you’re unavailable, but they can’t read the appointment text.

5. Use the Category box to indicate the project, team, or committee. Every time you schedule an appointment or accept a meeting invitation, indicate what project it’s related to in the Category box. Use the Master Category List to add your labels. “Tag” each appointment with one or multiple categories. Then under the View menu, select Arrange by, Current View, By Category. Then you can see all meetings, past and present, you had with a certain group, person, project, committee, etc.

6. Use Contacts to Find Meetings. Can’t find an upcoming meeting with someone you know you scheduled? Tired of searching your calendar manually to find it? Instead, get into the habits of using the Contacts box at the bottom left of each appointment, to indicate whom you’re meeting with (can be multiple people). To find all upcoming meetings with a particular person, go to that Contact’s address card, select the Activities tab, and in the drop-down box, select Upcoming Tasks/Appointments. The people must be loaded in your personal Contacts list (not just your company’s global address book) for this to work. If a meeting invitation is used, this feature is automatic, and you don’t need to select the names.

7. As a courtesy to your coworkers, send a meeting invitation instead of an email when you’d like to connect. Rather than emailing colleagues and asking, “What’s your schedule today? Can we get together for 30 minutes?” take a minute to schedule a meeting invitation. While in your Calendar, select Actions, New Meeting Request, Scheduling Tab, Add Others, Add from Address Book, and select attendees. Check their availability on the calendar (this assumes you’ve been granted access to their calendars) and find an open time (or select AutoPick to let Outlook find the next available date/time). Send the meeting request. When invitees receive it, they can simply click Accept, and Outlook moves the appointment to their calendars for them. This saves the recipient time and also saves you from trying to coordinate multiple calendars manually.

8. If someone does send an email wanting to meet, convert it into an appointment. If your colleagues don’t understand the meeting feature and insist on sending emails for appointments, you can quickly turn an email into a Calendar item. Right-click on the email, select Move to Folder, and then Calendar. A new appointment window automatically opens, containing your email and any attachments. Fill in the date, time, and details, and then Save and Close. The message is moved from the Inbox into the Calendar automatically. No more manual copying and pasting!

9. Use labels to quickly “see” the layout of your schedule for the day. Right-click on any appointment in your calendar. Select Label. Select Edit Labels. Change the text to display the colors as you’d like. Pick colors consistently with your team (travel, multiple locations, training, personal, vacation, meeting, video conference, etc.) so you can quickly see where team members are working and what they’re doing.

10. Block out time to work. Sometimes you might want to actually schedule an appointment to WORK. To protect your time from others, schedule a Task on your Calendar (Outlook 2003). With the Task Pad view in the Calendar showing, click on a Task you’d like to complete. Hold the left mouse key down while you drag it to your calendar and release. An Appointment window will pop up, automatically inserting the task into the text portion of the appointment item. Fill in the time you want to work on the task on your calendar. Change the Show Time as field to Tentative, if desired. Save and close. The task will still be kept in your Task Pad, but now you’ve blocked out time on your calendar to work on it. NOTE: Do NOT put things you need to DO on your Calendar (that’s what Tasks are for), because if you don’t complete it, you’ll have to move it manually (not so with Tasks).

11. Keep your calendar up to date. It’s frustrating when your colleagues are trying to set up appointments, and it appears that you’re open, so they send out a meeting request to a large group. You respond, “Sorry, I have a conflict on that day/time,” to which they respond by banging their heads on the desk in frustration, asking, “Then WHY didn’t you have it on your calendar?” Truly, if an organization is going to predictably use shared calendaring to coordinate meetings, you must keep yours current. It’s fine to use a traditional paper method as well, but if you schedule something on your “other” calendar, make sure to update your electronic one at regular intervals as well.

12. Include travel time in a single appointment and put the actual meeting time in the subject. If your meeting starts at 11:30, but it’s going to take you thirty minutes to drive there and fifteen minutes to get out of the building to your car, block out your calendar starting at 11:00 (so others can’t schedule with you). Then write @11:30 in the subject line, so you know the actual meeting time.

13. Do not accept a meeting invitation if the requestor can’t state in one sentence the exact reason you are meeting. For example:
- To inform our department of changes in the holiday pay policy.
- To sell management on our division’s plan to automate payroll processing.
- To brainstorm the best way to resolve the association’s budget deficit.
- To determine realistic sales goals for each region for next year.
- To discuss the critical skills required for successful performance as a first level supervisor.

14. Send lengthy reading materials at least 48 hours in advance. Participants express frustration with wasting time in meetings reviewing materials that were just handed out. They don’t have adequate time to digest the information and formulate questions. They could have reviewed that document while waiting in the doctor’s office yesterday. Don’t waste everyone’s time by forcing them to sit there and read together like kindergarteners—their time is much too expensive.

15. If updating a meeting already scheduled, send an update to the existing appointment. If you have already set up a meeting and invited participants, sending an email about the meeting forces them to either copy and paste the additional information into the meeting or have two meeting blocks for the same event side by side on their calendars, forcing them to open two items to get complete information. If you need to add information, send out a meeting update. To contact meeting attendees with a reminder or other message, open the original meeting request, click the Actions menu, and select “New Message to Attendees.”

16. Avoid meeting request responses. If you’re sending a meeting request to a large group and don’t need or want responses, in the open new meeting request, on the Actions menu, uncheck the line Request Responses. To make this the default. Tools, Options, E-mail Options, Tracking Options, “Delete blank voting and meeting responses after processing.” Or create a Rule (under Tools, Rules and Alerts, start from a blank rule) to automatically delete messages responses with certain words in the subject line.

17. Schedule time for preparation and action. Depending on your level of involvement in the meeting, you need time to get ready. You might need to start your preparation days before if you need to create a report or give a presentation. When you accept a meeting, immediately go into your calendar and block off at least 15 additional minutes separately for prep time, a bio break, refreshing beverages, and transfer time—and add more as necessary for mental preparation and review. Don’t walk into the meeting “cold.” In the same way, block out time at the conclusion of the meeting to review action items, activate them into your time management system if you can’t complete them right then, and get organized.

18. End meetings before the top or bottom of the hour. If you’re the one scheduling the meeting, don’t use the standard Outlook settings of hour or half hour blocks. If one meeting is from 1:00 to 2:00, immediately followed by another from 2:00 to 3:00, you will by default be late to your 2:00. So use either :15 or :45 start and end times, to allow transition time.

19. Limit attendees to meetings. More is not merrier. Think through who really needs to be there. Don’t worry about “hurting someone’s feelings” if they aren’t included. If you simply want to keep a stakeholder or player in the loop, select them as “optional,” instead of “required.” Always assume that higher-ups have things to do that are much better uses of their time than sitting in your meeting. Think about how much money people are paid, and ask if your meeting is worth an hour of their pay PLUS what they otherwise could have been doing if they weren’t stuck in your meeting. Only invite people if they have a direct contribution to make to the meeting objective, and the desired decisions would not be able to be made without them. If their presence is only required for ten minutes, give them the first ten minutes, and then allow them to graciously depart. Keeping others who aren’t invited informed can be done with a quick email summary or inclusion on the distribution list of any meeting notes or minutes.

20. Confirm everything. I’ve often shown up for a meeting and the other person “forgot.” You’d like to think adults are all responsible and will do what they say they will do, but it’s always better to dash off a quick email. “Looking forward to seeing you on (date) at (time) at (location). Let me know if something comes up.” I don’t make people confirm that things are correct; I ask them to let me know if there is a change. Also make sure you get directions and map it out well in advance of trying to run out the door. I look at my calendar for the next day before I leave work and make sure I’m ready to roll on everything. Confirm with attendees, too, when it’s your meeting. Open the original meeting request, select Actions, and then New Message to Attendees.

21. Journal your meeting notes. Many people don’t know how to use the Journal feature in Outlook or even what it’s for! If you’ve ever accidentally clicked it, you’ll get a pop-up box that asks you if you’re SURE you want to turn on the Journal. Most people freak out and click NO. Next time, click yes. Open a new Journal entry, type up your meeting notes, put in the day/time of the meeting, indicate in the Contacts field who was at the meeting, and select a Category for the meeting name or project. When you select that Contact and click the Activities tab, you’ll be able to see the Journal entries (notes) from every meeting you’ve ever had with that person. You can also pull up your Journal entries by Category to review meeting notes as far back as you’d like. OR give your notes to your assistant, have him type them up in the text field of the original meeting notice, save, and send a message to attendees (under Actions).

22. Avoid meetings on Fridays. Many departments and teams just decide as an informal policy to schedule meetings Monday-Thursday if at all possible. Too many people try to take long weekends or duck out early, making scheduling and rescheduling a nightmare on these days, plus you’ll end up with a lot of no-shows. I try to leave Fridays open for personal appointments. I find if I put a doctor’s appointment in between business meetings, something always happens to derail one or the other. It’s hard to get my mind switched between different realms as well.

23. Always send or request an agenda and include it in the text portion of the appointment or include as an attachment. A basic agenda should include a statement of purpose (see #13), any logistical considerations, the decisions to be made, a list of the topics to discuss (in priority order), who is responsible for that item, and how long you are allotting for each one. Ask participants if they have any changes to the agenda items to let you know in advance of the meeting, so you can make adjustments if necessary. Once you get into the meeting, follow the agenda diligently, so you can ensure all points are covered, decisions are made, and the objective is achieved.

24. Don’t let Outlook pick the length of your meeting. The default is one hour, so that’s how much time people normally schedule meetings! Instead, match the length of the meeting to the purpose. If you’ve done an agenda (see #23), and you’ve determined you’ll only need forty minutes, then schedule for that. Time will expand to fill the amount of time available. If you’ve promised folks you’ll be out of there, people tend to work toward that goal. If there is slack time, more socializing will naturally take place and an hour will definitely get used. Some people try to build in “buffer” time—don’t cave to this habit. I purposefully under-schedule and announce the goal at the beginning, so everyone is actively moving forward.

25. For longer meeting, allow enough breaks. Give a break at least one break for every hour and 15 minutes, max. Let attendees know at the outset what to expect. If you keep rambling on, and they aren’t sure when they’ll get a bio break, they will just start getting up randomly and sneaking out. If you clearly state at the beginning, “We will meet from now until 10:00, and then we’ll break until 10:10,” etc. It is also common courtesy that if you’re meeting over a lunch hour to provide food.

26. Be considerate of those in other time zones. If you’re in the Pacific Time zone, and some of your meeting participants are calling in from the east, a 2:00 meeting puts them into departure time. Realize that people may have childcare commitments at the end of the day; an afternoon meeting (or vice versa for early mornings on the west coast) can severely inconvenience folks and reduce the odds of attendance.

27. Strike a balance on when to schedule a meeting. If you schedule a meeting too far out, you’ll get a bunch of cancellations and requests to reschedule as you get closer—or you’ll just get trumped by someone higher up. If you wait to schedule a meeting until the last minute, it’s hard to find a block of time when most people are readily available. So it’s best to schedule around one to three weeks in advance. Anything sooner than that or further than that is fraught with scheduling challenges and conflicts.

28. Let the meeting leader know as soon as you’re aware of a conflict with a scheduled meeting. If you have a change in your calendar but don’t want to “rock the boat,” you inconvenience more people the longer you wait. It takes effort to work schedules around appointments, so as soon as you know, raise the flag. The chair can determine if they can make it without you or if the meeting should be moved.

29. Display multiple Outlook windows at one time. Perhaps you want to see your calendar while looking at an email. While in your Inbox, right-click on your Calendar (either on the Folder List or the icon) and select “Open in New Window.” Outlook will open your Calendar in a separate window, which you can resize and move to where it’s most convenient for you, while still being able to switch back to the Inbox. This is especially useful if you have a large monitor or dual monitors.

30. Customize your Calendar to your preferences. Don’t be satisfied with the standard calendar layouts—make it your own! For example, you can automatically add holidays to your calendar. On the Tools menu, click Options, then Calendar Options, and then click Add Holidays. The weekends are also compressed by default. If you want to show Saturday and Sunday as separate boxes, right click in the Calendar and select Other Settings. Uncheck the box that says Compress Weekend Days. While you’re there, change the default setting for 30-minute time slots to 5, 6, 10, 15, or 60 minute slots (I use 15). Frequently schedule with people in another time zone? Avoid confusion by displaying another zone. Under the Tools menu, select Options. On the Preferences tab, click Calendar Options, Time Zone, and “Show an additional time zone” check box. Select the desired time zone and OK out of there.
 

Make it a productive day! (TM)

(C) Copyright 2008 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.


Ask the Audience
This month’s question is derived from two people, who are basically asking the same question. All contributors received a free 21-day eCourse on The Exhaustion Cure. If you have a productivity dilemma for next month, send your question to Becca@TheProductivityPro.com. Our readers will send you advice.


Q: Dear Readers,

How do I handle my supervisor's enormous email box? My present position is Executive Assistant in an extremely highly visible position. My supervisor is constantly receiving enormous amounts of email that requires her either being on a conference call or being in a meeting. I have to maintain all of the emails that come in according to “Action,” “Dates,” etc. Can you give me some suggestions as to how to keep her email box from constantly over flowing when just about all of the emails are important? Your response is appreciated.

Sincerely,

Lesia


Dear Readers,

I support a very busy executive who receives many e-mail messages each day. Managing the volume is extremely difficult, especially when he is out of the office and can’t access immediately access e-mail. I want to be “green” and not print out the messages, but I need to make sure that they are viewed and triaged. I know this is a dilemma for many - how do others effectively organize e-mail for their bosses?

Thank you,

Becky


A: Dear Lesia and Becky,

Most of these are ideas from earlier lessons from Laura, but believe me, they do work – I live by these rules and have passed along to many of my colleagues. It has taught me that email is not the monster I once thought it was, and that it can be managed quickly!

1. Create 4 new folders within the Inbox
a. Do Now!
      i. These are items that need immediate attention when the executive returns. Be sure to block time in their calendar in order for them to attend to these pressing issues
b. Review & Assign to others
     i. Be prepared with the emails in this folder -schedule 1 hr. (or more if needed) to go over each of these emails with your boss. Come ready to take notes to create an action plan –for items that could possibly be easily handled by yourself or another individual. This gives your Executive the chance to make the determination if this is something that can be delegated to another person. Then assign tasks based on the action plan.
c. Follow-up
     i. Inside this folder, place items that may need some follow-up actions, but are not urgent. You can also create folders within this “follow-up” folder with dates if there are deadlines to hit. (i.e. name them “by July 1”, or “by July 15” etc.) This divides up the email into smaller bits making it much more manageable.
          1. You could also take this further by dragging and dropping the email directly into the calendar and scheduling time for these follow ups since these may be calls that need to be made, or reports that are due.
d. Read
     i. Inside this folder, place items and email articles that do not have time limitations but are of interest. This is the area your boss can turn to while eating lunch, or between phone calls.
2. Keep the inbox cleaned out every day, and touch each email only once.
3. Delete all junk email immediately….

Lorri Deffendoll, CAP
Kimball Electronics Group


A: Dear Lesia and Becky,

I feel strange making an attempt to answer this, but I remember a comment from Laura Stack's many organizing tips. She said have a page in your planner for each of your frequent contacts (spouse, children, support staff, etc.) Then when there's enough stuff on the page send them a message.

Maybe these assistants need to assess what's in the inbox. Try sorting by sender, request type, and date. This might help prioritize the requests and allow the assistant to make one full-page report to the executive that's not so overwhelming.

I wish them good luck and hope my idea works for them.

Karen Rich

Ask the Productivity Pro®
Q: Dear Laura,
Your advice has changed my life for the better. I also took your Stop Procrastinating class and I love it. I have a tremendous amount of uncontrollable time and don't know how to change it except to go back to work and stop being a stay-at-home mom! I love this season of my life and want to be at home as long as I can. I need to learn how to do entrepreneurial things at home, so that maybe I can stay, but I am not doing well at balancing my time.

I am one of those people who can do lots of things pretty well. Although I am kind of slow at most things. So lateness has always been an issue. My challenge now is that I want to do more, but I did commit to focusing on Janay my 18 m.o. until I go back to work. But there is a part of me that feels a pull (I think by God) to do more so that I can try to stay home longer. My hubby keeps telling me that I am supposed to be doing nothing but Janay, but I still feel called to minister to God's people is certain ways (teaching Sunday School, supporting other moms, offering a ride to church etc).

Lastly, despite all my efforts to do other things that are in alignment with my personal mission, I feel I am always cleaning the house, washing clothes and cooking. My personal devotion is almost non-existent unless I go to church for a class.

I know I have said a mouth full, but any tips could be helpful.

Agape,

Twyla

A: Dear Twyla,
This too shall pass. Stay focused on your baby. Don’t worry about doing lots of things pretty well. Only do a few things very well that are important, and let the rest slide. When I took my first baby Meagan home, I thought I could still be the perfect spouse and homemaker and business owner, and now be the perfect mommy too. I ignored the age-old advice to “sleep when the baby sleeps.” That was the only time I had to straighten up the house! I used to have certain standards when it came to dust bunnies and dirty toilets. But after almost dropping my baby from falling asleep while feeding her at 2:00 a.m. and putting ice cream in the cabinet, I realized something had to give. People who say they sleep “like a baby” simply cannot have one! I was too fatigued to keep “doing it all.” I decided then and there that I needed to lower my standards about cleaning if I was going to stay sane. If my neighbors didn’t understand why my toilets were dirty, they could come over and clean them. I discovered that if I didn’t take care of myself, I wouldn’t be able to take care of my daughter. And Meagan never gave a hoot about the state the house. Now that she is 13, I feel qualified to dole out a piece of advice:

“Cleaning and scrubbing can wait till tomorrow.
For babies grow up, we’ve learned to our sorrow;
So quiet down, cobwebs,
Dust, go to sleep!
I’m rocking my baby, and babies don’t keep!” —unknown

Every night, look at the next day. Ask yourself, “If I got nothing else done tomorrow, what would be the one thing I could do that would make me feel like I’ve had a productive day.” Get that one thing done when you have a little block of time. For now, gone are the days of checking off ten of those. Accomplishing one or two things a day is…perfect.

Laura Stack: The Productivity Pro (r)

Laura Stack, MBA, CSP
Publisher

Message from Laura

On October 3, 2008, Denver Options and Creating Training Accelerating Talent will be sponsoring two half-day seminars with Laura Stack, open to the public. Click here  for more information.

It’s back to school time! With three kids in elementary and middle school, this is a New Year of sorts for parents. Here are some tips to help you stay sane and productive:

Back-to-the-Future. The first step in moving forward with back-to-school resolutions is to take a look back. What were the situations from the previous school year that could use improvement? Did your child often miss the bus? Did they have a hard time making the honor roll or even passing grades? Was everyone too busy to sit down for dinner together? Once you figure out what areas need improvement, it will help set goals for the upcoming year.

Talk to your children. Whether your school-age children are in elementary school or high school, talk to them about areas they would like to see change, both personally and within the family. Their insight into what areas need improvement may differ from their parents. Discussing the differing goals will help to bring every person in the family on the same page. Buy-in on goals from all members of the family encourages success.

Small steps. Having a student go from straight C’s to straight A’s may be asking too much. The same is true for wanting to have a family who never eats dinner together suddenly sit down at the table five nights a week. Success comes from breaking each resolution into small but achievable steps. Set up weekly goals for each person in the family in order to overcome barriers and create small achievements. Adding steps each week will insure a slow incremental achievement of the main goal.

Make a plan. Assess each resolution and make a list of what changes need to come in to play to have a successful outcome. A child who has not been known for good grades may need to have a tutor. In order to help avoid detention for being tardy, have a back-up plan for your student to take responsibility for making their lunch and setting out their clothing the night before. Move dinner back to 6:30 instead of 5:30 to make sure everyone is able to be there. Having a list of solutions for the resolutions gives everyone a roadmap about how they will reach success.

Coordinate. One of the main challenges with having family resolutions is time. While one parent is working late, another may be taking one of the kids to soccer practice, while the oldest child is at band rehearsal. Posting a calendar with weekly schedules for each person in the household will help everyone keep track of everyone else. This can help the children to know that the parents have early meetings on certain days; so being on time to the bus is a necessity. And parents can keep track of when and where the children’s extracurricular activities are taking place. It is also beneficial to provide each person in the family with a DayTimer planner. This will help keep the kids responsible for their own time and keep everyone organized.

Smile. Stay light-hearted about the changes. You can always start over at anytime. And don’t forget, there’s another chance to create resolutions coming right around the corner.


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Laura in the News!
MiamiHerald.com - Miami, FL, USA
Telecommuting: driving down the cost of working
If you don't think you can be as productive at home, don't risk it, productivity expert Laura Stack says.



New York Times
Workplaces to See More Spats Over After – Hours

Podcast #2: Mini Review of Laura Stack's The Exhaustion Cure
By mondayqb@gmail.com (Mike St. Pierre)
Exhaustion_cure Be sure to check out my second podcast which features a mini-review of Laura Stack's brand new book The Exhaustion Cure: Up Your Energy from Low to Go in 21 Days. PLAY PODCAST.

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© 2008 Laura Stack.  Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, author, and professional speaker who helps busy workers Leave the Office Earlier® with Maximum Results in Minimum Time™. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time management training firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations.  Since 1992, Laura has presented keynotes and seminars on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today’s workplaces.  She is the bestselling author of the books Find More Time (2006) and Leave the Office Earlier (2004).  Her newest productivity book, The Exhaustion Cure (Broadway Books), hits bookstores in May 2008.  To have Laura speak at your next event, call 303-471-7401.  Visit www.TheProductivityPro.com to sign up for her free monthly productivity newsletter.


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