Posts Tagged ‘delegation’

Lee’s Keys © #4

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

Prioritize Tasks, Schedule Time, Minimize Stress.

If you have a problem with being on time, try setting your watch ten minutes early to be sure you won’t be late. Act according to the time on the watch not the “real” time. Remember your travel time to and from an appointment and schedule that as well.

One way to reduce stress is to SCHEDULE your workday.

Prioritize your TO DO List, 1-2-3 in order of importance – Do the most important thing first, or when you are at your optimum mental performance level. It may be early in the day or late in the afternoon. Determine when it is for you and work accordingly.

Do not schedule too many high priority items or tasks for one week or one day.

Do not let 3’s become 1’s due to inattention.

Make appointments with yourself to get work done. KEEP the appointment!

Wasted time is doubled effort, and increased stress. Searching for misplaced items and information wastes time. Be sure everything in your office and home has a place to “live” and keep it there, whether it’s the stapler on the desk, or electronic files. Take it out and put it back where it belongs. (Wasn’t that Day 2 in Kindergarten???)

Break each project into manageable steps. Be Realistic. Do not keep adding to each step unnecessarily.

Delegate when possible – if you are not the only one involved in accomplishing a task or project, others should share certain responsibilities throughout the cycle of completing the project.

Projects will expand to fill available time, so schedule the time. Set completion dates for the overall project and also for each step. Work toward each date until it is done.

Remember that when you are scheduling your time, one of the hardest things to do is to say NO. Mastering the art of saying “no” to unrealistic expectations is not easy, but can be one of the most freeing things that you ever learn to do.

Professional Organizers - The Old Hybrid?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

I found an old article about what we do at OAI.

How old? August 1997!

Is it still relevant? YES!

Title: Organizers Clear Out Company Clutter

It talks about improving proficiency, getting organized and increasing efficiency in the business environment. Here are some snipets:

“Professional organizers now are a hybrid mix of interior designer, schedule adviser and occupational engineer. Throw in a little psychology and lots of common sense, and a fairly accurate image of the modern-day professional organizer comes into focus”

“I go in and look at the job, then determine the client’s needs based on what the client tells me,” Ms. Donald said. “Some have space needs, some have systems needs. Some just need to maintain or regain control of their clutter.”

“Every office has to be organized differently,” said Ms. Donald.

“If I had suggested the same organization with Equity Technologies that I have for this client, it would have caved in.” she said.

Equity Technologies is a fast-growing Mobile business run by Cathy Anderson-Giles, who retained Ms. Donald several months ago.

“We started out about seven years ago warehousing equipment for companies,” Ms. Anderson-Giles said.

As the company and related enterprises grew to more than 50 employees, Ms. Anderson-Giles said she needed to delegate more responsibility to her staff and reorganize her office operations.

She heard about Organizing Associates Inc. through a sister-in-law whose professor at [the] University of South Alabama had hired Ms. Donald.

“My sister-in-law was very impressed with the changes she saw in the way the professor was handling classes, meetings and schedules,” Ms. Anderson-Giles said. “Lee came in and studied the way we disseminate information, the way we communicate with each other and with customers. The main thing she helped me do personally was change my focus from being a manager to being a leader. She really helped me with that transition.”

According to Stephanie Denton, the national chairperson for NAPO who will be among the speakers at the upcoming conference in Point Clear, professional organizers assist everyone from the homeowner who can’t seem to get a garage straightened out to major corporations going through mergers.”

Click here to view the entire article with pictures.

Upward Delegation … Is Your Business at risk?

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Have you ever delegated a task to your assistant and, after realizing it wasn’t going to be done, assumed responsibility of it again? If so, the following story may sound familiar.  

 

Directory, Redirected

An executive had been asked by a co-worker to get a corrected list of contact information compiled for a large directory. There was a deadline, which was quickly approaching. Since the executive was involved in another, more important project, she asked her assistant to find the remaining few e-mail addresses. This request involved calling four people to confirm their new addresses.

 

Upon receiving this request, the assistant “teased” the executive about waiting so long to involve her in this job, “jokingly” indicating that she might be able to do this in her spare time, and left the office. At 4:45 PM, the assistant turned off her computer as she made one more personal phone call and was about to leave for the day. The executive asked for the corrected addresses and the assistant indicated that she had not had time to make the necessary calls. In a friendly voice, she suggested that if the executive would just stay a few minutes later than usual, that she could probably find the people herself.

 

The executive re-assumed the task.

 

Resentment Due To Perceived Lack Of Value

One question I am often asked by office assistants is, “When does my time become important?” The answer is, your time is always important, as long as you are using your time at work to help your executive accomplish work they need to accomplish in order to properly do their job.

 

What is the solution? How can I avoid this situation?

Both people were not happy with the way the process happened, and yet neither wanted to fully address the issue for fear of further damage. This is always a negative in an office setting.

 

When the center of power shifts from management to subordinate, it is not a productive situation. The manager is usually seen as weak and in a more negative light than the employee because no manager should ever “concede” to a subordinate concerning an assigned task.

 

Managers can certainly utilize productive criticism from an assistant however the manager should never allow themselves to be railroaded into taking back a task they have delegated to an assistant. As a rule, this practice greatly jeopardizes the manager’s authority in dealing with that employee in every other future office matter.

 

The best way to avoid the situation is to have a clear understanding of job responsibilities and clear communication at the beginning of the working relationship. Such incidences can be prevented through the proper exchange of information initially and by managers understanding their role in leadership.