Why Time Management
Why Time Management
plan it
DO IT NOW
not important
forget it
delegate
not urgent
urgent
Ideally, you should make a list each night or each morning of everything that you want or need to
do for that day. At this stage don't plan out every minute. Don't even think about which jobs are
most important - just write down everything you can think of. You might want to list your tasks
every 5-7 days, so you can plan longer projects (i.e., more than one day) better. Also, you should
allow for your own imperfections. There are going to be days when you forget or just don't feel
like doing some things. Giving yourself more than one day at a time gives you more flexibility
(and more room for error!).
PRIORITIZING:
the next step is to rewrite your list in order of priority, with the intention of doing the higher
priority tasks first and working your way down the list. A lot of your prioritizing is done for you
if you keep in mind the due dates for the different assignments, projects, events, etc. you are
working on. You should also consider how important that item is to the success of the whole
year. A small assignment or event may be lower priority than a final exam or a large fundraiser.
How you prioritize is up to you. No one can tell you what is most important to you; just be
responsible with your priorities.
SCHEDULING:
Now that you've got a prioritized list of everything you need and want to do, you should look at
your school and AIESEC schedule to fit your activities around what you already have scheduled
(the givens). Again, you might want to do this for a few days at a time rather than every day.
Remember to let your schedule be flexible. Don't get overly ambitious - there's no need to plan
out every minute of your day. Make a reasonable schedule which you can be sure to stick to.
Leave room for breaks, socializing, and those little things that tend to pop up.
Time thieves
lack of delegation
TV
Internet Surfing