“I’m Sorry, I Just Didn’t Get to it Because I Didn’t Have Enough Time”




This phrase is one of the most frequent things I hear from my clients at some point in the coaching process.

The clients who utter this phrase are usually apologizing for an incomplete stretch (homework assigned by the coach), an unsent prep form (usually sent each week before every coaching session) or a really important task that directly relates to their burning desire, which is why they hired me in the first place.

1. More often than not, time is not the challenge, it’s a priority issue

Managers and leaders need to become aware of the discrepancy between what they say they want and the amount of time they’re actually spending in pursuit of it.

  •  What is your priority? Here’s my first request of you: take a step back to a thousand feet and look down at yourself and remind yourself of what you really, really, really want (as Dr. Dyer puts it).
  •  Now remind yourself again of what will happen if things don’t change in one year.
  •  If you’re already sweating, remind yourself of what your life will be like in one year if you actually can get what you really want.
  •  I’m glad we’re now on the same page again.

2. What’s eating up all your time?

Wouldn’t you love to know the answer to that question? Aha but I’ll wager that you already do. Let’s put it down on paper.

Write down a big goal you want to have accomplished in one year’s time.

  •  Draw 2 vertical rectangular shapes on a page side by side. One represents your Ideal day. In other words, the way you think your day should go in order to enable you to reach your goal. The other represents your Current Average day.
  •  Chunk off each rectangle into blocks of major tasks that you do as part of your day. Don’t forget to put “me time” in there. The only things you should leave off of these rectangles is eating and sleeping because, well, I’m assuming you HAVE to make time for those and do anyway.
  •  Now think about the time you require to complete each of these tasks. Assign both the number of hours required to complete each chunk and its percentage of your day.. Do this for both your Ideal day and your Current Average day. You can take the average of the past week to come up with Current Average day percentages.
  •  Here’s an example of one of my clients who did this exercise:


Big Goal: Grow company to $1 million sales

Job: Small company owner
Ideal Day

3. Change your Chunks

  • Write down 3 things you could immediately do (I mean starting tomorrow!) to change the discrepancy in the percentages between the two rectangles.

Examples:

o Hire extra help to complete one of the chunks
o Delegate tasks to existing resources
o Learn a new skill that will help you become more efficient or proficient at one of the chunks

I’m not saying you’ll have your Ideal day tomorrow, but you need to make sure that within one month, you have to be on the track to your big goal by actually spending the appropriate amounts of time on each task.

4. Tools to keep you honest

  • A monthly Calendar:

o Get one where there’s enough space to write detailed daily appointments and activities for at least a month in advance.

o You must remember to actively schedule and include the following:

+ Actual planning time for the week where you readjust your schedule if needed.

+ A buffer for unavoidables and emergencies. The amount of time you allow for this needs to be based on the average number of emergency hours you spent each day last month.

+ Plan in all the chunk pieces (Leadership, Admin, HR etc.) you named in your Ideal day schedule.

o Use a different colour pen/pencil for changes on your schedule to track where the scheduling and forecasting of your time was off so you can schedule more accurately the following week.

  • Your coach and yourself:

o Be honest with yourself and with your coach. You know if you feel like you’re still running against the wind and never getting anything done despite all your efforts. Insanity is defined as continuing to do the same things but expecting different results. If you’re not really changing the way you do things, you will not reach your goal.

5. It was never about my schedule anyway…

On most occasions, I’m amazed to find that failing to complete a task has nothing to do with time limitations; it’s actually a scapegoat for a plethora of wonderful things such as:

    • Lack of confidence to handle the task required
    • Comfort in sticking with the familiar
    • Lack of skill to perform task
    • Inability to pinpoint or admit lack of skill
  • Be honest enough to admit that your time management isn’t to blame. Now let’s find out the other side to this story, here’s my next request: Think about what exactly is stopping you.
  • Then write down 3 facts you know to be true that nullify your belief or fear:

o Eg. If what’s truly stopping you is thinking “If I call and leave a voicemail, they won’t call me back”, then write down things like:

+ “People I’ve left messages to before have called me back in the past”

+ “How will they know who called if I don’t leave a message?”

+ “There are many other ways I can reach them other than voicemail, I’m going to try one of them.”

  • The next step is to write down 3 things you’re going to do to overcome the barrier you’ve identified:

o Eg. I’m going to do it

o I’m going to send an email first, then call

o I’m going to drop by to see them with a brochure of my services

And here’s a bonus:

o I’m going to attend that teleclass about “taking the fear out of cold calling”

Hopefully this will get you on your way to what I call the “say-do continuum”. You will now be a person of your word where you truly say what you’ll do and do what you say you’ll do.

chalad
About the author:
A certified business coach, Chala is the person you go to if you want to jump quickly to the next level of your business potential. She has been a brand manager at companies such as Pepsi, Pizza Hut, Frito Lay, Diageo, and Playtex. In addition to her growing coaching practice, Chala currently manages the Stationery Category brands for Canada with BIC Inc. For more information on coaching and on Chala’s coaching practice, go to her website.
My website is at: http://www.coachtactics.com


  

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