Tips For Successful Time Management

December 21st, 2009 admin No comments

Time management is simple – you have to decide what to do and then do it. The following tips will help you decide what to do, then use the techniques to actually get things done. Using tips and techniques together throughout the day is the best way to manage your time.

Deciding What to Do…

1. What Matters Most – You need to consider what your priorities are, for both short and long term goals. Invest the most time in the things that matter to you.

2. Your Role – Focus on tasks that are your responsibility. That includes in the workplace as well as your home life.

3. Your Goals – Have concrete goals so that you always have something specific and clear to aim for.

4. Track Your Time – Knowing how you actually spend your time can help you find where you need to improve your management skills.

5. Plan Your Time – Planning ahead will help you save time, especially if you also plan in those unexpected interruptions. Use a planner, diary or PDA.

6. Fill in the Gaps – Make use of all those short periods when you are waiting for something else. Even 5 minutes can be used for something.

7. The 80-20 Rule – Take note of what your return will be on your investment of time. Overall, around 80% of your results will come from only 20% of your efforts. Spend time on the things that will pay you back the most.

…Then Do It

Once you’ve used the above techniques to decide what you need to be doing, the next step is to actually do it.

1. Start – The most important step to getting things done is to just get started. Break it down into smaller pieces if the job seems to large, and start at the beginning.

2. What’s Next? – Keep your momentum going by taking it just one more step.

3. Ask Others – Get assistance whenever you can, and ask others for their help or opinions. You can save a lot of time by taking advantage of what others already know.

4. Delegate – If someone else can be doing a particular task, let them.

5. One Thing at a Time – Multi-tasking isn’t always the best way to go, especially in the workplace. Your tasks will get done faster and better if you give them 100% of your attention. It’s usually a less stressful approach too.

6. Hard Jobs First – Free up your your mind by getting the tough stuff out of the way first. You’ll be able to concentrate on other tasks later, and it will save you the stress of dreading it later.

7. Capture Everything – Don’t rely on your memory. Take notes about what you want to do so you can recall the details later. Many people use a PDA because of the advantages it offers as a time mananagement tool.

8. Do Less – Are you responsible for too much? Do you dare pare down your commitments? Doing so allows you to focus on a more reasonable number of tasks. Know when to say “no”.

9. Good Enough – Don’t spend more time than necessary beyond what a task really needs.

10. When is it over? – Make your tasks measurable so that you know when it’s finished.

Investing money is important, but investing in time is even more valuable. There is only so much time in a day, so you need to make the most of it. Tips like these are the right start to improving your time management skills.

Tim Wilson is the editor of Time-Management-Success.com, the guide to effective time management. Read more about the advantages of PDA devices at his site.

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Improve Your Time Management By Calculating the Cost of Your Time Management System

December 20th, 2009 admin No comments

The return on investment and cost of time management systems is not a topic many time management authors discuss.  They happily discuss making lists, setting up software and gizmos and other methods of “saving” time and increasing productivity.

The truth of the matter is that any time management system including the ones I have developed cost time to implement.  Like any other investment and make no mistake about it time is invested, time management systems must be evaluated in terms of the return on investment. So, if a particular time management system takes five hours a week to implement and maintain, if it does not save you more than five hours and in my opinion much more than five hours a week why would you do it.  

If you are making lists, updating lists, re-typing lists and priorities into a software program, this is in actuality time you could be using to do the true things you need to get done. So making a list of the things you need at the grocery store saves you the time of unnecessary trips when you realize you forgot something. This simple example should be used to look at all of your time management activities. Your system takes a certain amount of time to implement and maintain.  Therefore, it must make productive by a multiple of the invested time through either saved time or increased focus on important goals.  

Now there are no set formulas for this calculation, but you can keep a time log of where your time is spent and estimate if the invested time produces a return.  Alternatively, you can look at the number of tasks you complete or hours you work in total to estimate if there are in fact improvements to your productivity.  So take a good look at how much time you are investing in time management and try to calculate if the time is actually providing you with a return of more time saved elsewhere in your life.

This is why for many people a simple system is the way to go to gain immediate improvements in productivity without a huge investment of time to realize them.

Author of the Ultra Simple Guide to Time Management, a 10 page ebook on paper based productivity. It is available on the author’s blog.

Simple Time Management

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Fingerprint Access Control System

December 18th, 2009 admin No comments

In physical security, the term Access Control refers to the practice of restricting entrance to a property, a building, or a room to authorized persons. Physical access control can be achieved by a human (a guard, bouncer, or receptionist), through mechanical means such as locks and keys, or through technological means such as a card access system. Tutis Access Control is a fingerprint based access control and time attendance system for all kinds of office and factory premises. This tamper proof fingerprint door lock device eliminates the administrative cost involved with the conventional ID Card or swipe cards. Tutis Access Controlis more secure as compared to the conventional swipe card or ID cards because of the exclusive fingerprint for every entity. Further, the system also has a provision for time attendance calculations based on the data captured and recorded in the device. Other functionalities of the system include:

In physical security, the term Access Control refers to the practice of restricting entrance to a property, a building, or a room to authorized persons. Physical access control can be achieved by a human (a guard, bouncer, or receptionist), through mechanical means such as locks and keys, or through technological means such as a card access system.

Tutis Access Control is a fingerprint based access control and time attendance system for all kinds of office and factory premises. This tamper proof fingerprint door lock device eliminates the administrative cost involved with the conventional ID Card or swipe cards.

Tutis Access Controlis more secure as compared to the conventional swipe card or ID cards because of the exclusive fingerprint for every entity. Further, the system also has a provision for time attendance calculations based on the data captured and recorded in the device. Other functionalities of the system include:

Fingerprint Access Control

Features Of Fingerprint Access Control :

. Eliminates administrative costs pertaining to conventional swipe cards and ID cards

. Fingerprint matching with quick, accurate

. Available for users up to 500/1000/1500

. Can record up to 30,000 transactions

. Access Control – 50 Time Zone, 5 Grouping, 10 Combination, Holiday Management support,  many fingerprint access, intimidate fingerprint access grade security management support  standalone work

. Relay output – 3A/12VDC

. Keypad Or Display – LCD with 80 character and numeric keypad

. Power – 9-24V DC, stay current – 0.50 mA, work- current 400 mA

. Validating Speed <=2 s

. FRR = 1%

. FAR = 0.0001%

. Baud rate – RS232-115200, RS485-115200, TCP/IP

. Sensor – Optical

. Operating Temperature – 0 0 C – 45 0 C,Operating Humidity – 20%-80%

. Authentication – CE, FCC, MA

. Management software – Transaction fingerprint management and Access control attendance  options and network manage

. Data is available in excel/html/ASCII format for further calculation

. Database Supported – Access, SQL, ODBC Compliant

.SDK Available for customized requirements

Fingerprint Access Control , Access Control System , Biometric Access Control

Tutis Technologies Ltd, is a pioneer in the field of Biometric software solutions in India for access control and time attendance. A BSE listed company, Tutis aims at introducing not just the technological innovation and prowess but a range of biometric products to customize & redefine workspaces through the best office automation and security solutions. It has a range of fingerprint based biometric products and software solutions with a wide spectrum of functionality, interoperability and scope for customization.

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