Time Management and Your Big Rocks
In Steven Covey's excellent book, "The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective People" he tells a well-worn story about the use of
time.
In the story, some professor guy (I think) stands at the front
of a class, with a big jar. In the jar, first of all he puts
some big rocks, and asks the class, "Is it full now".
Mostly they say, "Yes".
Then he gets some smaller rocks and these fit in quite nicely
too, just between the big rocks. Again, he asks the same
question, "Is it full now?"
The group, a little more suspicious say, "Yes", because it seems
to be.
He then gets out a bag of sand and surprise, surprise, those
tiny grains of sand squeeze down beside the smaller rocks,
filling up the tinier spaces. "Full?", he asks.
"Sure", say the increasingly dubious bunch of students in the
audience.
Finally, trump card is the water, smaller than sand, of course
and finally, as we aren't getting too sub-molecular about it,
the jar is full.
Impressive huh?
The professor then asks,
"What's the moral of the story?"
Of course the class, thinking they've spotted the trick here,
say,
"You can always squeeze a bit more in"
A standard and pretty smart reply. The professor, however, is a
step a head (all that professorism does it, of course!).
"The moral of the story is that you need to get your big rocks
in first, or all that other 'stuff' gets in, way too soon and
takes up all the space."
Cool story?
The point of course, relates to managing your time.
What are your 'big rock' things?
Well, for sure it isn't all the little jobs you do. All the
fire-fighting (or it may be in the short-term, but that is
another day).
The trick is to create spaces, ring-fenced, as they say, to do
the good stuff.
In business, this is a list something like this:-
1. Planning for the future 2. Time with your people - good,
focused one-on-one time preferably 3. Coaching your people in
their work 4. Developing others around you 5. Delegating
constructively 6. Creating Succession Plans 7. Building
relationships 8. Developing new business opportunities 9. Fixing
problems once and for all 10. Making time for a life outside the
business
There are more!
Covey and his big rocks eh?
He calls them Quadrant Two activities. If you don't spend time
putting these first into your schedule, truth is, you will never
fit them in and things will never evolve and grow.