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December 2010 - Issue 78 - www.clareevans.co.uk
Hello ,
It's December and the end of the
year is rapidly approaching. We're all
either winding down for Christmas or winding up for the festive season.
Many of us in the UK have already
had an enforced break from work as a result of the disruption that the snow
caused.
How did it impact you and your
business?
It's been an exciting year all
round - there have been the challenges of a recession to deal with and a
general tightening of belts all round. New challenges and opportunities have arisen and many people have chosen this time to launch a new business.
What have your challenges been this year and how have you dealt with them?
I'm taking a two week break over
Christmas and New Year and looking forward to time with family and friends.
However, before I go, I have a very
special Christmas gift to help kick start your New Year. Book a coaching package before the end of the
month and get 20% off either a Kick Start or Get Into Action Coaching Programme.
You can find the details here. Be sure to get in touch if you want to take
up this offer and get yourself off to a good start in the New Year.
Keep in touch with what I'm up to and get extra news and tips from my blog or Follow me on Twitter.
Enjoy the rest of this month's newsletter and have a great Christmas and New Year.
Clare
P.S. Feel free to pass this newsletter on to friends and colleagues.
Expected The Unexpected
I often hear from people that they
can't manage their time because they have to respond to whatever the clients or
customers need or demand.
Some people have the kind of job
where they have to respond quickly to a client's needs. They're never
quite sure what they're going to be doing from day to day.
While it might be more difficult to
plan or have a regular structure you can still manage the
work you have and create systems and flexibility around it to allow for the unexpected.
If 50% or 80% of your working week is taken up responding to
clients or dealing with the unexpected - then plan the other 50% or 20%.
Educate your clients and customers -
sometimes it's their lack of planning and organisation that means you're
constantly dealing with their deadlines or their urgent problems.
Check for patterns in your work. Are you busier at the beginning or end of the week? Are mornings busier or quieter than the
afternoons? Do you have quieter periods
at certain times of the month or during the course of the year?
Measure your workload over a period of time
to see when you're more or less busy or the types of tasks you're dealing with.
For instant - Accountants will
always be busy at year-end or when VAT returns are due. Not only does their volume of work increase but there's a natural tendency for their clients to leave
or put off things like this to the last minute which adds to the pressure.
If you work in IT you can guarantee that the Monday after an installation or upgrade is likely to be
busy.
Most urgent, last minutes calls are more likely to come in at about 4pm on a Friday afternoon.
Some people find their business
drops off for a couple of months around the Summer holiday break or at the
beginning or end of the year. All
businesses are different.
Take advantage of the quieter periods to either catch up on admin, set aside time for planning or step up your
marketing.
There are always unexpected things
that turn up - suddenly finding that you can't get in to the office for two
days because of the snow or you're off sick for a few days can all have an
impact.
Some of this is about contingency
planning - knowing who needs to do something or what needs to be done if
someone is out of the office.
Re-prioritise your workload if you find you have to drop
everything to deal with an unexpected or urgent task or if you're taken out of
the office for a few days to work on a client's site.
It makes the few minutes you spend planning even more important. Knowing
where you are, what you need to be doing and where you were focused.
When you get back to work - re-prioritise what needs to be done. Set aside time to deal with the backlog. Don't just launch into
trying to deal with everything - deal with it in chunks at a time.
If you know where you are then it's easier to get back to where you need to be when something urgent comes up. Especially if it's already in your planner or
written down and not all in your head.
What unexpected things do you need to make allowances for? They may be less
unexpected than you think.
Give me a call or email me if you'd like to book up a free Strategy Session and get a boost for 2011 - www.clareevans.co.uk.
Until next year.

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