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Archive for the ‘Time Management’ Category

WEBINAR: Organizing Paper & Managing Time

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

If you could ask one question to a top-notch professional organizer, the President of the DC chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers, to be exact, what would it be?

Think about it, because you’ll actually have just that opportunity! Join us on Wednesday, June 3rd for The Enterprising Moms first Webinar  — Organizing Paper & Managing Time: Effective Strategies From a Pro.

Featuring Judy Parkins of Gently Organized, the webinar will offer tools and strategies to more effectively manage your paper and your time. Learn more about the event and register now!

This free webinar is brought to you by The Enterprising Moms and fellow Enterprising Mom, Maryann Kearns of Potomac Webinars, offering an end-to-end solutions for webinar planning and implementation.

Register now and share this invitation with a friend!

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Productivity Makeover for Entrepreneurial Mom – Part 1

Monday, March 16th, 2009

woman under desk 150x150 Productivity Makeover for Entrepreneurial Mom   Part 1As mentioned in an earlier post, I was gearing up for my first session with productivity expert Terry Monaghan of Organizing For Your Life. Terry works with individuals and executives at organizations to help them them develop structures and processes that enable them get more done in less time.

During our first session, Terry asked lots of questions about what was working and what wasn’t. We discussed what support systems I currently have in place and how I would like things to work. During the course of our discussion, we uncovered some of my sticking points and what made them sticky for me.

A few of the key points that really shifted my thinking …

  • I’m a highly visual person. If a thing is not in my line of vision, it’s likely to fall off my radar. What I learned is that my visual cues (polite term for ‘overflowing step file holders’) are overstimulating and overwhelming; and that there are more visually appealing and less stress-inducing ways of keeping track of active projects. Music to my ears!
  • Many of the systems I have in place are well thought can work well for me, once I work out all of the kinks. For instance, I have numerous email accounts to help me keep track of different types of email (bills, personal, shopping, business, admin, networking, etc.). While some people use filters, I chose different accounts. My system for separating email works, but the way I process my email doesn’t. I’m working with Terry to implement a system to process my in-box and keep it empty.
  • Most of the projects I’m working on require large chunks of time, something I rarely have. Terry helped me to shift how I think about my projects and my progress on them. By breaking projects up into smaller tasks, scheduling blocks of time for tasks (even as little as 15 minutes) and using a timer to keep me on task, I can make steady progress and achieve a sense of accomplishment while working towards completion.
  • I don’t have to start from scratch. Terry explores how I work, what works well, and then works with me to put structures in place that support the way I work. So, it’s not about implementing a canned system, but building a system that works with my work flow.

These may seem like obvious things, and on some level they are. But discussed with a productivity expert in the larger context of prioritizing what’s most important to me and maximizing my time, it’s quite powerful. By making just a few small changes in the way I work over the past few days, I’ve already seen an impact and my motivation is quite high!

Next, we’ll work on my time. Stay tuned…

In the meantime, what’s most effective for you in managing your email, your schedule, your paper? How do you manage it all?

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Business-Owner Moms and Child Care

Friday, March 13th, 2009

mom computer baby 220x300 Business Owner Moms and Child CareFor entrepreneurial moms, finding just the right childcare arrangement, one that provides enough care to enable one to focus sufficiently on business while also providing moms a flexible schedule with time for family, can be one of our greatest challenges. This is can be especially difficult when one is first starting out. Does one commit to childcare to create the time to build and maintain the business? Does one work in the off hours until the money starts coming in and then invest in childcare? Or, does one use some creative combination while getting things rolling.

Last week on The Enterprising Moms web site, we featured a poll that asked ‘What type of childcare arrangement do you have?’ to get a sense of how moms are managing.

According to our unscientific poll based on the responses of visitors to our site, here is what we learned:

More than 60% of respondents use either part-time or full-time care. More than 12% have school-aged children and presumably work during school hours. And more than 27% of moms use an occasional babysitter or handle all of the child care on their own.

Of course there are lots of variables that the poll doesn’t address (number of children, type of business, etc.) because of the inherent limitations of the polling tool, but we still get a glimpse into how others are making it work:

  • Part-Time Care: 37.5%
  • Full-Time Care: 22.9%
  • Kids in School (K-12): 12.5%
  • No Child Care – All Me: 12.5%
  • Occasional Babysitter – Paid: 10.4%
  • Occasional Babysitter – Co-op: 4.2%
  • Kids Beyond Childcare Age: 0%

What’s your story? How do you make it work?

::  © The Enterprising Moms ::

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Productivity Makeover for Entrepreneurial Mom – Intro

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

mom phone toddler 150x150 Productivity Makeover for Entrepreneurial Mom   IntroLife is pretty complex. With three young kids, multiple business ventures and no local family, some days it doesn’t take long for me to get overwhelmed by it all. Even when one is on top of their game, there are those cyclical things that come up and need to be addressed, like the winter cold and flu season, summer camp planning, school vacations and breaks. Some are predicatible and can be planned around, but others just spring up, like a snow day. And, without plans in place to address these things before the crisis arises, one can easily be thrown off course.

In an effort to get ahead of the game, last year I read and implemented some of David Allen’s principles from Getting Things Done, which has a cult-like following in productivity circles. While I gained valuable tips and tools for getting some things done, because I’m time challenged, like most Enterprising Moms, I haven’t found the best way to integrate some of the more critical pieces of the puzzle.

Enter Terry Monaghan, of Organizing For Your Life. I first heard about Terry when she was recommended on The Enterprising Momsdiscussion list as a person who helps “working women increase their productivity and therefore their income by managing their time and cutting out the clutter and nonsense that bogs us down each day.” When I read about her, I thought she sounded like someone I need to meet. At the same time, planning was underway for a series of Enterprising Events and we decided to take a fresh approach to the typical business seminar/presentation — we decided provide a before and after portrait as applied in a real-life situation — a makeover.

So, I got in touch with Terry and we’ve arranged to do a makeover on yours truly! I’m absolutely thrilled at the opportunity to work with a productivity guru who’s worked with corporate executives at Fortune 100 companies and solopreneurs, many of them business-owner moms, to help them ‘get more done in less time.’

Our first session is tomorrow. Stay tuned updates as this process gets under way.

::  © The Enterprising Moms  ::

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Keeping Up With News & Events

Monday, July 28th, 2008

I returned from “vacation” over the weekend and am slowing getting back into my groove. When I’m away, I give myself permission to tune out a bit. But, in everyday life, I do like to keep up with current events, news and industry information, and sometimes it can be a challenge.

Where do you get your news and how do you stay on top of if?

I get most of my news from NPR while getting ready in the morning and driving. (“Marketplace” in the morning and evening is one of my favorites!) I subscribe to a few magazines (Working Mother and just tried Pink), but rarely have time to read them. I no longer subscribe to the daily paper — just don’t have time to read it. I get most of my industry news via email, and from web sites and blogs through RSS feeds. And, while the multitude of ways to receive information makes getting it convenient, it can be overwhelming.

How to you keep up with current events, world news and industry information? What are your favorite sources of news and your favorite ways to receive it? What are your favorite sources of news and info related to being a mom and/or business owner?

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Time Tracking

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Need to track time for client billing (or to keep yourself in check)? Check out this cool tool — SlimTimer.

It’s a web-based tool that enables you to track time worked on specific projects and run reports based on the entries. You can create multiple projects, share projects with others, add notes about the task being worked on and throw in some tags for good measure. Then just open the timer and click on the project name when work begins and ends. It pops up in a short and slim window, so it’s discreet and doesn’t take up much space on your desktop.

All this, and did I mention that it’s free?

Check it out at: www.slimtimer.com

Got a cool tool that makes things run a little smoother? We’d love to hear about it! Drop us a line.

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