NABBW
Columnist - Winning At Working
| Name: |
Nan
Russell |
| Title: |
Columnist,
Writer, Speaker |
| Expertise: |
Winning
At Working |
| Web
Site: |
www.nanrussell.com
www.winningatworking.com
www.intheschemeofthings.com |
| Email: |
nan@nanrussell.com |
| Bio: |
Nan
Russell has spent over twenty years in management, most recently
with QVC as a Vice President. She has held leadership positions
in Human Resource Development, Communication, Marketing and
line Management. Nan has a B.A. from Stanford University and
M.A. from the University of Michigan. Currently working on
her first book, Winning at Working: 10 Lessons Shared,
Nan is a writer, columnist, and speaker. Her career insights
column, Winning at Working (www.winningatworking.com
) regularly appears on over eighty websites; and her life-reflections
column, In the Scheme of Things (www.intheschemeofthings.com)
is published in six states and Canada. Her work has been selected
to appear in several anthologies. To sign up for Nan’s
free eColumn(s), or read more about Nan or her work, visit:
www.nanrussell.com.
|
View
Past Articles
It's
Not About Time
By Nan S. Russell
With mounting
to-do lists, big projects with short delivery dates, consuming workloads,
growing obligations and festering unfinished tasks, it's no wonder
in this what-have-you-done-for-me-today world we often feel time
deprived. Work-life flows to home-life, balance becomes imbalance,
and goals and dreams get relegated to a closet shelf.
If this sounds
familiar, you're not alone. In a recent "Winning at Working"
reader survey, the most commonly articulated work problem was related
to time. Overwhelmed. Overworked. Overstressed. Too much to do and
too little time to do it.
But here's the
reality. No matter how much we do, we will never get everything
done. There isn't enough time for all that needs doing, all we want
to do or we'd like to do or we should do. There never will be, even
with the most sophisticated productivity, organizational and time-management
approaches. Sure, they're helpful, but thinking the chaos and stress
in life is caused by not having enough time is an error.
You see, the
problem is not a time problem. We all have the same amount. It's
a choice problem. The choices you make determine whether you're
running your life, or your life is running you. And you do have
choices. Sure there may be consequences to saying no, establishing
boundaries or reordering priorities. But there are also consequences
if you don't.
All tasks are
not equal. All commitments are not equal. All responsibilities are
not equal. All clients are not equal. All people of personal importance
to your life are not equal. Yet many of us operate as if they were.
You can do fifty things today and get little, if any, result for
having done them. Or you can do one or two that bring a big return,
be it emotional, financial, physical or psychological. People who
are winning at working know the difference and operate accordingly.
They see time
as life's currency and how it's used as a choice. Choices shape
your results and your life. You get the same twenty-four hours each
day as your co-worker down the hall. But use differs. Practice the
piano eight hours a day and you'll be better than people who don't.
Practice and hone your workplace talents and the same applies. Or
spend time getting ready to work, shooting the breeze, surfing the
web, fiddling with email and you'll complete the day having traded
your time for minimal results.
How you spend
your time puts value on what you're spending it on. For years, I
never had "time" to exercise consistently until a health
issue caused me to re-prioritize my choices. Funny how I managed
to find the hours when I had to. Choosing to eliminate an hour of
television created 365 "found" hours a year. That's nine
weeks.
People who are
winning at working know this secret: there is always time for what
matters to them. So, they allocate their time carefully, understanding
their life as a reflection of their choices. They make time for
the people they love, the passions they have and work that uses
their uniqueness. They focus on the results, goals, and life-dreams
they desire, rather than accepting what comes their way. They do,
while others talk of doing. They plan their day, while others let
their day plan them. And they motivate themselves, while others
wait for someone or something to motivate them. For people who are
winning at working, it's not about the time they have; it's about
the choices they make in how to use it.
(c) 2006
Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.
Sign up
to receive Nan's free biweekly eColumn at www.winningatworking.com.
Nan Russell has spent over twenty years in management, most recently
with QVC as a Vice President. She has held leadership positions
in Human Resource Development, Communication, Marketing and line
Management. Nan has a B.A. from Stanford University and M.A. from
the University of Michigan. Currently working on her first book,
Winning at Working: 10 Lessons Shared, Nan is a columnist, writer
and speaker. Visit www.nanrussell.com
or contact Nan at info@nanrussell.com.
PAST
ARTICLES
October
2005: Taking Your Words Seriously
November 2005: Fact
or Opinion?
December 2005: The
Secret to Success
January 2006: Shades
of Grey
February 2006:
Staying in the Game
March 2006: The Most
Important Commitment You Can Make
April 2006: Lying on
a Nail
May 2006: The
IT Factor
June 2006: Ancora
Imparo
July 2006: Serving
Company Politics
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