This Week’s Motivation: Planning and Productivity in a Home Office

Quote - Productivity is never an accidentThis week’s motivation is about planning and productivity in your home office – a good topic to start off the new year!

Do you make big plans, goals or resolutions every new year? I usually don’t do too well with a long list of resolutions…setting a few main goals is a better way for me to be successful in planning the new year.

I love the quote shown here because it really makes such a simple statement about productivity – but one that a lot of us probably struggle with. We all have days when we don’t feel productive in our home office and wonder where the day went; but we’d probably get more done if we had a better plan.

A few tips for planning:

1.Schedule every hour – If you have a long To-Do list, plan your day (hour by hour) instead of just waking up with a goal to “get it all done today”.

2. Get a few things done early – On days when you know family commitments will take you away from your home office, have a plan to get a few, short tasks completed early in the day so you won’t feel torn when family time starts.

3. Set up an accountability system – Share your plans or goals with a supportive friend, colleague or virtual group to help with accountability. You will be more likely to stick to a plan you’ve shared with others.

One example of how better planning has made a big difference in my home office is the Ultimate Blog Challenge. I’m taking part in the Challenge, which I’ve done 4-5 times now, and one thing I’ve learned is that participating in the challenge has made me a better planner.

Because the goal is to write 31 posts for the month, I know that the only way I can hope to complete the challenge is to plan my entire month of blogging. I choose topics, schedule publishing days, block out time for blogging every day and focus on only the writing during that time – no multi-tasking!

When I first started blogging, Ultimate Blog Challenge months were the only times I’d plan my blog posts for an entire month, (before that, I’d blog when I could fit it into my weekly schedule) …and guess what? Those Ultimate Blog Challenge months were the only ones when I blogged consistently!

Now I start every month with a blogging plan (editorial calendar), whether it is an Ultimate Bloging Challenge month or not (some months I don’t blog as often as others, but I still create a plan, choose my topics and schedule posts).

Taking the time to create a better plan for your home office, whether it’s for blogging or some other part of your business, pays off in the long run, when you are bound to see an increase in your productivity.

Have a great example of how better planning has made a difference in your home office? Share in a comment – I’d love to hear it!

Sign up for the Ultimate Blog Challenge – there’s no deadline, it’s free and I highly recommend it. Go to the website www.ultimateblogchallenge.com for details. *The Ultimate Blog Challenge months are January, April, July and October.*

The quote image was created using quozio.com – a great, free tool for creating and sharing quotes.

5 Tips to Help Concentrate on Major Projects in a Home Office

5 Tips to Help Concentrate on Major Projects

 

Concentrate on the work at hand…I think it’s more difficult than ever to do with social media and cell phones at the center of our daily lives. I used to think that multi-tasking was one of my best skills (as a WAHM with 3 kids, it was a necessity!); but I’ve come to the realization that multi-tasking isn’t the best approach to concentrate on the major projects in my home office.

Training myself to concentrate only on the project in front of me and focusing exclusively on it for a set amount of time, is the key to moving forward in my business.

What has helped me concentrate on my major projects and be more productive?

1) Scheduling a dedicated time for major projects

If I’m working on a major project that requires 10 hours of my time this week, then I will schedule those 10 hours over several days: an hour here, 45 minutes there, whatever fits in my schedule…because I know I don’t have 10 hours of uninterrupted time available.

2) Scheduling my major project time to coincide with my “peak performance” time

If I do this, it usually means I can get the project done sooner than I planned. For example, I am at my best in the morning and my least-focused later in the evening, so I don’t schedule time for working on major projects at 9:00 pm. I’d rather work on a major project early in the morning then check email or set up automated posts at 9:00 pm, when I don’t need to be creative.

3) Turning off distractions

What are your biggest distractions in your home office? Mine are the internet/social media, phone calls and (evening) TV. So I let calls to go voicemail, keep the TV off or limit my time on social media when I am working on an important project.

For me, this means actually logging out of social media sites (like Facebook or Twitter)…it’s too tempting to take a “quick” peek at Twitter – and before you know it, you’ve lost 20 minutes!

4) Starting the day with a Power Hour (or 30 minutes, most days)

I’ve read that your first hour of the day sets the tone for the rest of day…so I am making more effort to start my day on the right foot. This usually means getting up a little earlier, exercising, reading positive affirmations or personal growth articles to start out in the right frame of mind.

Whatever your “power hour” includes, the purpose is to have a plan for starting the day rather than hitting the snooze button and stressing out because you are running late.

5) Taking enough breaks

Working from home sometimes means we never take a break from our business. And that isn’t good for us or the business. So I am “scheduling” break time into my work time: after spending dedicated time on a major project, I immediately take a break.

That means a physical break too – getting up from my desk, going into another room to make a phone call, going outside for 10 minutes…it’s quite entertaining for my cats, I’m sure, to watch me dance and sing around the house on my 10 minute break! But it works! I come back in a better frame of mind, ready to concentrate on the important tasks of the day.

So those are a few ideas I’ve used to help me better concentrate on major projects in my home office. Do you have any to add to the list? Feel free to share in comments!

Quote - Concentrate all your thoughts upon the work at hand

Top photo courtesy of stockimages/FreeDigitalPhotos.net