Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Why Time management doesn't work

 
"Time management is a misnomer.  The real challenge is in managing ourselves." - Dr. Stephen Covey

To state that the field of time management and its conventional methods are largely ineffective is a bold statement indeed, yet time and time again we find ourselves falling back into the same traps, the same bad habits and the same self defeating patterns.

Much like New Year's resolutions, our time management interventions leave us filled with a sense of deep personal disappointment and failure. Attempts at becoming 'more organised', at working 'smarter rather than harder' and even just working harder are not sustainable in the long term.   We chastise ourselves and blame ourselves for not trying hard enough and 'letting things get on top of us'.  This thinking is not only self defeating, but bad for our self esteem.  

If you can identify with your own personal time management failures, you are not alone. If your attempts have failed, the continual disappointment in one's self is destructive and ultimately self sabotaging.

So why do we fail? The answer is more complex than you may think.

The truth is we are not incompetent in designing our own time management strategies.  In this area, we can be surprisingly innovative. In fact it is preferable that we design strategies that will suit our individual personalities.  For example, a 'to-do' list will not work for every personality.  So if we have the ability to design our own strategies, what is the problem?

Firstly, we struggle to implement lasting change in our lives. For our new strategies to be successful, we need to understand the nature of habit formation.  Much like joining gym, until a strategy has become habitual and we have moved into effortless unthinking competence, we will fail to implement these strategies in the long term.

Secondly, we neglect the underlying core psychology that causes us to self sabotage.  Time management encompasses every area of our lives.  We therefore need to examine the core reasons why we are afraid of success in some areas, or inclined to sabotage and procrastinate in others based on a complex system of historical responses.  

Time management without accounting for psychology is futile.  To change our behaviour, we need to understand it first.  

I hope you enjoyed this first posting.  Please subscribe to this blog for more articles as we continue on our journey to make peace with the clock, and ourselves in the process.

1 comment:

  1. Time management is an essential skill that helps to keep our work under control, at the same time that it helps manage the schedule. To start managing time effectively, we need to set goals. When we know where we are going, we can then figure out what exactly needs to be done, in what order.

    Goal setting is must before we set any time management plan. Having a plan and knowing how to prioritize it is one best thing. For effective time management, I would recommend to use any good time management application. Personally, I use Replicon Software - http://goo.gl/yGF1mm

    ReplyDelete