In 2007, just after his cancer diagnosis, Carnegie Mellon professor Randy Pausch gave a well received lecture on Time Management. These are my notes (slides here, transcript here).
Side note - he is better known for his Last Lecture on Achieving Your Childhood Dreams - ironically given before this Time Management talk.
Money vs Time
- We are very good at dealing with money, but very bad at dealing with time. Having an idea of how much your time costs helps you start making tradeoffs better.
- We have to manage our time better than we manage our money. We have money budgets, what about time budgets?
- We are in a "Time Famine" - nobody says they have "too much time". Yet The typical office worker wastes almost 2 hrs a day at work, and 28 hours a week on TV. This isn't just a one-off problem - you can't solve it one week and then go back to normal - it's systemic and requries change in fundamental processes to address this once and for all.
- The goal is to have fun, be happier, lead a more meaningful life. If you're not going to have fun, why do it?
- Being successful doesn't make you manage your time well. Managing your time well does make you successful.
- Turn money into time - Hire someone to do chores. Esp if you have kids.
Goals, Priorities, Planning
- Always ask: Why am I doing this, What is the goal? Why will I succeed? What will happen if I don't do it?
- It's more important to do the right things, rather than do things right.
- Pareto Principle, 80/20 rule. Focus on the high value/impact things.
- People asked Walt how he built Disneyland in 366 days. His reply: "We used every one of them."
- Planning is impt. Failing to plan = planning to fail. Have a plan for day/week/quarter.
- You can still be fluid - plans can change.
- Todos - Break things down into small steps. "Get tenure" is not a todo. Eat your frog - do the ugliest thing first.
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Prioritization (MOST IMPORTANT) Covey/Eisenhower Matrix
- urgent + important
- not urgent + important
- urgent + unimportant
- not urgent + unimportant
- the trick is to not do unimportant things, and to tackle important things before they become urgent.
- Keep your desk clear - have 1 thing on your desk
- Touch each piece of paper, email once. Inbox is not your todo list. File the email away and put it on your todo list.
- A filing system is absolutely essential. Have one place in the house where any piece of paper goes. (Ditto in the cloud/computer)
- Have at least two, maybe three monitors. Using just one "is like eating off the airplane tray."
- Productivity Stack:
- Todolist
- Inbox
- Calendar. Dont use your brain to remember your appointments.
- Standing during phone calls - will be much faster. Don't get comfortable. "I'd love to keep talking with you but I have students waiting."
- Exercise on bike - can be spent on phone if you have a headset
- Write a Thank You note. Tangible way of telling someone you appreciated something. It makes you rare, they remember you well.
- The dog - reminds you you have better things to do
- Chair - make your office comfortable for you, optionally comfortable for others (eg folding chair).
- You do not find time to do something, you make time. And you make time by electing not to do something else.
- Learn to say no. Opportunity cost is real. "Gentle no" = "I'll be your backup". "If you need an 8th person I'll be there."
- Find your creative time and defend it ruthlessly. It varies for people - could be 10pm-Midnight.
- Find your dead time and do stuff where you don't need to be at your best.
- Interruption takes 6-9mins, but recovery takes 4-5mins. Got to find ways to reduce frequency of interruptions. Turn phone calls into emails. Batch interactions with other people.
- Giving hints to cut meetings short: Get up, walk to the door, thank them, shake their hand. Walk them out of the room.
- Time journals - monitor and update thru the day. Fred Brooks had actual time clocks.
- Look at open blocks where you know you are going to be wasting time, as gaps between blocks - make up a fake class.
- Delegate.
- "How am I wasting other people's time?"
- You become more efficient at work so you can leave on time and spend it with the people you love. Once you have kids the stakes are real.
Procrastination
- Sometimes you get lucky - if you wait long enough you may not have to do it
- Sometimes you want to avoid Parkinson's Law - Work expands to fill the time available for it.
- But key realization - doing things at the last minute is very expensive. If you push things up to the deadline that's where all the stress comes from
- Make a fake deadline and pretend it is real.
- Identify why you're procrastinating - afraid you are going to fail? scared to ask somebody for something? Sometimes you just have to ask.
Delegation
- Grant Authority + Responsibility
- Delegate but always do the ugliest job yourself, so it is very clear you are willing to do what you ask
- Treat your people well, esp staff/secretaries
- Don't be vague:
- Give specific thing to do
- Specific date/time
- Specific penalty/reward
- Challenge people: delegate until they complain
- Communication has to be CLEAR - and written
- Don't tell them HOW to do it - tell them what you need done, let them come up with solutions. This is how to work with people smarter than you.
- Offer relative importance - so people know what order to do them in
- Beware upward delegation - step back.
- Carrots > Sticks. Reinforce behavior you like. "Thank you I really appreciate you did a good job."
Meetings
- Take everybody's phones in a meeting. Be present.
- A scribe should take One minute minutes at the end. What decisions got made, and who is responsible for what.
Tools
- "Computers are faster, they just take longer."
- Technology has to make your life better, end to end. eg. if it changes workflow. "Just a little bit faster" is not good enough.
- don't delete email
- If you want something done, don't send it to 5 people. Send it to ONE person. use alf weaver specificity rules.
- If person has not responded in 48 hours, nag them, bc their response rate will be zero
- It's not a vacation if you're reading email
Reporting Up
- Ask when is next meeting, what you want by then, who to turn to for help
Life Advice
- Kill your television. Average American spends 28 hrs/wk on TV.
- Eat, sleep, exercise.
- Never break a promise, but re-negotiate them if need be.
- If you haven’t got time to do it right, you don’t have time to do it wrong.
- Recognize that most things are pass/fail. Good Enough is good enough.
- Feedback loops: ask in confidence.
Call to Action
- Put your TODO list in priority order
- Do a time journal or count hours of TV you watch
- Make a note to revisit this in 30 days and ask "What Have I Changed?"
Style Notes
- He often uses humor - noting the optimistic side of his very grim situation, giving some relief to his audience while also reminding them of the importance of his message.
- He is also extremely respectful - being humble to specific members of the audience ("Gabe is REALLY in good shape", "I am NOT smarter than Jim Calhoun", "Am I giving a talk with Alf Weaver in the audience?"), as well as the venue/general audience itself ("there aren't many better PhD programs in history than this one").
- He brings in personal stories and examples, often involving his wife, and they are usually relatable and funny. His slides use photos from his own life living the things he talks about.
- The anecdotes also inject some variety - 40 minutes in he breaks for a tangent about his dog and a tiny debate he had with his wife.
- Vocal variation - 53 minutes in he screams "PUT THE CIGARETTE OUT MOM" and that is a nice spike in decibels.
- Ending is really good: He ends with actionable things to do, and a nice reminder of why this is important:
"If I haven't changed anything, then we still had a pleasant hour together. If you have changed things, then you'll probably have a lot more time to spend with the ones you love. And that's important, time is all we have. And you may find one day, you have less than you think."