Somewhere along the way, my three worlds—personal, professional and organizational—became saturated with activity. More responsibility, more worthwhile tasks and more can’t-miss family moments mean that decisions about what to do and when to do it are more important than ever.
A productive life doesn’t happen by accident. You don’t stumble upon great personal choices, plans, priorities and goals. One of the most important lessons about personal productivity is that you have to spend intentional time planning your daily and weekly schedule.
U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower said it this way:
I have two kinds of problems, the urgent and the important. The urgent are not important, and the important are never urgent.
That statement is at the heart of the Eisenhower Matrix, a method for making consistently good decisions about time and your agenda.
I set aside my first hour on Monday morning to plan and prioritize the coming week. It’s my planned weekly time to make decisions about important, unimportant, urgent and not urgent tasks.
Here’s how it works. In what is now called the Eisenhower Decision Principle, tasks are evaluated and sorted using important-unimportant and urgent-not urgent criteria. Those tasks are then placed in one of four quadrants in the Eisenhower Box or Matrix.
You may do this intuitively but consider placing daily and weekly tasks in the proper perspective. Sort important-unimportant and urgent-not urgent tasks to make good decisions about your schedule:
So what’s the Big Idea?
One of the most important lessons about personal productivity is that you have to spend intentional time planning your daily and weekly schedule. Know what to do now, what to schedule later, what to delegate to someone else and what to delete. Make better decisions with the Eisenhower Matrix.
Resources
Source
“Time Management,” Accessed April 23, 2015, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_management.