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How to Stop Being Last Minute with Your Time Management

Young businessman running in a city street

This is a guest post by Brenda Berg. She is a professional with over 15 years of experience in business management, marketing and entrepreneurship. Consultant and tutor for college students and entrepreneurs at https://AustralianHelp.com/. She is self-motivated results driven individual who is encouraged to travel and share gained experience in career, business and self-development.


Are you the kind of person who’s always running late? Do you always have to text ‘I’m running behind by five minutes’ to the people waiting for you? Then you may have an issue with time management. There are psychological elements to being chronically late, but it is something you can change about yourself. Here’s why being constantly late is affecting you, and how you can start to make the change.

Always being late will have an effect on your life

Being perpetually late can hurt you in all areas of your life. Researcher Diana DeLonzor studied lateness and wrote about her findings in her book, Never Be Late Again. She says that lateness is seen as rudeness or even a power play by others, but in fact, that’s often not the case. In fact, the person that gets hurt the most by your lateness is usually you.

Think about it. If you’re continually late for work, your boss will reprimand you. If you’re late often enough, you can be fired. Be late in filing your taxes, and you can be fined. If you’re always late to meet your friends, you can even lose friendships as they feel disrespected.

As you can see, lateness is a more serious problem than most people think. DeLonzor says that lateness habits are instilled in childhood, and so are ingrained into your psyche by the time you’re an adult. As such, it can feel as though there’s no way out of it, that lateness is just a part of your personality. In fact, though, it’s something you can change so its stops having such an impact on your life.

The three kinds of late people

One of the most interesting theories DeLonzor came up with was the different types of late people. There are three main groups that she identified, all that struggle with lateness for different reasons, according to the research.

The Deadliner: This person lives for the thrill of rushing to meet a deadline. They say that they work their best while under pressure, and can’t cope if they feel they’re wasting time. That means they may overload themselves, or rush from one place to the other without a break in between.

The Producer: This person hates the idea of having any time wasted. They’re great makers of to do lists, and inevitably create lists that they can never hope to finish. They’re usually engaging in ‘magical thinking’, which leads them to believe they can do more in a day than they realistically can.

The Absent-Minded Professor: This person is easily distracted. If they need to leave the house right now, they’ll stop on the way out of the door to fix a picture that’s crooked, or to pull to curtains shut properly. They’re always late as they can’t prioritize what’s more important. It can often be the case that this person has a form of ADHD or another attention disorder that makes it harder for them to focus on what they need to be doing.

If you see yourself in any of these groups, then you have a lateness problem that you need to address. Luckily though, it is possible to turn things around, no matter how bad you feel your problem is.

How to start getting a grip on lateness

Ok, so you’ve worked out that you’re really struggling to get anything done on time. However, you also feel like there just isn’t enough time in the day to get things done. How do you get around this? The answer is, says Gareth Johnson from Academized, to sit down and analyze your time. ‘I used to feel like I was working all hours of the day, but I couldn’t fit anything in’ he says. ‘I was starting to become late with my deadlines, which of course I couldn’t let keep happening. A friend suggested to me I log all of my time over a week, and see how I was really spending it.’

According to the article by Nagesh Belludi, time logging is the best way to see how you’re managing your time. Over the course of a week, log everything you do in 10 or 15 minute increments. This, ironically, can be time-consuming. However, the results are well worth it. At the end of the week, you’ll have a comprehensive account of how you’re really using your time.

Many people who try this are astounded by how much time they waste in a day. There’s many ways you could be leaking time and not even know it. You could be spending ten minutes every day talking to co-workers when you should be working. Maybe you’re busy scrolling through social media when you should be heading out to pick up the kids from school. You could also be losing time fixing unimportant things, rather than handling the main issue that’s in front of you.

You’ll also see that you’re doing work that really should be done by other people. For example, you may be an executive, but you’re still spending a couple of hours in the week booking flights and hotels for an upcoming trip. Why are you doing this? Is there an assistant who can help you by taking on jobs such as these?

Another issue that may show up in your log is that you’re wasting time as you don’t have the right skills or tools to do the work you need to do. If you’re spending too long trying to navigate Microsoft Excel, or you’re fighting with a software program that isn’t suited to the task, you’re wasting time. You’ll need to either develop the skill or change the tool in order to claim that time back.

What now?

Now you’ve gathered this data, you’ll have to decide what to do with it. What you do will be very much dependent on what you found in your log. Here are a few examples of actions you may want to take.

Tips for managing your time better

 

So you already have the main strategies for managing your time better. There are lots of other strategies you can implement to help you improve your time keeping, too. Here are some of the best ones to try as you look to change your thinking on managing your time:

Use these tips and tools, and you can be more productive in your everyday life. It is possible to end your lateness for good.


This is a guest post by Brenda Berg. She is a professional with over 15 years of experience in business management, marketing and entrepreneurship. Consultant and tutor for college students and entrepreneurs at https://AustralianHelp.com/. She is self-motivated results driven individual who is encouraged to travel and share gained experience in career, business and self-development.

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