Get your brain in motion

Category: Management (Page 21 of 24)

Doing Your Things Without Losing Your Mind

Today, having a mile-long daily to-do list is not so difficult and rare!

Everyone is busy, and sometimes it seems so hard to get things done efficiently and effectively, not only at work but also in private life.

However, the busier you are, the most important is to manage your life and time to be more productive and not to waste your precious time. Actually, what is really important is to know how to start and how to create the space to give your best.

And following the 10 tips below by Lifehack, you could be able to do your things better!

1. Write It Down.
2. Get a Head Start.
3. Do Your Most Dreadead Task First.
4. Turn Off Distractions.
5. Take Breaks.
6. Batch Process.
7. Eat Breakfast.
8. Get Some Exercise.
9. Delegate.
10. Say No.

Read more on: http://bit.ly/XF96j5

PROCRASTINATION

Image source: http://bit.ly/w4zXA

Ten tips for using social media

The spread of social media has affected the way in which public institutions communicate with the public. Nowadays, governments have understood that social media have some benefits when used to be connected with citizens in a more transparent and accountable way, by communicating 1-to many rather than repeatedly 1-to-1. Social media are one of the few ways a government can directly and instantly receive feedback on its policies and decisions.

However, civil servants should be particularly careful when using social media, especially in their own time. In social media the boundaries between professional and personal can sometimes be blurred, and commenting on some issues could carry some risks, such as disclosing official information without authority or compromising the impartial service to the government.

For this reason, in UK Government Digital Service and Home Office have established social media guidelines for civil servants. The guidelines include these ten tips for using social media:

1. Have a clear idea of your objectives in using social media (behaviour change/service delivery/consultation/communication);

2. Learn the rules of each social media space before engaging;

3. Abide by the Civil Service Code and ask for advice if you are not sure;

4. Remember an official account belongs to the Department not the individual;

5. Communicate where your citizens are;

6. Build relationships with your stakeholders on and offline – social media is just one of many communication channels;

7. Try not to channel shift citizens backwards (move from email to telephone for example);

8. Do not open a channel of communication you cannot maintain;

9. Understand when a conversation should be taken offline;

10. Do not engage with users who are aggressive/abusive;

Read more on: http://bit.ly/KClufb

Barack Obama's tweet on November 7, 2012 in Paris after his re-election as US president

Image source: http://bit.ly/168Odoj

Quotes Can Light Up Your Day

Having a bad day? Do you need a bit of encouragement to move through it? One of the best things you can do is writing some simple sentences down and keep them in mind!

Here it is a quote by Lifehack  that could inspire you:

Quotes-Not-To-Miss

If you want to read 12 more quotations, take a look at http://bit.ly/16RsZK4

Image source: Lifehack

The good listener

If we were supposed to talk more than we listen, we would have two tongues and one ear.” Mark Twain

Listening is not the same as hearing: in order to listen effectively you need to use more than just your ears. The 10 principles to become a good listener are:

1. Stop talking
2. Prepare yourself to listen
3. Put the speaker at ease
4. Remove distractions
5. Empathise
6. Be patient
7. Avoid personal prejudice
8. Listen to the tone
9. Listen for ideas – not just words
10. Wait and watch for non-verbal communication

 
 
 
listen
 
image source: Lysh Thinks
 
 

Key strategies for effective Virtual Team Management

Project managers spend most of their time managing tasks and resources on projects. This is all true whether the project is being handled remotely or if your team is sitting in the same room with you.  It is just that the skills needed to effectively manage tend to skew more heavily on effective communication and the remote aspect can invite some challenges that don’t necessarily exist in the co-location project environment.

To manage a virtual team, it should be given more attention to six key strategies:

1)       Hold meetings regularly, not sporadically

Keep every meeting.  It can be very tempting to skip what might seem like a meaningless meeting.  Even if there is nothing new to report, it is still important to have those touch points with your team to keep them fully focused and engaged.  Even if your team status call is only 5 minutes long – you still need to have it.

2)       Streamline communications

Consolidate and prioritize communications using email, texting, blogging and staying in touch and being personal. Communications of an important nature should be cohesive and never delivered in fragmentary pieces that have to be pieced together by the receiver. Mutually assess the communication preferences of yourself and your team members to develop a communication plan.

3)       Be a good listener

When you are out of easy reach and you are tasked with managing the performance of others it is easy to get into the trap of needing to transmit lots of information.  Do not forget the listening part and always be sure to keep an open mind. Be present and try to enter the perspective of those speaking to you. This will help you ask effective questions and identify what direction to go with your own needs and agenda. You might be very pleasantly surprised at how much more information you get from your team this way.

4)       Manage deliverables, not activities

In the virtual project world, it is difficult to stay focused – and keep your team focused – on the project deliverables.  Do not get too bogged down in managing the minute details because the distance you have between you and those that are performing those activities make that type of micro managing even more difficult.  Focus on the higher-level tasks and the overall deliverables and expect your team to perform.

5)       Know your team members and manage accordingly

Every employee is different. Mobile workers make it easier for managers to take a more personalized approach in how they work and interact with members of their team. Understanding what enables each employee to perform at his or her best is the most important responsibility of a manager.

6)       Leverage technology

Today, the list available tools is endless, choose what suits best for your team and project.  Choose a solid tool – like a web-based PM scheduling, status and document sharing tool for teams as an example – and ensure that your project team know how to use it.  Putting a web-based solution in the hands of the project team can definitely make project manager’s job easier as task progress update responsibility can be delegated to those actually doing the work.

Read more on: http://bit.ly/PSelYs

Nuova immagine

Image source: http://bit.ly/a6edxp

« Older posts Newer posts »