Interactive Workshop: Managing Time Effectively
Open for: Interactive Workshop: Managing Time Effectively
Discover how to redirect your actions so to integrate the highest payoff activities that make the biggest difference in your success.
Invest Time Properly
Benjamin Franklin said, “Time is money.” But time is actually more valuable than money—if you lose money, you can earn it back. Lost time is gone forever.
Time management means doing the right actions at the right time, aligned with your goals, values, and purpose.
The Five D’s of Effective Time Management
When facing any task, choose from these five options:
Design
Make proactive choices. Plan your high-payoff activities and best practices for every area of life.
Disregard
If the time, effort, or cost doesn’t justify the benefits, ignore it. No negative consequences.
Diminish
The task is worthwhile but takes too much time. Consciously reduce how much effort you invest regularly.
Delegate
The task must be done and can be handed off safely.
Common pitfalls:
- Outdated beliefs about asking for help
- Being “penny wise, pound foolish”—saving money but losing high-value time or opportunities
Do It
If it doesn’t fit the other categories, commit and execute. Stop procrastinating. Build the habit. Empower yourself to improve your life continuously.
The Jar Demonstration
A professor filled a 5-gallon jar in front of his class:
- Rocks → “Is it full?” Class: “Yes.”
- Gravel (poured around rocks) → “Full now?” Class: “No.”
- Sand (poured around gravel) → “Full?” Class: “No.”
- Water (filled to top) → “What did you learn?”
Class: “There’s always room for more.”
Professor: “No. Put the rocks in first!“
Lesson for the Five D’s:
- Rocks = Design + Do It (priorities)
- Gravel = Diminish
- Sand = Delegate
- Water = Disregard
Schedule priority “rocks” first—daily, weekly, monthly. They create quality in exercise, family time, and recreation.
Time and Belief
Start with this belief: You have enough time—24 renewable hours daily—if used wisely.
Negative belief (“not enough time”) blocks progress. Track where time goes, clarify goals, and identify progressive/perpetual action steps.
Daily Time Use Analysis reveals unconscious habits, like a food log shows eating patterns. Life-changing awareness follows.
Weekly Time Survey totals time per task. Example: Americans spend ~1 hour/day on social media = 45 workdays/year (2 months full-time).
Time Management Sheet helps prioritize: Urgent vs. Important.
Breaking Habits
Old routines persist without reason.
Pot Roast Story:
Newlywed cuts ends off roast “like Mom.” Mom: “Like Granny.” Granny: “My pot was too small.”
Examine your habits objectively. Question: “Does the time/effort equal the benefits?”
Delegation example: Parents say “no time” for kids, but could teach shared responsibility for more quality bonding.
Personal story: Cut news consumption from 2 hours/day to 30 minutes = 3 extra months/year for high-value activities.
Sample Tools
Here are the full copy-paste ready Markdown tables for your WordPress page:
Daily Time Use Analysis
How I Spent My Time
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| 6:30 AM | |
| 7:00 AM | |
| 7:30 AM | |
| 8:00 AM | |
| 8:30 AM | |
| 9:00 AM | |
| 9:30 AM | |
| 10:00 AM | |
| 10:30 AM | |
| 11:00 AM | |
| 11:30 AM | |
| 12:00 PM | |
| 12:30 PM | |
| 1:00 PM | |
| 1:30 PM | |
| 2:00 PM | |
| 2:30 PM | |
| 3:00 PM | |
| 3:30 PM | |
| 4:00 PM | |
| 4:30 PM | |
| 5:00 PM | |
| 5:30 PM | |
| 6:00 PM | |
| 6:30 PM | |
| 7:00 PM | |
| 7:30 PM | |
| 8:00 PM | |
| 8:30 PM | |
| 9:00 PM | |
| 9:30 PM | |
| 10:00 PM |
Identify your most important to least important activities and total time spent at each level.
Weekly Time Survey
| Week of: __________ | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Task 1 | ||||||||
| Task 2 | ||||||||
| Task 3 | ||||||||
| Task 4 | ||||||||
| Task 5 | ||||||||
| Task 6 | ||||||||
| Total Hours |
Time Management Sheet
| Day/Week/Month | Urgent Tasks | Important Tasks |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | ||
| Tuesday | ||
| Wednesday | ||
| Thursday | ||
| Friday | ||
| Saturday | ||
| Sunday | ||
| Weekly Total |
Time vs. Value Analysis
| Activity/Task | Time Spent (hrs/wk) | Value/Benefit (1-10) | D Decision | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social Media | ||||
| News Consumption | ||||
| Family Time | ||||
| Exercise | ||||
| Work Projects | ||||
| Total |
D Decisions: Design | Disregard | Diminish | Delegate | Do It
Multi-Tasking and Multi-Shifting
Multi-tasking: Humans handle multiple tasks via “branching” (brain’s prefrontal cortex). Not frantic—smooth like pilots. TV watching pairs well with chores/exercise/web.
Multi-shifting: Life demands rotation: business, family, health. Weekly schedules balance priorities. Time management is an art.
Chronos vs. Kairos
- Chronos (chronological): Linear clock time—planting, watering schedules.
- Kairos (kairological): Growth/maturity time—unpredictable (pumpkins’ size, business growth, body fat loss).
Napa Valley wisdom: “The grape is the boss!” Trust the process; patience required.
Example: Fitness goal halved in 2 years—progress, not failure. Businesses grow at their pace despite chronological plans. Cultivate belief in your process.
Time slips away. Invest wisely—no guarantees of tomorrow.
Learn to Say “No”
Best time control word: “No.” Saying yes overloads your plate.
Why we say yes when we mean no:
- Guilt
- Wanting to be liked/avoid conflict
- Fear of criticism
- Unclear goals/low self-esteem
How to say no effectively:
- Be firm, calm, immediate
- Honest and brief—no excuses
- Repeat your reason if pressed
Fine-tune time use for life quality and success.
Workshop Survey