TRAINING
AND DEVELOPMENT
Making It All Happen With
The Time Available
We are overwhelmed with information. David Shenk in Data Smog writes, "I
was thinking that information was power. I now regard this as one of the great seductive
myths of our time". Today we are on information overload.
We are overwhelmed with things to do. Opportunities for filling a day abound
everything serves some purpose: learning, meeting a responsibility, preparing for
something, earning money or paying for something. In 1940, the average adult had 100,000
items to consume. Today the average adult has over 2 million items to consume. In the
workplace, while specializing was the norm in the past, the ability to do many things is
expected in todays world.
How you use your time determines:
• Your rewards
• Your relationships
• Your time available
Time is the only resource that cannot be saved, stored, or held in reserve: It ticks by
and is gone forever. While little can be done during an individual second, by making use
of many seconds, and many minutes, and hours, and days
. you can accomplish whatever
you set your mind to accomplish.
You can put the resource of time back into your control and accomplish whats
important to you: This program will show you how.
At the end, you probably wont say I wish I made another meeting or filed
more paper., but as a wise friend of mine says, Youll want the peace of
mind in knowing you made the most of your time and lead a life of which you are proud
a life balanced in what you wanted to accomplish.
You'll learn ways to...
• Identify and recapture lost hours
• Determine the right things for you to do
• Gain the peace of mind and success you want
You and your people will learn powerful new ways
to...
-
Evaluate your current use of time and find lost hours available.
Determine easily what you want to accomplish and where your time is spent.
-
Evaluate your best use of time.
Create an environment that will allow you to spend your time that best meets all
your needs.
-
Organize everything you must deal with to survive.
Discover tools for dealing with the overload of "in box" and getting it
to the "out box".
INSTRUCTOR:
JEFFREY HANSLER
For
a .pdf version of this page click
here.
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