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Introduction
Laura Vandercam and the host delve into the intricacies of time management, covering topics such as logging time, combating guilt, and overcoming overwhelm. The chapter showcases Laura's expertise in the field and provides practical insights for improving personal time management skills.
Estimated Reading Time:3 minutes, 45s.
Podcast Length36 minutes, 50s.
Time tracking is something I often write about on ALOP, and rightfully so: tracking your time helps you gain perspective on your life, so you can determine whether the way you spend your time is true to your priorities and what’s important to you. On this week’s episode of Becoming Better, my special guest Laura Vanderkam and I dig into the intricacies of managing and tracking your time—including how and why you should keep a time log, the stories we tell ourselves around how we manage our time, and what Laura has learned from tracking her time every single day for years.
The episode is well worth a listen—and there’s a link to play the episode at the bottom of this post—but as always, in case you don’t have the time to do so, here are the best nuggets from our conversation, including how to track your time, and why you should do it.
Tracking your time is a pretty simple practice (here’s a printable PDF and an Excel template that’ll let you track a week). Each half-hour, you jot down how you spent your time during that previous half-hour. Once you have about a week’s worth of data, you look it over.
In looking over your time log, Laura recommends asking yourself a few things:
Different people will want to track different things. For example, depending on your situation, you may be interested in paying special attention to things such as how much time you spend:
You don’t have to make a pie chart and account for everything, but you’ll want to look out for whether you’re spending your time intentionally, in ways that are important to you.
Tracking your time takes less time and attention than you might think. It takes just a few seconds to jot down what you worked on during each half-hour chunk of time, and once you settle into the practice, you can update your time tracking sheet every hour or two, recalling what you just did.
There are countless benefits to tracking your time. Here are just a few of them:
There are countless other benefits, but these are a few of my favorites!
The post How to Track Your Time appeared first on Chris Bailey.
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