Skip to main content

6 Ways to Take Control of Your Workload

By Christine Reedy

Whether you’re trying to impress your new bossor gunning for a promotion, it can be hard to say no to more work. After all, you want everyone to see your hard-working, challenge-accepting, up-for-anything attitude. Unfortunately, every new project you agree to take on comes with a looming deadline—and before you know it, you can barely keep your head above water.
When you feel like projects are starting to slip through the cracks or you just can’t give your best because you’re spread too thin, take some time to address the situation before your to-do list gets the best of you. Here are a few ways to tackle an overwhelming workload and get back on track.

1. Create a Schedule

Keep a master schedule of all of your final deadlines by setting up a calendar on iCal or Google Calendar or using a nice planner (I love the set-up of Moleskine’s weekly notebooks). Seeing everything in one place can help you prioritize your time because you’ll know exactly what’s coming up, days and weeks in advance.
But don’t stop there—the trick to organizing your time is to break your projects up into mini-goals that will be easier to achieve. Small, attainable goals will help you bust through tough projects and stay on track.
For example, planning a large work eventrequires you to coordinate a number of groups, both inside and outside the office. Instead of setting one big deadline on the date of the event, schedule it out into smaller tasks during the weeks leading up to the event, like making sure your caterer has your menu, finalizing the correct headcount of attendees, and proofing and printing handouts. Meeting these mini-goals along the way will make sure that nothing is left to the last minute.

2. Stay Alert

Setting up your master schedule is only half the battle—the other half is actually using it. If you’re not in the habit of checking your calendar daily, you might need a little push in the right direction, so after you’ve set deadlines for yourself, also set some alerts. A pop-up on your computer or phone can be a quick reminder of what’s coming up (check out apps like 2Do, Wunderlist, and Todoist), or, if you use a paper planner, set up visual alerts with Post-Its reminding you of what’s happening during the week ahead.
These alerts could include checkpoints for big deadlines (e.g., at the halfway point to your project’s due date, you could set an alarm to make sure you ask your supervisor to review a draft of your report) or just general day-to-day reminders (for example, setting alerts for Mondays and Wednesdays, so you can make sure you’re on track before you run out of time at the end of the work week).

3. Organize It

When you’re working on several projects at the same time, your inbox can quickly explode into an overwhelming mess of information. And while you can’t stop the flow of emails coming in, you can at least keep your assignments organized and separated.
Try adding folders and color-coding to your inbox to help you find important information when you need it. For example, create a separate folder for each specific assignment you’re working on, which will let you easily scan for conversations or files that you need.
To go a step further, you can even set up a rule in Outlook to send email from certain addresses or with certain phrases in the subject line to the specified folders you’ve created. Gmail does the same thing if you set up a filter. Either method allows you to pre-sort your inbox, so you don’t have to spend valuable time sifting through the mess!

4. Get Little Stuff Out of the Way

Are you in charge of repetitive reports or spreadsheets that have to go out weekly or monthly? To save yourself time and energy (and free up valuable space on your already-crowded to-do list), create a template for each report, instead of starting from scratch each time.
Do you constantly receive emails asking similar questions? Create canned responses in Gmail or keep a Word doc on your desktop with answers for common issues (e.g., how to use your FTP site, who to contact for customer service, or the dates for upcoming trade shows). Having something you can easily cut and paste from will make answering routine email less time-consuming.
Doing the small stuff early and making it as streamlined as possible gives you more space to work on complex projects.

5. Keep Up to Date

Set aside a few minutes before you leave in the evening to look back at your schedule and update it with your daily progress (even just doing this weekly is a big help!). Didn’t quite finish a task? Move it to the next day or the next block of time you have scheduled for that particular project. It also helps to have some free time scheduled into each day (or even just once a week), which will allow you to be more flexible if you don’t meet a mini-goal and need to rearrange your schedule.
Keeping an eye on what you’re getting done each day can not only help you from feeling overwhelmed, it can also help you gauge how much time you really need for a given project or task. And knowing that, you’ll identify exactly how much you can take on in the future!

6. Talk About Sharing

If you start to realize that some of your mini-goals aren’t getting done because there isn’t enough time, because other projects are taking priority, or because new responsibilities keep landing on your desk, it may be time to talk to your supervisor about redistributing some of your work.
This is another reason having a detailed schedule of your projects planned out by day and week is crucial: If you have a clear idea of what needs to be done and in what timeframe, your boss can easily see what’s on your plate. Then, together, you can determine what’s most important to stay on your immediate to-do list and what can be pushed back or delegated to someone else.
Yes, it can be hard to let go, but it’s always more important to share the workload with the rest of your team and make your deadlines than try to prove that you can handle it all and not quite get there.
Finally, when you start to feel like you're losing it, take a big breath. Remember, control is all about keeping yourself organized and being honest about what you can handle.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NAMBA: A VILLAGE WHERE MANNA STILL FALLS.

Namba is a small and drought-stricken village in Southern part of Angola, a Seventh Day Adventist missionary who spent nearly a lifetime in Africa established a mission in this village. This white missionary left and for some years the mission was under the care of a local director. One year the rains failed to come, the crops did not grow, and the mission stores were emptied and no money to buy food if it could have been found. The mission director had been away for some weeks on a trip visiting distant mission schools. The believers at the Missao Adventista da Namba came to the end of their resources and food supply. The director's wife called the families together and told them the situation. Then she read to the people the promises of the Lord and told them of the manna which had been sent by God to His people in the time of Moses, assuring them that God could send them food in the same way, if necessary. After prayer, a little girl, about five years of

The nature of mindsets, part 1.The deeper reason to examine our mindsets is so we can mount a self-aware response to the great challenges of our day. We simply can’t respond to our personal and global problems in a meaningful way unless we also learn how to examine our mindsets as an integral part of how we live our lives

The nature of mindsets by Ash Buchanan A primer on how our underlying beliefs, attitudes and assumptions create our everyday lives — and our shared world Mindsets shape the lives we lead, the actions we take and the future possibilities of the world we live in. In this primer, we provide an overview of what mindsets are, why they matter and explore a range of practices you can use to be mindful about how and why you use them. What is a Mindset? “Your beliefs become your thoughts, your thoughts become your words, your words become your actions, your actions become your habits, your habits become your values, your values become your destiny.” — Mahatma Gandhi Eight principles can be used to describe the underlying nature of mindsets. 1) Mindsets are habits of mind The word mindset was first used in the 1930’s to mean “habits of mind formed by previous experience.” In simple terms, mindsets are deeply held beliefs, attitudes and assumptions we create about who we are and how t

HOW PRAYING IN TONGUES CAN BOOST YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM

It has been reported by medical science recently that praying can affect a sick person’s outcome for the better. One study showed that even when the sick person did not know people were praying for him/her, their health improved. As believers, we know personally what prayer has done for us in our times of sickness (Js. 5:15-16). But did you know that “praying in tongues” can actually make you healthier? Speaking in Tongues Can Boost Your Immune System A few years ago, a brain surgeon at Oral Roberts University did a study of what happens in the brain when people pray in tongues. He found that they secreted two chemicals that can boost the immune system by 35-40%! Think about the effects this can have on opportunistic diseases such as cancer. God created the immune system to be our defense against harmful invaders: bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic, and even malignant. It is when the immune system is weakened that such pathogens can attack and overwhelm our bodies. We all know tha