You Can Do Anything in Just 15 Minutes
Posted on 21. Mar, 2008 by Elizabeth Potts Weinstein in Blog
Have something on your to-do list that you’ve been procrastinating forever? Maybe your bookkeeping or taxes, or your desk organization, writing your book, cleaning up your kid’s toys, writing new copy for your website, or finishing up a client project?
Here’s the secret — instead of working on your big project or task, just do it for 15 minutes.
I’ve been harnessing the power of 15 minutes for the last few weeks, helping me to organize my house, clean up my landscaping & front porch, get all my daily housekeeping done, give toys to charity, organize my desk, get my files cleaned up, cut down on email time, launch an affiliate program, and cut my to-do list down to size.
I originally learned this tip from flylady.net, who teach it in conjunction with running a smooth household. But you can use the Power of 15 Minutes in all aspects of your personal & business life to stop procrastination & overwhelm and finally get stuff done.
How does it work?
- Get a digital timer. You may call it a kitchen time or an “egg timer” — something that will count down time and buzz when your time is up.
- Pick the task or project on your to-do list that you’ve been procrastinating the longest.
- Set your timer for 15 minutes and work on that project for 15 minutes solid. No checking email. No checking twitter or facebook. For that matter, get off the internet. No answering the phone. Don’t answer your mobile (unless you are sure it’s your kids calling and they are either bleeding or in jail). You may need to go somewhere else to do this (coffee shop, library, cave).
- At the end of 15 minutes you are DONE. Yay!
- Acknowledge your progress. You can cross off that task on your list for the day. (if it seems weird to cross it off, write down “15 minutes on XYZ project” and cross that off) Amazing how much you can get done if you are NOT multitasking!
- Be happy! Don’t you feel like you’ve made progress! Congrats!
This also works great if you spend TOO MUCH time on a task. Set your timer for 15 minutes of internet surfing or email reading. At the end of 15 minutes, get back to work.
This article was featured in The Twenty Fourth Edition of the Carnival of Improving Life.
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