Beat Parkinsons Law and do more in less time
Do you ever feel less motivated and less productive when you have lots of time available?
Planning a busy day (and staying focussed) can be very challenging, but no planning and multitasking even leads to poorer results.
The solution is to use Parkinson's Law for time setting and improving your productivity
Parkinson's Law says that the more time you dedicate to a task, the more time you will spend on that task.
This can lead to stress because you tend to postpone difficult tasks till the end, knowing you have plenty of time. It is much better to put a tight time limit on your task; this way, you feel the time pressure, and most people need that little pressure to be productive.
As you see, this is not a time management or productivity technique, but Parkinson's Law is often used in combination with other time management techniques such as time blocking, the Pomodoro technique, ...
This combination makes it so powerful.
Strategies to beat Parkinson's Law
Plan carefully
When you plan your work in advance, you will be working more efficiently and less likely to procrastinate. Creating a plan also helps you manage your time more efficiently.
When you create a plan, you have to:
Set shorter deadlines
knowing you have a tight deadline encourages you to take immediate action, and this prevents you from procrastination
Use time-blocking
Use the Pomodoro technique
The short breaks after each segment help keep your mind fresh.
Review and adjust
By mastering all this, you will use your time more effectively and be more productive.
Pro's and Con's
This time management technique is especially useful for professional environments, entrepreneurs and personal development. It helps you manage your time and daily routines.
People in more artistic branches will not have much advantage of this, because you cannot measure creativity in time. Creativity comes and goes sudden.
Pro's:
Why is it called Parkinson's Law?
In here, he wrote a story about a woman whose sole task for the day was to send a postcard. She had an entire day to complete this task, so she spends one hour finding a right card, 90 minutes writing that card, she took her time looking for an umbrella, a slow walk to the post office, ...
And at the end, it really took her a whole day to do something she could have done in an hour.