Monday, September 28, 2009

A Farewell to Time Management

For decades there was a focus on Time Management. It was a belief that we could become more productive, and therefore happier, if we could only optimize the use of our limited time. Initial efforts were centered on the process of scheduling. The problem with scheduling people's time (as opposed to a machine's time) is that while it may keep you busy, it doesn't necessarily make you effective.

Personal scheduling gave way to Prioritization in the schools of Time Management. Doing the most important things turns-out to be much more effective than doing the greatest number of things. Thus Prioritization soon lead the way to Goal Setting, Mission Statements, Core Competencies, etc.

It was very effective, very profitable, and fun for a while. After the innovation wore off, 20th century productivity went back to feeling like the same old grind, just a bit more productive - but not enough to take us to the levels we had hoped to achieve.

The question has now become, how can we preserve that "innovation" stage where our efforts were effective, profitable, and fun? It's most easily recognized by feelings associated with Energy. When we're in that kind of state things happen in a tireless and joyful fashion. The issue now facing the 21st Century Active Investor is how can we manage to keep our personal Energy at those levels?

I have been enriched by the opportunity to drive to Snyder for a client. After passing the city of Sweetwater you enter Texas oil country. Here Texans have lived to bring us the Energy from fossil fuels underground that have driven our economy. But on this drive, you won't give oil a thought. What you see is miles and miles of windmills harvesting Energy from the air. If we told our ancestors we could get Energy from just the air they would have considered us mentally unstable; but today it's everywhere on the road to Snyder.

This is a metaphor for 21st Century Personal Energy Management. We don't have to go to great lengths underground to get a limited supply of Energy; it's abundantly available in our environment. The challenge is to harvest it. Windmills reach out their arms to be driven by the air moving in their environment. In a similar fashion we have to create processes that enable us to reach out and catch the Energy moving in our environment.The place to start is to acknowledge what causes our feelings to be high or low. Typically positive or negative perceptions of our environment create high and low feelings of Energy respectively; however each of us have our own Energy attractors.

With this internal guidance system in place, Active Investors can began to recognize those activities, people, and places that either drain or renew their Energy. Our personal Energy supply is both apparent (from our feelings - our internal guidance system) and abundant (from our environment - if we can recognize it). Our 21st Century challenge is now to manage our Energy by knowing how to continually reach out for more.

Image credit: goosegrease


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