KEMBAR78
Get Off The Couch: How To Better Value Your Time As A Business Owner | PDF | Social Media | Popular Culture & Media Studies
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views3 pages

Get Off The Couch: How To Better Value Your Time As A Business Owner

This document discusses how business owners can better value their time by avoiding distractions and being more intentional about how they spend each day. It recommends asking clarifying questions to identify goals and priorities, planning each week in advance to stay focused on what matters most, and learning to say "no" to preserve time for the tasks that are truly important. The document stresses that time is a business owner's most valuable asset and should be spent wisely on achieving goals rather than given away freely or wasted on unimportant distractions.

Uploaded by

Ruffa Ozaeta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views3 pages

Get Off The Couch: How To Better Value Your Time As A Business Owner

This document discusses how business owners can better value their time by avoiding distractions and being more intentional about how they spend each day. It recommends asking clarifying questions to identify goals and priorities, planning each week in advance to stay focused on what matters most, and learning to say "no" to preserve time for the tasks that are truly important. The document stresses that time is a business owner's most valuable asset and should be spent wisely on achieving goals rather than given away freely or wasted on unimportant distractions.

Uploaded by

Ruffa Ozaeta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Get off the couch: How to better value your

time as a business owner


Tristan Wright

What’s your most valuable resource?

When I ask this question to my clients most say money, yet when I dig deeper they reveal their desire
to have not more money, but more time.

As a business owner time is a powerful asset, but unlike money, you can’t earn more. When time is
gone, it’s gone.

Like my clients, I’m sure you echo the belief that there are not enough hours in the day to do what
needs to be done. I disagree and don’t think that’s a valid argument, it’s a misconception. Here’s
what I mean.

Undervaluing time
Unfortunately, most of us undervalue the time we’ve been given. We ‘achieve’ that in many ways,
like the weekend couch-bludge. Chips in hand, coke at the ready we settle in for a Netflix-binge. Yet,
when we look outside we see a beautiful world worth exploring. Then at work, we’re swamped and
look outside and wish for a walk in nature.

What starts as fun or relaxation quickly forms a bad habit. Bad habits are toxic in business. The point
is, TV becomes a distraction and one that isn’t important. You need to focus on the big picture (not
the TV screen).

Distractions are everywhere on a daily basis. In fact, hugely successful empires have been built on
trying to distract you – think social media.

In 2013, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers’s released their annual Internet Trends report and
suggested that people check their phones 150 times per day and that more than 500 million photos
are shared on some social media apps per day, a figure that was predicted to double the following
year.

Social media, text messages, phone calls, emails the list goes on. Barring emergencies or work
priorities, most of what you experience in a day can be tallied-up to a distraction. If we allow it to
happen, we get frustrated and become stressed and that affects our output on what truly needs to be
done.

So, delete the tweet and call mum back later. Here’s the formula I use to block out distraction and
achieve what I need to.

First I start with a series of questions that sharpen my focus and allow me to identify priority over
procrastination. Each week these questions are always the same:
 What goals do I want to accomplish?
 What would I regret not achieving?
 What are my priorities?
 What makes me get out of bed every morning?

I’ve found answering these questions gives my working week structure and my life purpose. With
purpose comes motivation and that enables you to maximise your potential.

Have a plan
The next step is planning your day. Waking up to no plans is ideal if you’re on holiday and can sip
cocktails by the pool, but not in business. Lack of planning is a killer and allows your competition to
gain ground.

If your Monday morning starts with a ‘what needs to be done now’ moment you’re behind the eight-
ball and playing catch-up. That’s when distraction enters, all of a sudden emails assume the role of
priority and the snowball builds. Sound familiar?

On a Sunday I plan my entire week in advance, so when the alarm buzzes Monday morning I wake
up with a sense of mission and clarity. I’ve written down the tasks that need to be completed and
posted them to my project management software so my team knows what I’m working on (and that
saves a distracting conversation).

As I move through my tasks, I get a great sense of achievement (and enjoyment) out of crossing off
my list of things I’ve set as a priority. I also make it a point to pencil in specific times for self-care,
which often includes exercise, reflection, learning or just taking five minutes to catch my breath.

If time can never be replaced, how destructive can an entire unplanned day become? Very, an ill-
planned day leads to distraction and ultimately failure.

Don’t get anxious about it though, not every second of every day has to be structured with military
precision.

Spend time wisely


Remember the couch-bludge example before? We’re all guilty of that and you’re allowed to do it as
long you’ve planned your free time and can afford the rest. You need to spend your time wisely.

Free time means many things to many people and how you unwind is a matter for you. I deal with
clients that use their spare time to practise martial arts or play sport, spend time with family and
friends, read, visit weekend farmer’s markets, try new restaurants and bars.

Whatever it is you fill your free time with, make sure it’s still beneficial to the person you want to be
and the responsibilities you have. Don’t be a Charlie Sheen because he was never ‘winning’
behaving the way he did.

It’s rare to find somebody who truly believes in their self-worth. In business, you’re going to need it
because you’ll face more obstacles the further you go. You have to learn to let others know your
time is valuable.
As I’ve discussed, time is of huge value and you shouldn’t be giving yours away too freely. The
more you invest in the situations and problems of others the more you’re jeopardising the success of
your own needs and wants. This is like making deposits into everyone else’s bank account but never
putting a cent in your own.

There are obvious signs that you’re doing this:

Saying yes to everything: By accepting every request (business or social) that comes your way,
you’re putting other people’s priorities ahead of your own. If you want to smash the goals you’ve
sent, you need to learn to say ‘no’ to others.

You’re on call 24/7: Yeah, we all know who to blame here – smartphones. We’re expected to answer
the moment something comes through, but that’s unacceptable and a recipe for disaster. As I said
before, switch it off and learn to spend portions of your life without the constant buzz.

You allow tardiness: If a client or networker turns up late for lunch or a coffee, understand that it can
be valid but make sure they know it doesn’t become common or is accepted. When others disrespect
your time, you lose time to work on your goals.

If this is you, you need to establish boundaries and like a stickler, adhere to them. An 8 pm email
sent through can almost always wait and a 30-minute meeting should be wrapped up by the 20-
minute mark. It will take practice and a few attempts but soon others will get the picture you have
more important things to do.

Unfortunately, as a small business owner, the chance of success is stacked against you. Reclaiming
your time and prioritising how you use it is a vital step towards being where you wish to be. In
business, I advocate the need to be more selfish.

“Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live,
“ Oscar Wilde

No one else will value and respect your time more than you should your own. Make it count. If you
plan on accomplishing your dreams and achieving a massive amount of success in the process, the
key is to get very selfish with your time. It is your time, after all. It should be cherished, because it is
one thing we cannot buy more of and one thing we can never get back.

“A man who dares to waste one hour of time has not discovered the value of life.” Charles Darwin

You might also like