Tuesday, May 26, 2020

When Done Is Better Than Perfect - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career

When Done Is Better Than Perfect - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career There are some times when you have to accept that you will be unable to do your best work. I know this sounds awful, but it isnt, its a matter of prioritization. You cannot be successful and be perfect. You have to sometimes accept that good and done are better than reaching for perfection and taking far too long than a project deserves. As an example, I recently created a video for one of my companies, InformedIM. I really wanted the video to be absolutely perfect, but Im completely aware that I have client work on my plate that needs to be the priority. So it is, I saved myself from being less than perfect or worse, late, on my client work by having a video thats less than perfect. Its good, but its not my version of perfect. Youll note that I said my version of perfect. Thats just it, we all have much higher standards of ourselves than we do of others. There are times when you have to choose which level you will attain on a task, your perfection or others good. When is done better than perfect? Heres a fun exercise to figure out which projects should get your perfection and which should get others good: Open up a blank Excel worksheet and list your weeks tasks in Column A. Assign a value to each task from 1-10 of how important each task is in Column B (my clients are always a 10 in importance). In Column C, type in how long, as a best guess, it will take to complete the task to your vision of perfection. For Column D, type in how long, as a best guess, it will take to complete the task to the level of good. Now add up columns C and D. For most people, this is an eye opening exercise. If you do everything to perfection, youll be in the fast lane headed towards burnout. Eyes opened? Now lets continue the excercise- Sort your Excel spreadsheet by Column B (how important each task is) from largest to smallest. Copy Column D to a new Column E, this will become your real time availability for perfection. Set up Column E to show its sum in real time. (The Excel function is =SUM(E1:E??) where ?? is the last row) Starting at the top of your sheet, individually replace the values in Column E (Real Time Availability) with Column C (Perfection) until youve reached a feasible amount of time to fit into your week. Youve just chosen which tasks can be completed to perfection this week and which will have to be good and done. After a few weeks of practice youll be able to ditch the Excel sheet and get better at prioritizing your tasks on your own. Best of luck! Author: Nick Inglis is the Founder/CEO of LeftGen Information Management Group (InformedIM, SolveIM, ClearIM AgentIM), an expert on enterprise software, and is the author of the AIIM SharePoint Governance Toolkit. Nick has worked with companies as diverse as Ernst Young, Shell and Canon. Nick is a keynote speaker on the topics of SharePoint, Information Management and Collaborative Technologies.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.