5 Easy Steps to Avoid Procrastination
If staring at your?goals?for long enough could motivate you to start working towards them, it would have been perfect.
Unfortunately, it is not so. The reality is vastly different.
You sit on your laptop for hours, doing things, but at the end of the day you find you have not ticked off majority of items on your to-do list.
On a weekend you sit down with your partner with a drink in hand and in a mood to discuss your future but you realize you are still as far away from your dreams as you were five years ago.
You know that the time has come to take drastic measures but you have no clue about how or what.
Procrastination is more a mindset issue and mindsets are not changed in a day.
But while you are working on your mindset there are a couple of things you can start working on a framework that helps you avoid procrastination.
Step 1: Have at least a week’s schedule ready in your?calendar
When you do not have something concrete to go on, you tend to procrastinate.
Doing tasks that are trivial or important for you.
When you know the next three things you are supposed to be doing, it will be that much more difficult to waste time doing nothing.
You do not need to sit down and create the schedule for the next seven days in one dedicated session.
Schedule tasks in your calendar as?they come up. And very soon you will have a full calendar. Maybe more than you can manage. And when you have a full calendar it is really difficult to waste time doing nothing.
How to create a calendar schedule
Here is a?post?I recently wrote about creating schedules, but here is a quick process you can adopt to fill up your calendar:
Putting tasks in a calendar has another advantage.
The moment you put a task in the calendar, you don’t need to remember them and hence clear your mind space to focus on the task at hand.
If you cannot decide the priority of the task or find time slots immediately, put them in your Superlist.
In case you do not know, a?Superlist?is a combined list of all the personal and professional tasks you need to finish.
I believe in giving equal importance to personal and professional tasks, Otherwise you will be torn between the two and not have the much coveted?work-life balance.
Step 2: Get an accountability buddy
I am sure you are telling yourself that it “looks” great to get the calendar set up and filled but how to ensure that you actually do that task scheduled there?
Fair point.
Solution:?Get an accountability buddy.
Someone who will hold you accountable for finishing the tasks you are supposed to do, according to your own calendar.
This accountability buddy can be you yourself or someone else.
Write down the task for the day on a sticky note and put it up on your workstation. At the end as you complete the task, strike them off the list and lo, you have acted as your own accountability buddy.
And if you haven’t tried this before, let me assure you it is an immense pleasure scratching out a task from your list.
If this doesn’t work for you, you can make someone else your accountability buddy.
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It can be your colleague, boss, family member or a social media friend. Someone you look up to and whose words mean a lot to you.
Fix up a time — daily, weekly or biweekly — with your buddy to give them an honest account of how much you were expected to finish and how much you actually did.
Initially, just having an accountability buddy will not help you do the task. But as time progresses you will be motivated to finish the task just because you can tell your buddy that you have finished them.
In return, you can be their accountability buddy as well.
If it’s difficult for you to find an?accountability buddy?within your family or friends, look for them on Facebook or LinkedIn. These sites are teeming with groups of like-minded people who are looking for an accountability buddy so they can get more done.
Step 3: Minimize distractions while you’re?working
Distraction is a major factor for procrastination.
Take whatever drastic step you need to, for minimizing distractions while you are working. Distractions that prevent you from focusing on the task at hand.
Some suggestions for minimizing distractions:
Step 4: Reward yourself when a task is accomplished
Do not wait for the big goal to be completed before you reward yourself. Organizations have known the?effect of reward system?on employee motivation for long.
Celebrate the small wins — completion of smallest steps towards that big goal.
When you celebrate these small wins, it releases the happiness hormone — dopamine — and your mind starts getting used to it, propelling you towards completing tasks that bring it so much happiness.
Basically you are tricking your brain into letting you focus and finish a task so that they can get a shot of dopamine when you finish.
Sounds more like an addiction!! But then you do want to get addicted to finishing tasks on your calendar ??.
Step 5: Spend time with?yourself
Remember we said that procrastination is a mindset issue and you must work towards changing that?
The first step towards this is spending time with yourself.
Talk to yourself, analyze your own actions and behavior to understand why you procrastinate.
Do you procrastinate on all tasks across the board?
Or are there some specific types of tasks you tend to procrastinate on? Why?
Are there specific times during the day when you feel too lazy to work? How can that be rectified?
Holding these dialogues will slowly take you towards removing these obstacles.
Where do you go from?here?
We can explore all we want about what procrastination is, why you procrastinate and how you can overcome procrastination. But you need to start developing your own framework to avoid procrastination. According to the steps I have outlined above to actually start working towards them.
As you finish reading this post, I want to take you to take your first step towards beating procrastination.
Pick up a task (from your SuperList or to-do list) that needs to get done and schedule it in your calendar for today.
After completing, strike it off your list and reward yourself for completing the task.
You have taken the first baby step towards overcoming procrastination and now it’s time for the next one.
Founder & CEO at InKnoWin Consulting | Transformative Leadership | Innovation and Knowledge Management | Sustainability |
1 年Thanks Shweta .for the timely post!
R&D Project Manager - Memory & Storage at Keysight Technologies
1 年Pomodoro technique is also great…esp if you don’t get a continuous stretch of time to work e.g. when faced with frequent interruptions or meetings. I learnt it from a senior career coach..we even did a 20-25 minutes “do-it-together” pomodoro, at the end of which we discussed how it went. ?? your “accountability buddy” point reminded me of that. In general, it’s a good idea to have a, although be it a silent “company” at work, methinks. :-) Because there’s a “social” aspect attached to our well-being, however workaholics we might be.
Consultant - L&D, Networker, Storyteller & Training Facilitator
1 年Shweta . Thanks for sharing the simple ways to avoid procrastination.