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Tracking your time is a crucial part of time management. The only way to improve your time management is to track your time. This shows exactly where your time goes.
It also provides you with the necessary information to bill your clients, plan future projects, and set your rates. It will also show you where you need to improve your work by reducing the waste in your process.
A time management app, daily planner, or planning spreadsheet are great tools for tracking your time. You can track your time with a stopwatch or stopwatch app for your phone, tablet, or desktop.
Set Boundaries
Set boundaries to protect both your time and your workload. You need to be in control of your time and schedule and you can’t do this if you don’t set boundaries.
Be realistic about your workload. Keep track of your projects so you’ll know your availability. This keeps you from taking on work you can’t handle. Without boundaries, we can fall into scope creep (allowing a project to get bigger in scope than originally planned).
Don’t say yes to every request. If too many clients want too much work at the same time, something can’t be completed. Tasks for one client will get bumped to another day, and you could lose that client entirely. Squeezing too much work into too little time will reduce the quality of that work.
Friends and family walking into your workspace are some of the most prominent distractions when working from home. People around you must respect your time. Train everyone about what you will and will not do, and when you’ll respond. Be clear about your work hours and ask them not to disturb you during those hours.
If you work from home, it can be difficult to get friends and family to understand you’re busy and not available to them. They often think it’s okay to interrupt any time they want. Something as simple as a spouse walking into your room to talk for a minute can end up wasting 30 minutes of work time.
Don’t answer every phone call. Let them leave a message that you’ll check later. If you do answer the phone, start with the information that you only have a minute to talk. If it’s not important, call them back. Only respond to texts and messages during work hours if they’re important.
Reduce Distractions
As a freelancer working from home, we have a virtually endless supply of distractions. Distractions come in many forms including housework, watching TV, scrolling endlessly online, and even reading the mail.
It’s easy to fall into the never-ending scroll of social media. Freelancers often work alone, so people on social media often become our “co-workers”. Usually, they’re just people to talk to about anything but work. Even things we should do for work, such as checking email, can become a distraction.
Resist the temptation to constantly check for a new post or email. Our minds often want the dopamine rush of seeing something new in our feeds or inboxes. However, this is an empty rush that doesn’t satisfy the need, so we allow it to happen more and more trying to fulfill the need.
Focus on work and put social media and email out of your mind. Only check them when it’s time for a short break. Even then, pay attention to the time you’re on those platforms, and don’t allow yourself to get lost in the endless scroll and conversations. Save that for after work.
Set your phone to silent. This will remove the temptation to answer the phone when it’s hard to focus and you’re looking for a distraction.
One way of setting boundaries and reducing distractions is by setting up a home office. Your family will know that you’re not available to talk or partake in activities when you’re in your office. Remove distractions from your office so you can focus on work.
Take Breaks
It seems counterintuitive to stop working when you’re supposed to be managing your time but working for too long at a time can slow you down and allow your mind to wander. Taking a break can boost your physical and mental energy and keep you from losing focus. A break can stimulate dopamine and serotonin, which can make you more productive.
The frequency and length of the breaks are up to you, but it’s ideal to keep them short and not take too many. Experiment and decide what works best for your productivity. Set a timer for your break and stick to the set time.
Also, take a short break between unrelated tasks. This helps refresh your mind and makes it easier to start the next task smoothly. It is especially helpful once you’ve finished the work for one client and you’re moving to the next one.
Automate When Possible