There is plenty in the media recently about multitasking and our inability to do it effectively. I’ve always considered myself a great multitasker and prided myself on being able to remember many things while working on multiple projects on and off throughout the day. Now I’m a mom tracking 4 calendars besides my own, or maybe because I tend to store trivial information about people I meet.
The information isn’t trivial to the person it is in regards to…but it would seem trivial to everyone else. For example early last week through an inquiry posted on Twitter I discovered someone I follow was going to be in a wedding soon and she was asking some fashion advice. Friday I still remembered that conversation and wished her will in her isle performance. She was absolutely flattered I remembered. To me it was just run of the mill politeness plus a random memory.
Anyway, I find myself remembering less lately. Specifically less of the important stuff.
So, I’ve started making more lists. (You’re thinking, “Did she just say more?”) Scary, I know. I’ve also started a scratch list at the bottom of my major to do list. In a sense I use this as my parking lot so I don’t have to pressure myself to remember it later.
If it doesn’t get on the list, it doesn’t get done.
Besides my rabid listing I’ve started doing something else. I don’t multitask anymore.
If I’m on twitter I’m reading, browsing or tweeting.
If I’m writing a blog post I hammer the keyboard until the post is finished.
If I’m browsing through my reader I stick with it until my research itch is sated or I’m simply tired of reading.
Before I would be doing all three at the same time and maybe even have email up plus a client project I was working on open too.
Want to try it?
- Pick a thing. Any ONE thing. If this is new to you pick an easy one for the early win!
- Decide if you are going to work until completion (short tasks) or for a set amount of time (major projects).
- Keep your parking lot handy and get to work.
- Write down thoughts that distract you from the main task at hand.
- Celebrate when you’re time is up or your task is finished. Celebrate doesn’t mean go shopping! It means take a mental break by eating a piece of chocolate.
Try it and let me know how it goes!
Nibbling away -
Sundi
Photo Credits: Mike Oliveri

It isn’t unusual for her clients to get emails from her at 3 in the morning, a most likely time for her to be up and working, and the least likely time for her phone to be ringing. If she could only figure out how to download and print assessment results, while she packed boxes and her suite case and slept at the same time life would be so much easier! Just last week she found herself sitting in a taxi in New York traffic headed for her next keynote speaker event while doing a coaching call she inadvertently forgot to move the following week’s call because of her trip to Dallas. Details, details, details. The client never knew she wasn’t at her desk but she had yet to realize she wouldn’t have time to type her notes up for the clients boss before their debrief the following week.
This might drive Mason and James crazy but I’m chopping their list, 7 Myths About Outsourcing. Some of these myths really hit home for me so I’m going to address them.