The answer to that, my friends, like most things, is: yes and no. Some of the same strategies will be effective, but the work that we apply those strategies to is going to change. Depending on what our jobs are, it will be necessary to feel out the new routine and identify what areas have the most perceived risk, or negative consequences that could occur, (Babin, 2016, p. 253) due to poor time management. Forbes magazine recognizes that there are a wide span of problems a working person may face in the real world, and to that, they offer 30 Time Management Tips for Work-Life Balance, by Frances Booth. I will highlight some of my favorites below:
#19 (according to Booth's list): You can actually get an awful lot done in half an hour. Don’t just float because you’ve only got half an hour until your next meeting or appointment.
This is AMAZING advice! How often do we procrastinate because we convince ourselves we don't have enough time to get "it" done? When considering the awareness set of alternative possibilities when deciding what to do with our time (Babin, 2016, p. 257), it is easy to dismiss the one thing we have to do on the assumption that it is going to take awhile. Instead, think of every minute with the same potential as the next. What is the difference between the thirty minutes before your meeting and the last thirty minutes when you were productive? Nothing. There is no time like the NOW.
Another amazing strategy. By ending your workday at a fixed time, you cannot put anything off for later. Knowing that there is a time limit on getting everything done will force you to be productive and embrace the idea that there is no time like the present. Plus, when you finish, you are done for the day! No lingering responsibilities or to-do's (unless you are going into investment banking...in that case you're on your own).
Putting things off, no matter how much we procrastinators try to suppress the feeling, causes cognitive dissonance (Babin, 2016, 298). All of a sudden, when you become crunched for time and are struggling to get your work done, you are angry and scold yourself. Why didn't I just DO IT? To minimize this cognitive dissonance once and for all, it is time to shed the procrastination blanket and never look back, because good time management is truly the gift that keeps on giving.
Good luck!
References
Babin, B., & Harris, E. (2016). In CB 7 (7th ed., p.253-298). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.
Gupta, Sunil. "Marketing Reading: Creating Customer Value." Core Curriculum Readings Series. Boston: Harvard Business Publishing 8176, 2014.
Links
https://giphy.com/gifs/scared-college-old-bwkE04r0V3s9G
https://lifesjourneyblog.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/now.jpg?w=292
http://www.gyanibaba.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/459.jpg











