Sunday, March 24, 2013

[Bisnis-Karir] Digest Number 1454

Bisnis, Wiraswasta & Karir di  Indonesia

1 New Message

Digest #1454
1

Message

Sat Mar 23, 2013 8:33 pm (PDT) . Posted by:

"Ahmad Syamil" asyamil

Dear all,

FYI,

Ahmad Syamil
Arkansas State University
http://www.linkedin.com/in/asyamil2

================

The Power of No + Structured Time in a Large Company.

David Marcus,
President at PayPal.Com (an eBay unit).

When you're leading a large company, everyone wants a piece of you.
This makes time your most precious asset. How you manage it can truly
determine how successful you'll be. Chances are your calendar is
already overloaded with unavoidable obligations: board meetings,
committees, and various other necessary-but-fairly-unproductive
discussions. Throw in the meetings you accept because you don't want
to be rude and basically, you are screwed.

Of course you don't have to be an executive to find yourself
struggling to balance the endless demand for meetings with the need to
find time to actually get some work done.

Here are a few of the rules I've adopted that help me be more
effective (and preserve what's left of my sanity):

Rule #1: To be the master of YOUR time, be clear about your priorities.

If you don't decide how you're going to spend your time, someone will
do it for you. Start by picking the areas where you add the most
value. To help with this, here's how I organize my week:

Mondays: Corporate matters and financial reviews
Tuesdays: Product, design, and technology deep dives
Wednesdays: Check-in with my CFO, staff meeting, and business and
marketing reviews
Thursdays: External meetings
Fridays: Everything else

Because there's no such thing as a business lunch in California
(something I genuinely miss from my time in Europe), I have lots of
business dinners. I keep these to three a week or less to maintain a
balance with family time. You should make that a priority, too...

This schedule enables me to stay in touch with areas I want to go deep
on, monitor the pulse of the business, and it gives me the structure I
need to operate effectively. It also allows me to drive how I spend my
time vs. being a "victim" of the machine.

Rule #2: Say NO (a lot). It's okay. Really …

When I joined PayPal after the Zong acquisition, I took over the
Mobile team. This was a hot area and I was the new guy, so lots of
good folks wanted to meet. I didn't want to come across as arrogant,
plus I needed to meet people and understand how the company worked. So
I accepted almost every meeting request.

A few weeks of that really started to drag me down. I was spending so
much time in pleasant-but-mostly-useless meetings that I just couldn't
get much done. It was bad. I knew I needed to start declining
meetings, but I needed some criteria to help me choose and some
standard responses to streamline the whole process (and not hurt
anyone's feelings).

Here's what I came with:

Immediate Decline:

Meet and greet: "I'm XYZ, and I'd like to meet to introduce myself…" —
my response: "Sorry, but my calendar is really packed, I'm sure we
will interact soon when we need to work together on something. I'm
sure you'll understand, and I look forward to meeting you when the
time comes."

Let's catch up: "Hey, I'd like to set up time to catch up…" — "Sorry,
I'd love to catch up, but my calendar is really packed so I'm afraid I
can't accept meetings without a clear purpose. If there's something
specific you'd like to discuss, please send me an email, and we'll
figure things out. Sorry about that. I'm sure you'll understand."

Request for more information before accepting a meeting:
Topic not well defined: "I'd like to meet to discuss our point of sale
plans" — this is too vague. I started asking for at least a reason or
topic for the meeting and the desired outcome: A decision? On what?

Rule #3: Don't waste time in meetings. Ever.

Once you agree to a meeting make sure you get the most out of it. It
makes no sense to waste the first 20 minutes having someone flip
through slides to set the context. Request background material, read
it, and expect everyone to come fully prepared so you can focus on the
task at hand.

One other thing: When the topic has been covered, the meeting is over.
Don't use all the scheduled time just because it's on the calendar.
When it's over, it's over. Period.

Rule #4: Be Honest. Always.

When someone asks for feedback, don't be coy. You're not helping if
you're not honest. This applies to everyone: team members, peers, and
colleagues, potential partners, vendors . . . anyone. An inability to
say what you think quickly and clearly inevitably results in multiple
subsequent meetings that are a total waste of time for everyone
involved. Once you know what you're going to do—or not do—just say it.
Be polite and say it nicely, but don't waste everyone's time
(including yours). That shows a lack of respect . . . and courage.

GROUP FOOTER MESSAGE
Bergabunglah dengan milis lainnya:


Manajemen-Industri-subscribe@yahoogroups.com  ==> Manajemen Industri

Free-English-Course-subscribe@yahoogroups.com ==> Kursus Bahasa Inggris

PONSEL-INDONESIA-subscribe@yahoogroups.com ==> Telpon selular

HRD-POWER-subscribe@yahoogroups.com ==> Milis HRD

Indo-Job-subscribe@yahoogroups.com ==> Lowongan kerja luar negeri dan
beasiswa

Komputer dan Teknologi:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/KOMPUTER-TEKNOLOGI/

Manajemen produksi/operasi/supply chain/logistik:

http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/APICS-ID/

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