If you said anything other than time you would be wrong. Time is the only non-renewable resource you will ever have. You can acquire more of almost everything except time. More friends, more money, more possessions, more wealth can all be acquired but you can’t acquire more time.
As a sales professional you are paid in direct proportion to how well you use your time. There are 1,440 minutes in a day. How many of those minutes are you productive? How many of those minutes do you waste?
By most accounts people are productive less than ten percent of those 1,440 minutes each day. Lee Iacocca, one of the most well respected CEOs of our time, admitted that he was productive only about forty-five minutes each day. Various studies have shown that salespeople are productive at most about 90 minutes each day.
If you think you are more productive I challenge you to do this time productivity activity. Take a legal pad and in the left hand margin write out, in fifteen increments, the hours of the day. Each 15 minutes track and write down what you did. Do this as you go through the day not at the end of the day when your memory will fail you. Do this for three weeks and then analyze how much of your time is spent doing non-productive activities. If you keep an accurate record you will be astounded.
Once you come to the honest realization that you are wasting at least 80% of your working day, you may want to employ some of the following techniques to help you become more productive:
• 4. Make and use written lists. Every successful salesperson I know makes and uses written lists. Daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual lists. Lists engage the subconscious and help keep us focused on what needs to be done. Highly successful sales people have far too much going on to try and keep all the things they must do in their head.
• 5. Schedule your time in chunks. When planning your day schedule your time by blocking out important things first on your calendar. After the important chucks are blocked out go back and plug in the less important items. Be sure to plug in time for returning phone calls and planning.
Ben Franklin said it best when he said, “Do not squander time – it is the stuff life is made of.” The day of accounting will come and you will look back on your life and either be glad you managed your time well or you will regret that you did not.
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