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Time Management Case Study: Tetsuo

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For this month’s time management case study, we’re going to be looking at some of the productivity challenges that successful solo entrepreneurs have.

Meet Tetsuo

Tetsuo is a successful solo entrepreneur from Japan, who does business between the US and Asia-Pacific, working mostly from his laptop. He has a relatively mobile business with some remote employees and regular outsourcers. He also lives a fairly active life being involved with competitive martial arts and frequent traveling.

It is said that efficiency and effectiveness are often interconnected (with effectiveness narrowly edging out efficiency for first place in terms of importance), and in Tetsuo’s case he was more interested in “how to I maximize my existing time” rather than “how do I correct these unproductive habits” (of which he had none!) In particular, he was interested in:

Leverage Points

Even though the Japanese are masters at productivity and quality control, we believed that the Asian Efficiency Consulting Chart of Awe™ was something that they had never seen before:

The Asian Efficiency Consulting Chart of Awe™.

With this in mind, here’s how we addressed each of Tetsuo’s main wants (leverage points).

For his living arrangements, the main concern was Tetsuo’s travel time between home, office and dojo. Having to commute in a large US city during peak hour is not fun, and for Tetsuo it was an option to move to within walking distance of the latter two without a lowering of living standards or increase in living costs – and so we recommended that he did. As a more general principle, it is extremely beneficial to live around things that you frequent, whether it be work, the mall or your favorite street of public breweries.

Tetsuo already outsourced a lot of his more menial business tasks to virtual assistants based on Asia, but we recommended that he look for some local outsourcers, namely:

All these people can be found on places like Craigslist, or the resources we recommended in our personal outsourcing article.

Remaining productive while traveling is a huge challenge for most businesspeople, and Tetsuo was no exception. Everything that we mentioned in our prior case study on Steve still applies, but here are some additions that are specific for businesspeople:

Rituals and Scheduling

Tetsuo had a pretty tight schedule already worked out for himself, and he only needed some minor adjustments to see where he could free up some time for personal pursuits. We introduced him to the Pomodoro Technique, and strongly suggested that he avoid any sort of set appointments related to work, except those that he set himself.

For his morning ritual:

  1. Wake up at 11am.
  2. Drink 500mL water.
  3. Use bathroom.
  4. Feed and walk dog.
  5. Review goals for day. Review journal. Transfer items due to paper.
  6. Spend 5 minutes visualising completion of goals.
  7. Check email, Facebook and phone. Reply, clear and organize as necessary.
  8. Eat breakfast.
  9. Walk to office, begin with most important task first if no morning appointments were due.

For his evening ritual:

  1. Check email and Facebook. Reply, clear and organize as necessary.
  2. 30 minutes visualization.
  3. Write journal entry outlining day. Review tasks completed, and compare with morning journal entry. Set tasks and review goals for next day.
  4. Spend time with girlfriend, or catchup on reading.
  5. Sleep.

Efficiency System

Tetsuo mostly had his efficiency system worked out already, including:

Resource Utilization

Because he asked for it, we gave Tetsuo some “hard truths” about utilizing the resources he had available to him:

Emotions and Business

One issue that Tetsuo had (and one that is common to all business people) is how emotions interplay with business. Here at Asian Efficiency we believe that non-productive emotions have no place in the business world, and most of the time simply get in the way of getting things done. We gave Tetsuo a simple exercise taken from Maxwell Maltz’ Psychocybernetics, called the Mental Retreat Room. From our original report to Tetsuo:

A mental retreat room is a quiet and uninterrupted space that you form in your own mind – somewhere for you to go when you need focus. It is something that you should visualize and create ahead of time, and access when you need it.

Start with a simple room, and furnish it with whatever you find restful and relaxing – landscapes, painting, pleasant memories, calming music, art, colors. Keep in mind that there may or not may be walls to the room, and that it can stretch on as much as you would like it to.

Over time, you will find yourself embellishing the room with more pleasant thoughts and scenes. It only becomes more effective with use.

In Closing

As your situation in life changes, so do your time management challenges. Often people become frustrated because they advance in their careers or business and find that they have less and less time – this is because they are using the same time management strategies. Think of it as a video game: as you “level up” so to speak, your abilities, capabilities and responsibilities change, thus requiring you to shift time management and productivity strategies to remain on top of things.

Photo By: Paul (dex)

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