I get the Harvard Business Review Management Tip of the Day during the week and had to share this one.
(BTW, I highly recommend HBR for pastors … it’s worth the expense.)
This tip was particularly insightful because in our our experience, pastors regularly suffer from this malady (and so do most church leaders, truth-be-told).
What to Do When You’re the Bottleneck on Your Team
When you have too much to do and not enough time to do it, putting in just a little work on each project can be tempting. But this type of incremental progress can be a disaster for your colleagues because you can hold things up and become a bottleneck. To keep moving things off your plate, ask your boss to help you set priorities, and then organize your to-do list accordingly. Break your work into clear stages, and delegate some tasks to others so you can focus on what you do best. Decide in advance on your deliverables for each day and stick to the plan. Learn to say no to requests that fall outside your core priorities. Say: “I’m flattered you thought of me for this. But the company/my boss/the client is counting on me to focus my attention on X.” Finally, create a report detailing what you accomplish each day to hold yourself accountable.
Are You the Bottleneck
I get the Harvard Business Review Management Tip of the Day during the week and had to share this one.
(BTW, I highly recommend HBR for pastors … it’s worth the expense.)
This tip was particularly insightful because in our our experience, pastors regularly suffer from this malady (and so do most church leaders, truth-be-told).
What to Do When You’re the Bottleneck on Your Team
When you have too much to do and not enough time to do it, putting in just a little work on each project can be tempting. But this type of incremental progress can be a disaster for your colleagues because you can hold things up and become a bottleneck. To keep moving things off your plate, ask your boss to help you set priorities, and then organize your to-do list accordingly. Break your work into clear stages, and delegate some tasks to others so you can focus on what you do best. Decide in advance on your deliverables for each day and stick to the plan. Learn to say no to requests that fall outside your core priorities. Say: “I’m flattered you thought of me for this. But the company/my boss/the client is counting on me to focus my attention on X.” Finally, create a report detailing what you accomplish each day to hold yourself accountable.
Recent Posts
Common Member Retention Challenges + How to Solve Them
November 20, 20245 Biblical Lessons Your Children’s Ministry Should Focus On
November 14, 2024Invite People Into Solutions – Not to Church: 4 Tips to Success
November 9, 2024Categories
Meta
Categories