“We’ve read that the typical office worker is interrupted every three minutes, that it takes 15 minutes to recover from each interruption, that interruptions cost the country $12 trillion in lost productivity (the number fluctuates radically). We get it: interruptions are not welcome.”
– Workawesome
The goal is to stay focused, right.
But if you’re a project manager, it’s your job to be interrupted! You need to know what’s going on in real time with each of the projects you’re in charge of.
It’s nearly impossible to avoid interruptions, distractions, phone calls, emergent e-mails, and drop-in visits. So how do you make the most out of the time you spend being… well, interrupted?
In our small studio, we’re all project managers to some extent. We develop (and continually evolve) a sort of checks and balances system that helps us keep track of each others work. We want to make sure nothing but our best work goes out the door. That doesn’t mean, though, that the process is always smooth. This article from Workawesome has some insightful ways of handling unscheduled breaks in the day, and actually remembering to follow up later.
We’d like to add a few of our own ideas of how to stay on track throughout the day:
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