The Other Lecture [The 4-Hour Workweek Journal]

Randy Pausch is a well known and admired educator in computer science circles. In September of 2006, Professor Pausch was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and was told he had between three to six months of decent health left. Later that month, he gave a rather inspiring lecture at Carnegie Mellon University entitled Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams. Ironically, the talk was part of what used to known as the Last Lecture Series: If you had one last lecture to give before you died, what would it be? This talk has come to be known as Randy Pausch’s Last Lecture:

 

I’ll let you watch it for yourself. And when you are done, ask yourself, isn’t achieving your childhood dreams not the very definition of fulfillment?

Remember brick walls let us show our dedication. They are there to separate us from the people who don’t really want to achieve their childhood dreams. Don’t bail. The best of the gold’s at the bottom of barrels of crap.

Source: Randy Pausch Last Lecture

While that lecture has become quite popular on the Internet, and in and of itself extremely relevant to the spirit of The 4-Hour Workweek, Pausch also gave another lecture that is worth mentioning here, especially considering the time management kick I have been on lately. The lecture is actually on the topic of effective time management. It was originally given back in 1998, but Pausch was asked to give it again (post cancer diagnosis) late last year. A lecture on time management from someone with probably not that much longer to live has a certain credibility:

 

Besides nailing the concepts of “time is money”, the Pareto principle, and planning & prioritizing, what I really like about this lecture are some of the absolutely practical tips (I’ll mention a few here, but you can really just watch the lecture for yourself!) he provides:

  • Develop strategies to minimize the time spent on Telephone calls: consider using a speaker phone and/or a head set. Have, or insist on, an agenda for phone calls. Stand while you are on the phone. Batch phone calls to just before lunch or at the end of day - that way people you are talking with have a motivation to get off the phone.
  • Email: batch the processing of email to a limited number of times each day. Process your inbox to zero. File, but never delete email.
  • Journal you Time: It is hard to impossible to manage your time if you do not track where it is spent. At a minimum, track how much time you spend watching television. Consider getting rid of your television.
  • When you delegate, be specific and empower that person to complete the job without further intervention from yourself.
  • If you find yourself procrastinating, ask yourself why you are putting it off. Sometimes, all you have to do is ask someone else for help.
  • When you have small children, exchange money for time at every opportunity.

As Pausch points out, unlike money, we can never get our time back.

Original post here: Brick

13 February 2008 | Time Management, Videos | Comments

Comments:

  1.  
  2.  
  3.