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  • Gabe Robins:

  • Welcome to the University of Virginia.

  • I notice a lot of folks here from out of town and we appreciate your coming.

  • We are very fortunate to have today with us

  • my friend and mentor Randy Pausch.

  • I first met Randy in 1992 when I became a professor here at UVA

  • and I was lucky enough to recognize Randy's greatness early on

  • and his honesty courage and grace were very striking even back then.

  • As a mentor

  • Randy has been sort of a cross between Yoda

  • Captain Kirk

  • and Jim Carrey

  • and his unique combination of wisdom leadership and humor

  • has taught me many important life lessons over the years.

  • Randy always gave me and everybody else honest advice

  • that was untainted by political correctness

  • and in fact sometimes untainted by politeness even but

  • I appreciated that greatly because as a mentor

  • that's exactly what you want.

  • I owe a lot of my success to him

  • and he's been a perfect mentor.

  • There's an old saying

  • that "Talent does what it can but genius does what it must."

  • And Randy's genius has been a valuable asset to me

  • and to many many others over the years.

  • His sharp wit has made us laugh many many times and still does.

  • Randy repeatedly reminded us

  • that those who think that you can't have a lot of fun while getting an education

  • probably don't know much about either.

  • Indeed Randy has raised the level of fun in education

  • to an entirely new dimension.

  • We'll forever be grateful to him

  • for doing so and for the wonderful value that he added to our lives.

  • Randy's impact will continue to touch and affect many many people

  • across the world for many many years to come.

  • And now we would like to introduce our dean of engineering Jim Aylor

  • who has a few more things to say about Randy. Thank you.

  • Jim Aylor:

  • Wow. It's really great to see everyone here

  • and the School of Engineering and Applied Science is really excited that you've come to help us

  • honor our colleague and friend Randy Pausch.

  • My understanding is that every seat is filled so we really do appreciate everyone

  • being with us.

  • What I want to do is to give you a little bit of background on Randy.

  • I know a lot of you

  • know about him either directly or indirectly but then I want to make a couple of announcements

  • that are special to us here at UVA and the School of Engineering

  • and in special in terms of initial announcements of things that are going to happen.

  • Randy received his B.S. in Computer Science from Brown University in 1982

  • and his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1988.

  • Directly from CMU he joined the faculty of the Computer Sciences of the University of Virginia

  • where he successfully was granted tenure.

  • During his time at Virginia he established a major research activity in the general area of human

  • computer interaction.

  • Probably more importantly he was a dedicated educator

  • and served as a mentor for many students and many of his colleagues.

  • One of the most important and most successful initiatives while at Virginia

  • was the ALICE software project

  • a computer animation design tool

  • which has proven very effective at getting and keeping

  • middle school girls interested in computers.

  • In fact thanks to an agreement with Electronic Arts the next version

  • of ALICE will use the 3D characters and animation from The Sims

  • the most popular PC video game in history.

  • This is an outstanding accomplishment for Randy

  • but even more important

  • it will be a major contribution to efforts to increaseliteracy in Computer Science.

  • On behalf of Bob Pianta dean of the Curry School of Education and myself

  • I am pleased to announce

  • that the University of Virginia Young Women Leaders program

  • a well-established mentoring program at the UVA's

  • Women's Center and the Curry School of Education

  • that pairs at-risk middle school girls

  • with college women

  • with the goal of boosting the self-esteem and leadership skills

  • of both groups

  • is now planning to incorporate ALICE into its mentoring program

  • through a collaborate effort with the Department of Computer Science.

  • This initiative will allow both middle-school girls and their college mentors

  • to receive exposure to computing concepts

  • to the design of 3-dimensional animated virtual worlds.

  • This will impact several important fronts

  • all near and dear to Randy's heart

  • including encouraging young women to enter technology fields

  • helping at-risk groups

  • and building cross- disciplinary bridges.

  • The university is honored to be able to incorporate Randy's great legacy

  • into this worthwhile endeavor.

  • At CMU Randy co-founded the Entertainment Technology Center

  • an activity based on the principle of having technologist

  • and non-technologist works together

  • on projects that produce artifacts

  • that are intended to entertain

  • inform and inspire.

  • He has also worked for a period with Walt Disney's Imagineering.

  • I'm also pleased to let you know that Disney-own publisher Hyperion

  • has just announced plans to publish a book

  • about Randy called "The Last Lecture"

  • which will be co-authored by Randy

  • and Wall Street Journal reporter Jeff Zaslow.

  • Throughout everything Randy does

  • there is an infectious and inspiring enthusiasm.

  • That spirit is intact today

  • even though he is facing a very difficult time.

  • A husband and the father of three

  • Randy is a smart funny courageous man.

  • I am thankful that he chose to spend this day with us

  • and I'm honored to welcome him back to the University of Virginia grounds.

  • And now please join me in welcoming Prof. Randy Pausch

  • Randy Pausch:

  • Thank you that's very kind but never tip the waiter before the meal arrives.

  • Thank you Gabe and Jim I couldn't imagine

  • being more grateful for an introduction. These are two people that I've known

  • a long long time

  • I taught here at UVA I love this school

  • it's an incredible placefilled with tradition and history and respect

  • the kind of qualities that I really admire

  • that I want to see preserved in American society.

  • And this is one of the places that I just love for preserving that.

  • I think the honor code alone at the University of Virginia

  • is something that every university administrator should study and look at and say:

  • "Why can't we do that too?"

  • I think there are a lot of things about this place to love.

  • Oh.........I'm going to talk today on the topic of time management.

  • The circumstances are as you probably know a little bit unusual.

  • I think at this point I'm an authority to talk about what to do with limited time.

  • My battle with pancreatic cancer started about a year and a half ago.

  • Fought did all the right things

  • but as my oncologist said if you could pickoff a list

  • that's not the one you'd want to pick.

  • On August 15th

  • these were my CAT scans. You can see that if you scroll through all of them

  • there are about a dozen tumors in my liver

  • and the doctors at that time said

  • I love the way they say it: "You have three to six months of good health left."

  • Optimism and positive phrasing. It's like when you are at Disney:

  • "What time does the park close?"

  • - "The park is open until eight."

  • So I have "three to six months of good health."

  • Well let's do the math:

  • Today is three months and twelve days.

  • So what I had on my day-timer for today was not necessarily being at the UVA.

  • I'm pleased to say that we do treat with palliative chemo

  • they're going to buy me a little bit of time

  • on the order of a few months if it continues to work.

  • I'm still in perfectly good health.

  • With Gabe in the audience I'm not going to do push-ups

  • because I'm not going to be shown up.

  • Gabe is really in good shape!

  • But I continue to be in relatively good health

  • I had chemotherapy yesterday you should all try it it's great.

  • But it does beg the question I have finite time -

  • some people said: "So why are you going and giving a talk?"

  • There are a lot of reasons I'm coming here and giving a talk.

  • One of them is that

  • I said I would.

  • That's a pretty simple reason. And I'm physically able to.

  • Another one is that

  • going to the University of Virginia is not like going to some foreign place.

  • People say: "Aren't you spending all your time with family?"

  • And by coming back here for a day

  • I am spending my time with family both metaphorically

  • and literally because it turns out that -

  • many of you have probably seen this picture from the talk that I gave

  • these are my niece and nephew Chris and Laura.

  • My niece Laura is actually a senior... a fourthyear!

  • here at Mr. Jefferson's university.

  • Laura could you stand up so they see you've gotten taller?

  • There you are.

  • I couldn't be happier to have her here at this university.

  • and ... the other person in this picture is Chris

  • if you could stand up so they see you've gotten much taller?

  • They have grown in so many ways

  • not just in height. It's been wonderful to see that and be an uncle to them.

  • Is there anybody here on the faculty or Ph.D. students of the history department?

  • Any history people here at all? OK

  • Anybody here who is from history find Chris right after the talk.

  • Because he is currently in his sophomore year at William and Mary

  • and he's interested in going into a Ph.D. program in history down the road

  • and there aren't many better Ph.D. programs in history than this one.

  • So I'm pimping for my nephew here!

  • Let's be clear!

  • So What are we going to talk about today?

  • We're going to talk about -

  • this is not like the lecture that you may have seen me give before.

  • This is a very pragmatic lecture.

  • One of the reasons that I had agreed to come back and give this is because

  • Gabe and many other faculty members had told me that they had gotten so much

  • tangible value about how to get more done

  • and I truly do believe that time is the only commodity that matters.

  • So this is a very pragmatic talk.

  • And It is inspirational in the sense that it will inspire you

  • by giving you some concrete things you might do

  • to be able to get more things done in your finite time.

  • I'm going to talk specifically about how to set goals

  • how to avoid wasting time

  • how to deal with a boss

  • - originally this talk was how to deal with your advisor

  • but I tried to broaden it so it's not quite so academically focused.

  • and how to delegate to people

  • some specific skills and tools that I might recommend

  • to help you get more out of the day.

  • And to deal with the real problems in our lives which are stress and procrastination.

  • If you can lick that last one you are probably in good shape.

  • And really You don't need to take any notes.

  • I presume if I see any laptops open you're actually just

  • doing IM or email or something.

  • If you're listening to music please at least wear headphones.

  • All of this will be posted on my website and to make it really easy

  • if you want to know when to look up

  • any slides that have a red star are the points

  • that I think you should really make sure that you got that one.

  • Conversely if it doesn't have a red star well...

  • The first thing I want to say is that Americans are very very bad

  • at dealing with time as a commodity.

  • We're really good at dealing with money as a commodity.

  • We are as a culture very interested in dealing with money how much somebody earns

  • is a status thing and so on

  • but we don't really have time elevated to that.

  • People waste their time and it always fascinates me.

  • One of the things that I've noticed is that very few people equate time and money

  • and they are very very equatable.

  • The first thing I started doing when I was a teacher was asking my graduate students:

  • "Well how much is your time worth an hour?"

  • Or if you work at a company: "How much is your time worth to the company?"

  • What most people don't realize is that if you have a salary let's say you make 50000 $ a year

  • you probably cost that company twice that

  • in order to have you as an employee because there's heating and lighting and

  • other staff members and so forth so

  • if you get paid 50000 a year

  • you are costing that company - they have to raise 100000 $ in revenue!

  • And if you divide that by your hourly rate

  • you begin to get some sense of what you are worth an hour.

  • When you have to make trade-offs of

  • "Should I do something like write software or should I just buy it

  • or should I outsource this?"

  • having in your head what you cost your organization an hour

  • is really kind of a staggering thing

  • to change your behavior. Because you start realizing that wow

  • if I free upthree hours of my time and I'm thinking in that in terms of dollars

  • that's a big savings!

  • So start thinking about your time and your money

  • almost as if they are the same thing.

  • Of course Ben Franklin knew that a long time ago.

  • So you've got to manage it

  • and

  • you've got to manage it just like you manage your money.

  • Now I realize not all Americans manage their money

  • that's what makes the credit card industry possible.

  • And apparently mortgages too.

  • So....

  • But most people do at least understand -

  • they don't look at you funny if you say:

  • "Can I see your monetary budget for your household?"

  • In fact when I say "your household budget"

  • you presume that I'm talking about money

  • when in fact the household budget

  • I really want to talk about is probably your household time budget.

  • At the Entertainment Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon

  • students would come in during the orientation I would say

  • : "This is a master's program everybody is paying full tuition."

  • And ... It was roughly 30000 $ a semester

  • and the first thing I would say is: "If you're going to come into my office and say:

  • "I don't think this is worth 60000 $ a year"

  • I will throw you out of the office. I'm not even going to have this discussion."

  • Of course they would say: "Oh god this Pausch guy is a real jerk." And then they were right!

  • But ... what I then followed on with was:

  • "Because the money is not important.

  • You can go and earn more money later.

  • What you'll never do is get the two years of your life back.

  • So if you want to come into my office and talk about the money I'll throw you out

  • but if you want to come into my office and say:

  • "I'm not sure this is a good place for me to spend two years"

  • I will talk to you all day and all night because that means we're talking about the right thing

  • which is your time because you can't ever get it back."

  • A lot of the advice I'm going to give you particularly for undergraduates -

  • how many people in this room are undergraduates by show of hands?

  • Okay good! Still young!

  • A lot of this - put it to Hans and Franz of Saturday Night Life if you're old enough:

  • "Hear me now but believe me later!"

  • A lot of this is going to make sense later and one of the nicest things is that

  • Gabe has volunteered to put this up on the web.

  • I.......I understand that people can actually watch videos on the web now.

  • So a lot of this will make sense later ....and

  • when I talk about your boss if you're a student

  • think about that as your academic advisor

  • if you're a Ph.D. student think about it as your Ph.D. advisor

  • and if you're watching this and you are a young child think of this as your parent

  • because that is the person who is in some sense your boss.

  • The talk goes very fast and I'm very big on specific techniques.

  • I'm not really big on platitudes.

  • Platitudes are nice but they don't really help me get something done tomorrow.

  • The other thing is that one good thief is worth ten good scholars.

  • And in fact you can replace the word "scholars" in that sentence with almost anything.

  • Almost everything in this talk is to some degree inspired

  • which is a fancy way of saying lifted

  • from these two books 0:17:32.830,1193:02:47.295 [Cathy Collins: Time Management for Teachers 1987; Career Track Seminar: Taking control of Your Work Day 1990]

  • and I found those books very useful but it's much better to get them into a distilled form.

  • What I've basically done is I've collected the nuggets for your bath.

  • I like to talk about "The Time Famine".

  • I think it's a nice phrase.

  • Does anybody here feel like they have too much time?

  • Okay nobody excellent.

  • I like the word "famine" because it's a little bit like thinking about Africa.

  • You can airlift all the food you want in to solve the crisis this week

  • but the problem is systemic and you really need systemic solutions.

  • A time management solution that says

  • "I'm going to fix things for you in the next 24 hours" is laughable

  • just like saying: "I'm going to cure hunger in Africa in the next year."

  • You need to think long-term and you need to change fundamental underlying processes

  • because the problem is systemic

  • we just have too many things to do and not enough time to do them.

  • The other thing to remember is that it's not just about time management.

  • That sounds like a kind of a lukewarm

  • a talk about time management that's kindof milk-toast.

  • But how about if the talk is:

  • How about not having ulcers?

  • That catches my attention!

  • So a lot of this is life advice.

  • This is

  • how to change the way you're doing a lot of the things and how you allocate your time

  • so that you will lead a happier

  • more wonderful life and I loved in the introduction that you talked about fun!

  • Because if I've brought fun to academia well it's about damn time!

  • I mean If you're not going to have fun

  • why do it?

  • That's what I want to know.

  • Life really is too short if you're not going to enjoy it...

  • People who say: "Well

  • I've got a job and I don't really like it" I'm like: "Well you could change?!"

  • "But that'll be a lot of work!"

  • "You're right you should keep going to work every day doing a job you don't like.

  • Thank you good night."

  • So the overall goal is fun.

  • My middle child Logan is my favorite example.

  • I don't think he knows how to not have fun.

  • No grant the lot of the things he does are not fun for his mother and me.

  • But he's loving every second of it.

  • He doesn't know to do anything that isn't ballistic and full of life.

  • He's going to keep that quality he's my little Tigger

  • and I always remember Logan when I think about

  • the goal is to make sure that you lead your life -

  • I want to maximize use of time but that's the means not the end.

  • The end is maximizing fun.

  • People who do intense studies and log people on videotape and so on

  • say that the typical office worker wastes almost two hours a day.

  • Their desk is messy they can't find things

  • they miss appointments are unprepared for meetings

  • they can't concentrate.

  • Does anybody in here by show of hands

  • ever have any sense that one of these things is part of their life?

  • Okay I think we've got everybody!

  • So these are a universal thing and you shouldn't feel guilty

  • if some of these things are plagueing you

  • because they plague all of us they plague me for sure.

  • The other thing I want to tell you is that it sounds a little clichéd and tried but

  • being successful does not make you manage your time well.

  • Managing your time well makes you successful.

  • If I've been successful in my career

  • I assure you it's not because I'm smarter than all the other faculty.

  • I mean I'm looking around and I'm looking at some of my former colleagues

  • and I see Jim Cohoon up there: I'm not smarter than Jim Cohoon.

  • I constantly look around at the faculty at places like the OV or Carnegie Mellon and I go:

  • "Damn theseare smart people!"

  • And I snuck in!

  • But what I like to think I'm good at is the meta-skills

  • because if you're going to have to run with people who are faster than you you have to

  • find the right ways to optimize what skills you do have.

  • Let's talk first about goals priorities and planning.

  • Anytime anything crosses your life

  • you've got to ask:

  • "This thing I'm thinking about doing why am I doing it?

  • Almost no one that I know starts with the core principle of

  • there's this thing on my To Do list why is it there?

  • Because if you're start asking like why am I... my kids are great at this.

  • That is all I've ever heard at home is: Why?

  • Why?

  • Why?

  • Sooner or later they're going to stop saying "Why" they're just going to say: "Okay I'll do it."

  • So ask why am I doing this what is the goal

  • why will I succeed at doing it

  • and here's my favorite: What will happen if I don't do it?

  • The best thing in the world is when I have something on my To Do list and I just go: Hmm no.

  • No one has ever come and taken me to jail.

  • I talked my way out of a speeding ticket last weekthat was really cool

  • It's like the closest I've ever going to be to attractive and blonde.

  • I told the guy why we had just moved and so on and so forth and he looked at me and said:

  • "Well for a guy who's only got a couple of months to live you sure look good!"

  • I just pulled up my shirt to show the scar and I said

  • "Yeah I look good on the outside but the tumors are on the inside."

  • He just ran back to his cruiser and... !

  • So that's one positive law enforcement experience for me.

  • The police have never come because I crossed something off my To Do list.

  • That's a very powerful thing because you've got all that time back.

  • The other thing to keep in mind when you're doing goal setting is

  • a lot of people focus on doing things right.

  • I think it's very dangerous to focus on doing things right.

  • I think it's much more important to do the right things.

  • If you do the right things adequately

  • that's much more important than doing the wrong things beautifully.

  • Doesn't matter how well you polish the underside of the banister.

  • Keep that in mind.

  • Lou Holtz had a great list:

  • Lou Holtz's 100 things to do in his life.

  • He would once a week look at it and say:

  • If I'm not working on those 100 things why was I working on the others?

  • I think that's an incredible way to frame things.

  • There's something called the 80/20 rule. Sometimes you'll hear about the 90/10 rule

  • but the key thing to understand is that a very small number of things

  • in your life or on your ToDo-list

  • are going to contribute the vast majority of the value. So...

  • If you're a salesperson

  • 80 percent of the revenue is going to come from 20 percent of your clients.

  • And you better figure out who those 20 percent are

  • and spend all your time sucking up to them.

  • Because that's where the revenue comes.

  • You've got to be willing to say this stuff is what's going to be the value and this other stuff isn't

  • and you've got to have the courage of your convictions to say therefore

  • I'm gonna shove the other stuff off the boat.

  • The other thing to remember is that

  • experience comes with time

  • and it's really really valuable and there are no shortcuts to getting it.

  • So Good judgment comes from experience

  • and experience comes from bad judgment.

  • So if things aren't going well

  • that probably means you're learning a lot and will go better later.

  • This is by the way why we pay so much in American society for people

  • who are typically older but have done lots of things in their past

  • because we're paying for their experience

  • because we know that experience is one of the things you can't fake.

  • And do not lose sight of the power of inspiration.

  • Randy's in an hour long talk and we've already hit our first Disney reference.

  • Walt Disney has many great quotes.

  • One that I love is: "If you can dream it you can do it."

  • A lot of my cynical friends say ya-di-ya-di-ya... to which I say: Shut up.

  • Inspiration is important and I tell you this much

  • I don't know if Walt was right but I tell you this much:

  • If you refuse to allow yourself to dream it I know you won't do it.

  • So the power of dreams

  • are that they give us a way to take the first step towards an accomplishment.

  • Walt was also not just a dreamer. Walt worked really hard.

  • Disneyland - this amazes me because I know a little bit about

  • how hard it is to put theme park attractions together

  • and they did the whole original Disneyland park in 366 days.

  • That's from the first shovel full of dirt to the first paid admission.

  • Think about how long it takes to do something say at a state university.

  • By comparison!

  • So it's ....

  • It's fascinating. When someone once asked Walt Disney

  • "How did you get it done in 366 days?"

  • he just deadpanned: "We used every one of them."

  • So again there are no shortcuts

  • there's a lot of hard work in anything you want to accomplish.

  • Planning is very important one of the time management clichés is:

  • planning to fail. Failing to plan is planning to fail.

  • Planning has to be done at multiple levels.

  • I have a plan every morning when I wake up and I say what do I need to get done today

  • what do I need to get done this week

  • what do I need to get done each semester

  • that's sort of the time quanta because I'm an academic.

  • And That doesn't mean you're locked into it!

  • People say: "Yeah but things are so fluid!

  • I'm going to have to change the plan!" And I'm like

  • "Yes! You are going to have to change the plan.

  • But you can't change it unless you have it!"

  • And the excuse of I'm not going to make a plan because things might change

  • is just this paralysis of: I don't have any marching orders.

  • So have a plan

  • acknowledge that you're going to change it

  • but have it so you have the basis to start with.

  • To Do lists. How many people here

  • right now if I said can you produce it could show me their To Do list?

  • - Okay not bad.

  • not bad.

  • The key thing with To Do lists is you have to break things down into small steps.

  • I literallyonce on my To Do list when I was a junior faculty member at the UV

  • I put: "Get tenure."

  • That was naive!

  • I looked at that for a while and I said: Oh that's really hard. I don't think I can do that.

  • And

  • My children Dylan and Logan and Chloe particularly Dylan

  • is at the age where he can clean his own room thank you very much.

  • But he doesn't like to

  • and Chris is smiling because I used to do this story on him

  • but now I've got my own kids to pick on.

  • Dylan will come to me and say:

  • "I can't pick up my room it's too much stuff!"

  • [sighs exaggeratedly]

  • He's not even a teenager and he's already got that move!

  • And I say: "Well can you make your bed?"

  • - "Yeah I can do that."

  • "Okay can you put all the clothes in the hamper?"

  • - "Yeah I can do that."

  • And you do three or four things

  • and then it's like: "Well Dylan you just cleaned your room!"

  • - "I cleaned my room!" He feels good! He is empowered!

  • And everybody is happy. Of course I've had to spend twice as much time

  • managing him as I could have done it by myself but that's okay

  • that's what being a boss is about is you're growing your people

  • no matter how small or large they might be at the time.

  • The last thing about To Do lists or getting yourself going is

  • if you've got a bunch of things to do

  • do the ugliest thing first.

  • There's an old saying: "If you have to eat a frog

  • don't spend a lot of time looking at it first

  • and if you have to eat three of them don't start with the small one."

  • This is the most important slide in the entire talk.

  • If you want to leave after this slide

  • I will not be offended because it's all downhill from here.

  • This is blatantly stolen this is Steven Covey's great contribution to the world

  • he talks about it

  • in the Seven Habits book.

  • Imagine your To Do list - most people sort their To Do list either

  • "the order that I've got it" throw it at the bottom

  • or they sort it in due-date list

  • which is more sophisticated and more helpful

  • but still very very wrong.

  • Looking at the four- quadrant To Do list

  • if you've got a quadrant where things are "Important and Due Soon"

  • "Important and Not Due Soon"

  • "Not Important and Due Soon"

  • and "Not Important and Not Due Soon"

  • Alright which of these four quadrants do you think

  • upper left upper right lower left lower right

  • which one do you think you should work on immediately?

  • Upper left!

  • You are such a great crowd. Okay.

  • And which one do you think you should probably do last?

  • Lower right.

  • And that's easy. That's obviously number one that's obviously number four.

  • But this is where everybody in my experience gets it wrong.

  • What we do now is we say: "I do the number ones

  • and I move on to the stuff that's "Due Soon and Not Important".

  • When you write it in this quadrant list

  • it's really stunning because I've actually seen people do this and they say:

  • "Okay this is due soon and I know it's not important so I'm going to get right to work on it."

  • And The most crucial thing I can teach you about time management

  • is when you're done picking off the "Important and Due Soon"

  • that's when you go here.

  • You go to "Not Due Soon and Important"

  • and there will be a moment in your life where you say

  • "Hey this thing that's due soon and not important:

  • I won't do it!

  • Because it's not important!

  • It says so right here on the chart!"

  • And magically

  • you have time

  • to work on the thing that is not due soon but is important

  • so that next week

  • it never got a chance to get here

  • because you killed it in the crib.

  • My wife won't like that metaphor!

  • But you solve the problem of something that's due next week

  • when you're not under time stress because it's not due tomorrow.

  • And suddenly you become one of these Zen-like people

  • who would just always seem like they have all the time in the world

  • because they figured this out.

  • Paperwork.

  • The first thing that you need to know is that having

  • cluttered paperwork leads to thrashing.

  • You end up with all these things on your desk

  • and you can't find anything

  • and the moment you turn to your desk your desk is saying to you:

  • "I own you!

  • I have more things than you can do!

  • And they are many colors and laid out!"

  • So what I find is that it's really crucial to keep your desk clear

  • and we'll talk about where all the paper goes in a second

  • and you have one thing on your desk because then it's like: "Haha!

  • Now it's thunderdome!

  • Me and the ONE piece of paper."

  • So I usually win that one.

  • One of the mantras of time management is touch each piece of paper once.

  • You get the piece of paper you look at it

  • you work at it

  • and I think that's extremely true for email.

  • How many people here -

  • I'm going to take it for granted that everybody here has an email inbox.

  • - How many people here have more than 20 items in their email inbox?

  • - Oooh! I'm in the right room.

  • Your inbox is not your To Do list.

  • My wife has learned that

  • I need to get my inbox clear.

  • Now Sometimes

  • this really means just filing things away and

  • putting something on my To Do list.

  • Remember the To Do list is sorted by importance

  • but does anybody here have an email program

  • where you can press this "Sort By Importance" button?

  • It's amazing how people who build software

  • that really is a huge part of our life and getting work done haven't a clue.

  • And that's not a slam on any particular company.

  • I think they all have missed the boat.

  • I just find it fascinating.

  • Because most people I know have this inbox

  • - oh I've got to ask. How many people have more than 100 things in their inbox?

  • - Oh I'm just not going to keep going this is too depressing!

  • So....

  • You really want to get the thing in your inbox look at it and say:

  • "I'm either going to read it right now or I'm going to file it and put an entry in my To Do list."

  • That's acrucial thing because otherwise

  • everytime you go to read your email

  • you're just swamped and it's just as bad as the cluttered paper.

  • You're all trying to figure out how that heading goes with that picture.

  • A filing system is absolutely essential.

  • I know this because I'm married to the most wonderful woman in the world

  • but she's not a good filer.

  • But she is now!

  • Because

  • after we got married and we moved in together

  • and we resolved all the other typical couple things I said:

  • "We have to have a place

  • where our papers go and it's in alphabetical order."

  • And she said: "That sounds a little compulsive..."

  • And I said: "Okay honey..."

  • I went out to IKEA and I got this big nice

  • way too expensive wooden

  • fake mahogany thing

  • with big drawers so she liked it because it looked kind of nice

  • and having a place in our house

  • where any piece of paper went and was in alphabetical order

  • did wonderful things for our marriage!

  • Because there was never any of this "Honey where did you put lahblahblah?"

  • And there was never being mad at somebody because

  • they had put something in some unexpected place

  • there was an expected place for it.

  • When you're looking for important receipts or whatever it is

  • this is actually important and

  • we have found that this has been

  • a wonderful thing for us.

  • I think file systems among

  • groups of people whether it's a marriage or an office are crucial but even if it's just you

  • having a place where you know you put something

  • really beats all hell out of running around for an hour going: "Where is it?

  • I know it's blue...

  • and I was eating something when I read it." I mean...

  • This is not a filing system!

  • This is madness!

  • A lot of people ask me:

  • "So Randy what does your desk look like?"

  • So As my wife would say

  • "This is what Randy's desk looks like when he's photographing it for a talk."

  • The important thing is that I'm a computer geek so I have the desk off to the right

  • and then I have the computer station off to the left.

  • I like to have my desk in front of a window whenever I can do that.

  • This is an old photograph these have now been replaced by LCD monitors

  • but I left the old picture because the crucial thing is

  • it doesn't matter if they're fancy high-tech

  • the key thing is screen space.

  • Lots ofpeople have studied this.

  • How many people in this room

  • have more than one monitor on their computer desktop?

  • Okay not bad! So we're getting there it's starting to happen.

  • What I found is that I could go back from three to two

  • but I just can't go back to one.

  • There's just too many things and as somebody said

  • it's the difference between working on a desk

  • like at home

  • and trying to get work done on the little tray on an airplane.

  • In principle the little tray on the airplane is big enough for everything you need to do.

  • It's just that in practice

  • it's pretty small.

  • So multiple monitors are very important

  • and I'll show you in a second what I have on each one of those.

  • I believe in this multiple monitor thing we believed in it for a long time

  • that's my research group

  • our laboratory a long time ago in Carnegie Mellon

  • that's Caitlin Kelleher who's now Doctor Kelleher thank you

  • and she's at Washington University in St. Louis

  • doing wonderful things.

  • But we had everybody with three monitors and the cost on this is absolutely trivial.

  • If you figure the cost of adding a second monitor

  • to an employee's yearly cost to the company it's not even one percent anymore.

  • So why would you not do it?

  • So

  • One of my walkaways for all of you is you should all go to your boss and say:

  • "I need a second monitor.

  • I just can't work withoutit Randy told me to tell you that."

  • Because it will increase your productivity and the computers can all drive two monitors

  • so why not?

  • So What do I have on my three monitors?

  • On the left ismy To Do list

  • all sorts of stuff in there.

  • And My system...

  • We're all idiosyncratic my system is that I just put a number of 0 through 9

  • and I use an editor that can quickly sort on that number in the first column

  • but the key thing is that it's sorted by priority.

  • In the middle is my mail program.

  • Note the empty inbox!

  • And

  • I try very hard

  • I sleep better if I go to sleep with the inbox empty.

  • When my inbox does creep up I get really testy

  • so my wife will actually say to me: "I think you need to clear the inbox."

  • On the third one is a calendar.

  • This is from a number of years ago but that's like

  • my days would be I used to be very heavily booked.

  • I don't care which software you use

  • I don't care which calendars I don't care if it's paper or computer whatever works for you

  • but you should have

  • some system whereby you know where you're supposed to be next Tuesday at two o'clock.

  • Because even if you can live your life without that

  • you're using up a lot of your brain to remember all that.

  • I don't know about you but I don't have enough brain to spare

  • to use it on things I can have paper or computers do for me.

  • Back to the overview.

  • On the desk itself

  • let's zoom in a little bit

  • look I have the one and one thing I'm working on at the time

  • I have a speaker phone -

  • this is crucial. How many people here have a speaker phone on their desks?

  • Okay not bad

  • but a lot more people don't.

  • Speaker phones are essentially free

  • and

  • I spend a lot of time on hold and that's because I live in the American society

  • where I get to listen to messages of the form:

  • "Your call is extremely important to us.

  • Watch while my actions are cognitively dissonant from my words."

  • It's like the worst abusive relationship in the world.

  • Imagine a guy who picks you up at your first date

  • and he smacks you in the mouth and says: "I love you honey".

  • That's pretty much how modern customer service works on the telephone.

  • But the great thing about a speaker phone is you hit the speaker phone and youdial

  • and then you just do something else and if it takes seven minutes it takes seven minutes

  • and hey I just look at this like somebody's piping music into my office.

  • That's very nice of them.

  • I also found that having a timer on the phone is handy

  • so that when somebody finally picks up in Bangalore

  • I can ...oh

  • I can say things like:

  • "I'm so glad to be talking with you

  • by the way if you keep records on this sort of thing

  • I've been on hold for seven and a half minutes."

  • But you don't say it angry you just say it as "I presume you're logging this kind of stuff"

  • and you're not angry so they don't get angry back at you but they feel really guilty.

  • And that's good you want guilty!

  • A speaker phone is really great.

  • I find that a speaker phone is probably the best

  • material possession you can buy

  • to counter stress.

  • If I were teaching a yoga and meditation class

  • I'd say we'll do all the yoga and meditation I think that's wonderful stuff

  • but everybody also has to have a speaker phone.

  • What else do we have besides the speaker phone? Let's talk about telephones for a second.

  • I think that the telephone is a great time-waster

  • and I think it's very important to keep your business calls short

  • so I recommend standing during the phone calls.

  • Great for exercise

  • and if you tell yourself: "I'm not gonna sit down until the call is over"

  • you'll be amazed how much brisker you are.

  • Start by announcing goals for the call.

  • "Hello Sue this is Randy

  • I'm calling you because I have three things that I want to get done."

  • Boom Boom Boom

  • Because then you have given her an agenda

  • and when you're done with the three things

  • you can say "That's great those were the three things I had

  • it was great to talk to you

  • I'd love to talk to you again bye." Boom - you're off the phone.

  • Whatever you do do not put your feet up.

  • If you put the feet up it's just all over.

  • And the other handy trick is

  • have something on your desk that you actually are kind of interested in going to do next

  • so the phone call instead of being

  • "Wow I could get off the phone and do some work... mmm...

  • Or I could keep chit-chatting!"

  • Usually the person you've called they'd like to chit-chat too.

  • So this is where the time- waster in the office goes

  • and if you're a grad student... [pauses]

  • Well if you're a grad student you already know about time-wasting.

  • Having something you really want to do next

  • is a great way to get you off the phone quicker

  • so you've got to train yourself.

  • Getting off the phone is hard for a lot of people.

  • I don't suffer from an abundance of politeness.

  • My sister who has known me for a long time is laughing a knowing laugh.

  • So

  • When I want to get off the phone I want to get off the phone.

  • I'm done.

  • And....

  • what I say is:

  • you know ... "I'd love to keep talking with you but I have some students waiting."

  • Now I'm a professor.

  • Somewhere there must be students waiting!

  • Alright it's ..... It's got to be!

  • Sometimes you get in a situation like with a telemarketer.

  • That's awkward because a lot of people are so polite -

  • I have no trouble with telemarketers I'll just go there with them!

  • If you're a telemarketer and you call my house you have made a mistake.

  • "Yeah I can't talk right now but why don't you give me your home phone number

  • and I'll call you back on dinner time."

  • Seinfeld did a great bit on that.

  • Or if you want to be a little bit more over the line:

  • "I'd love to talk with you about that but first I have some things I'd like to sell you!"

  • The funny part is they never realize you're yanking with them that's...

  • But if you have to hang up on a telemarketer

  • what you do is you hang up while you're talking.

  • "WellI think that's really interesting and I would love tokeep

  • --" I mean talk about self-effacing!

  • Hangingup on yourself!

  • And they'll figure it out and if they'll do and call back just don't answer!

  • Ten years from now all everybody will remember from this talk is hanging up on yourself.

  • The other thing is group your phone calls.

  • Call people right before lunch or right before the end of the day.

  • Because then they have something they would rather do

  • than keep chitty- chatting with you.

  • So I find that calling somebody at 11:50 is a great way to have a ten-minute phone call.

  • Because frankly you may think you're interesting

  • but you are not more interesting than lunch.

  • I have become very obsessive about using phones and time productively so

  • so...I think that everybody should have something like this -

  • I don't care about fashion

  • I don't have Bluetooth and I have this big ugly thing: "Hi I'm Julie from Time Life!"

  • But thething this allows me to do

  • because I'm living the limit case right now of

  • I've got to get stuff done and I really don't have a lot of time.

  • So I get an hour a day where I exercise on my bike

  • and this is me on my bike and if you look carefully you can see I'm wearing that headset

  • I've got my cell phone.

  • And for an hour a day I ride my bike around the neighborhood.

  • This is time that I'm spending on the phone getting work done and it's

  • not a moment being taken away from my wife and my children.

  • It turns out that I can talk and ride a bike at the same time.

  • Amazing the skill sets I have!

  • It works better in warm weather climates

  • but I have just found that having a headset

  • frees me up even if it's just around the house

  • you wear a headset you can fold laundry

  • it's an absolute "two for".

  • And I just think

  • telephones should have headsets

  • and someday we will all have the Borg implant and it'll be a non-issue.

  • What else is on my desk? I have one of those address-stampers

  • because I got tired of writing my address

  • I have a box of Kleenex.

  • In your office at work if you are a faculty member

  • you have to have a box of Kleenex.

  • Because if...

  • Jim is laughing!

  • At least if you teach the way I do...

  • There will be crying students in your office!

  • And what I found to defuse a lot of that is that I would have CS352 or whatever

  • written on the side of the Kleenex box.

  • I would turn it as I handed it to them

  • and they would take the Kleenex and they would be like "Oh..." I said "Yeah... it's for the class.

  • You're not alone!"

  • So having Kleenex is very important.

  • And Thank-You cards.

  • I'll now ask the embarrassment question

  • and I don't mean to pick on you but it just points things out so well.

  • By show of hands

  • who here has written a Thank-You note that is not a quid pro quo I don't mean

  • "Oh you gave me a gift I wrote you a Thank-You note."

  • And I mean a physical Thank-You note with a pen and ink and paper.

  • Not email. Because email is better than nothing

  • but it's that much better than nothing.

  • How many people here have written a Thank-You note in the last week?

  • Not bad I do better here than at most places because it is UVA.

  • Chivalry is not dead. How many people in the last month?

  • How many people in the last year?

  • The fact that there are a non-trivial number of hands not up for the year

  • means that anybody who is in this audience his parents are going "Oooh...

  • that was my kid."

  • Thank-You notes are really important.

  • They're a very tangible way to tell someone how much you appreciated things.

  • I have Thank-You notes with me and that's because I'm actually writing some later today

  • to some people who've done some nice things for me recently

  • and you say "Oh god you have time for that?" and I'm like

  • "Yes I have time for that because it's important."

  • Even in my current status

  • I will make time to write Thank-You notes to people.

  • And even if you're a crafty weasely bastard

  • you should still write Thank-You notes.

  • Because it makes you so rare

  • that when someone gets a Thank-You note

  • they will remember you.

  • It seems that the only place that Thank-You notes are really taken seriously anymore

  • is when people are interviewing for jobs.

  • They now sometimes write Thank-You notes to the recruiters

  • which I guess shows a sign of desperation on the part of the recent graduate.

  • But Thank-You notes are a wonderful thing

  • and I would encourage all of you to go out and buy a stack at your local dime store

  • and have them on your desk so when the moment seizes you it's right there

  • and I leave my Thank-You notes out on the desk readily accessible.

  • As I've said before gratitude is something that can go beyond cards.

  • When I got tenure here

  • I took my whole research team down to Disneyworld on my nickel for a week.

  • I believe in large gestures but it's also been a lot of fun I wanted to go too!

  • I didn't send them without a proper shepherd running after all.

  • What else? I have .....

  • a paper recycling bin

  • and this is very good because it helps save the planet but it also helps save my butt.

  • When I have a piece of paper that I would be throwing away

  • I put it in that bin and that takes

  • i don't know a couple of weeks

  • to get filled up and then actually sent somewhere else.

  • What I've really done here is I've created the Windows/Macintosh

  • trash can you can pull stuff back out of

  • - it works in the real world too!

  • And about once a month. I go ferreting through there to find the receipt

  • that I didn't think I'll ever need again but I suddenly need

  • and it's extremely handy.

  • I suspected that if I were giving this talk in ten years

  • I would say I just put it in the auto-scanner

  • because I find it almost inconceivable that ten years from now

  • first off that a lot of the stuff would be paper in my hands anyway.

  • But if it were paper then I would have any notion of doing anything other than

  • putting it on the desk where it goes "zzzk" and it's already scanned because it touched the desk.

  • This kind of stuff is not really hard to do.

  • So I think that's what's going to happen. And of course I have a phone book.

  • Note pad... I can't live without Post-it notes.

  • And the view out the window of the dog.

  • Because the dog reminds me that I should be out playing with him.

  • When I got married I married into a family.

  • I got a wife and two beautiful dogs.

  • There's the other one.

  • Could you help me with a debate I've had with my wife?

  • By show of hands how many people would semantically say: "The dog is on the couch"?

  • Nobody! Thank you!

  • Thank you!

  • Because the dog was not allowed on the couch.

  • And my wife came in one day...

  • Anyway thank you for agreeing with me it makes me feel very good.

  • So the dog is wonderful.

  • The dogs have long gone on but they are still in our hearts and our memories

  • and I think of them every day and they're still a part of my life.

  • I've presented to you how I do my office how I do things it's not the only way.

  • One of the best assistants I've ever met was the one named Tina Cobb

  • and she has a really different system she's a spreader.

  • If you think about it there's a method to her madness:

  • Everything here is exactly one arm's radius from where she sits.

  • It's like a two- armed octopus.

  • She got so much stuff done and I never presume to tell somebody else

  • how to change their system if their system is working.

  • Tina was much more efficient than I was

  • so I would just say do what orks for you

  • and everybody has to find a system for themselves

  • but you've really got to think about "What makes me more efficient?"

  • Let's talk about office logistics.

  • In most office settings people come into each other's offices and proceed to suck the life out of each other.

  • If you have a big cushy chair in your office

  • you might as well just slather butter all over yourself

  • and send yourself naked into the woods for the wild animals to attack you.

  • I say make your office comfortable for you and optionally comfortable for others.

  • So no comfy chairs.

  • I used to have folding chairs in my office

  • folded up against the wall. So people who want to come in to me

  • and talk with me they can stand.

  • And I would stand up because then the meeting is going to be really fast

  • because we want to sit down!

  • But then if it looks like it's something we should have a little bit more time on I very graciously go over

  • and open the folding chair I'm such a gentleman!

  • Some people do a different tack on this

  • they have the chair already there but they cut two inches off the front leg

  • so the whole time you're in their office you're scooting yourself up.

  • I'm not advocating that but I thought it was damn clever the first time I saw it.

  • Scheduling yourself.

  • Verbs are important: You do not FIND time for important things you MAKE it.

  • And you make time by electing not to do something else.

  • There's a term from economics that everybody should hold near and dear to their heart

  • and that term is "opportunity cost".

  • The bad thing about doing something

  • that isn't very valuable is not that it's a bad thing to have done it.

  • The problem is that once you spent an hour doing it

  • that's an hour you can never again spend in any other way.

  • And that's important.

  • How do you keep these unimportant things from sucking into your life?

  • You learn to say "No".

  • It's great my youngest child Chloe is at an age where this is her new word

  • about two weeks ago she learned it.

  • And it's like now everything is "no!" "No! No! No-no-no-no-no! No!"

  • She should be giving this talk!

  • And I asked her and she said: "No!"

  • So she's home playing!

  • But we all hate to say "No"

  • because people ask us for help and we want to be gracious

  • so let me teach you some gentle "No's".

  • The first one is:

  • "I'm really strapped but I want to help you I don't want you to be in the bind

  • so if nobody else steps forwardI will do this for you."

  • Or: "I'll be your deep fall back but you have to keep searching for somebody else."

  • Now you will find out about the person's character at that moment

  • because if they say: "Great! I got my sucker!"

  • and they stop looking

  • then they have abused the relationship.

  • But if they say: "That's great my stress level's down at zero

  • because now I know it's not going to be a disaster

  • but I'm going to keep looking for somebody for whom it's less of an imposition."

  • That's a person that

  • will get lots of this sort of support.

  • When I was in graduate school we did a moving party with four people

  • a lot of moving parties carry heavy objects

  • we had four people we should have had twelve.

  • It was a long day.

  • And after that I enacted a new policy I said from now on when somebody says:

  • "Will you help me move?" I'd say: "How much stuff have you got?"

  • And they would tell me and I would say: "Hmm that sounds like about eight people.

  • If you give me the names of seven other people that will be there I'll be there."

  • And I never again was at a moving party that went

  • for 14 hours

  • in January in Pittsburgh.

  • Everybody has good and bad times.

  • The big thing about time management is

  • find your creative time and defend it ruthlessly.

  • Spend it alone

  • maybe at home if you have to.

  • But

  • defend it ruthlessly.

  • The other thing is find your dead time.

  • Schedule meetings

  • phone calls exercise mundane stuff

  • but do stuff during that

  • where you don't need to be at your best. We all have these times.

  • And the times are not at all intuitive.

  • I discovered that my most productive time was between ten p.m. and midnight

  • which is really weird but for me it's just this burst of energy right before the end.

  • Let's talk about interruptions.

  • In interruptions

  • There are people who measure this kind of stuff who have stopwatches and clipboards

  • and what they say is that an interruption

  • takes typically 6-9 minutes

  • but then there's a 4-5 minute recovery to get your head back into what you're doing.

  • And if you're doing something like software creation

  • you may never get your head backthere the cost can be infinity.

  • But if you do the math on that five interruptions blow a whole hour.

  • So you've got to find ways to reduce both the frequency and the length of these interruptions.

  • One of my favorites is turn phone calls into email.

  • If you phone my office at Carnegie Mellon it says: "Hi this is Randy please send me email."

  • Again I presume everybody here has email

  • how many people here when a new message comes in

  • does your computer go "ding" or make some other noise?

  • Do we still have people doing that?

  • - What the heck is wrong with you people?

  • I love the fact that computer scientists just know nothing about anything

  • so for years by default all these packages out of the box would go "ding"

  • every time you get a new piece of email so we had

  • taken a technology explicitly designed

  • to reduce interruption

  • and we turn them into interruptions.

  • So you just got to turn that off. The point of email is you go to it when you're ready

  • not you're sitting around like Pawlow's dogs saying "Oh maybe I'll get another email!"

  • In the same way you try not to interrupt other people.

  • I save stuff up so I have boxes for Tina or formy research group meeting

  • and I put stuff in those boxes

  • and then once a week or however often when the box gets full

  • I walk down the hall and I interrupt that person one time and say

  • "Here are the eight things I have for you."

  • How do you cut things short?

  • Because people always want to spend more time than you want to spend.

  • Where you can say look

  • somebody interruptsyou and says:

  • "Got a few minutes?" and I say: "Well I'm in the middle of something right now."

  • That tells them:

  • "I'm interrupting it and I'm going to do it quickly but I've got to get back to that."

  • Or you can say: "I only have five minutes."

  • The great thing about that is that later you have the privilege of extending that if you so choose.

  • But when the five minutes are up then you say:

  • "Well I said at the beginning I'll have five minutes and I really have to go now."

  • So it's a very socially played way to bound the amount of time on the interaction.

  • If somebody's in your office and they don't get it

  • now I'm not saying that as a computer scientist I have

  • an inordinate amount of time or opportunity to interact with people with no social skills...

  • But if you have someone in your office who is just not getting it

  • what you do is you stand up you walk to the door

  • you compliment them

  • for some reason this is a crucial part of the process

  • you thank them and you shake their hand.

  • And if they still don't leave

  • which is pretty much a guarantee that you're dealing with someone from my tribe

  • then you're in the doorway you just keep going.

  • What I have found is that people don't like it when you look at your watch

  • while you're talking with them

  • so what I do is I put a clock on the wall right behind them

  • so it's just off access from their eyes

  • and I can just glance over a little bit when I need to see what time it is.

  • It's a very nice way to get me information without being rude to them.

  • Time journals.

  • Time is the commodity you better find out where your time is going.

  • Monitor yourself

  • and update it throughout the day.

  • You can't wait till the end of the day and say: "What was I doing at 10:30?"

  • because our memories aren't that good.

  • So what you do - and I really hope that technology within another five years or so

  • will be so good that the time journals can be created automatically

  • or at least some facsimile of it

  • but until then what we do is we monitor it ourselves.

  • This is what an empty time journal would look like.

  • The details aren't important but the key thing is that

  • when you fill it in you've got a bunch of categories

  • and what I was doing and you can do this very informally

  • but you'll get a lot of real data about where your time went.

  • And it's always very different. Anybody who has done monetary budgeting

  • you look at it and you go "Wow I didn't know I was spending that much on

  • dry cleaning." Or restaurants or whatever.

  • It's always a fascinating surprise.

  • And you always spend more than you think.

  • But with time budgets

  • you find out that the time is going wildly differently than you would have imagined.

  • The best example of this I know is Turing Award winner Fred Brooks's time clocks.

  • He's a brilliant computer scientist

  • but he also has this great array of clocks in his office and when you go in and talk to him

  • he says: "Is this meeting about research or teaching?" or whatever

  • and then he flips the appropriate switch and at the end of the week

  • he knows exactly where his time went.

  • The man is a genius!

  • When I meet with students and this is I think just as appropriate for people in a workplace

  • I say: "What's your schedule?" You have a set of fixed meetings every time every week

  • and what you have to do is you have to look at those and identify the open blocks

  • where you're going to waste time and I can tell you you're going to waste time just by looking at it.

  • So in this case you've got a class

  • where...

  • you've got a class at a certain point and then you've got a gap until the next class

  • so I've identified those here.

  • And the gaps between classes that in this case last an hour or an hour and a half

  • this is just prime time to be wasted!

  • So what I always told my students was

  • make up a fake class.

  • The fake class is go to one specific place in the library during that hour

  • and when you're sitting there with just you in the library and your books

  • there's a pretty good chance you might actually study.

  • So Don't go and hang out with friends for an hour just make that a fake class

  • make your own little study hall. It's a simple trick

  • but it's amazing how effective it is when somebody just explicitly does it.

  • When you've got your time journal data what do you figure out from that?

  • What am I doing that doesn't need to be done?

  • What can someone else do?

  • I love every day saying

  • what am I doing that I could delegate to somebody else?

  • My sister is again laughing because she knows who that person was in our youth.

  • What can I do more efficiently?

  • And: How am I wasting other people's time?

  • When you get good at time management you realize that it's a collaborative thing.

  • I want to make everybody more efficient it's not a selfish thing it's not me against you it's:

  • How do we all collectively get more done?

  • As you push on the time journal stuff you start to find that

  • you don't make yourself more efficient at work

  • so you become some sort of über-worker person

  • you become more efficient at work so you can leave at five

  • and go home and be with the people that you love.

  • People call this work-life balance.

  • For the junior faculty

  • you may have heard of it

  • in some sort of mythical sense

  • but it is possible.

  • I found that I worked less

  • - I worked fewer hours after I got married and I got more done.

  • And I was always fascinated in graduate school that the people who graduated fastest with their Ph.D.s

  • were the people who had a spouse and kids.

  • I said how can that be? That's like a built-in boat anchor.

  • Alright You know you've got

  • all these other demands on your time and I'm a single guy

  • and I've got all the time in the world and that's the problem.

  • I approach it like I've got all the time in the world

  • so my time isn't precious.

  • When you've got a spouse and little kids

  • your spouse is likely to say things to you like:

  • "You better not be into that grad school more than 40 hours a week!"

  • so when you come in you're not sitting around playing computer games.

  • Not that I ever did that!

  • But when you come in you're coming in and you're doing work

  • and I found like most people that once I got married and had kids

  • my whole view of time management really got - I mean we were playing for real stakes now!

  • Because now there are people whose lives are impacted if I'm spending too much time at work.

  • The other thing about time management that makes you really start to look through a crystalline lens

  • and figure out what's important and what's not - I love this picture.

  • I blanked out her name

  • but this says: Blahblahblah this is a pregnant woman

  • and it says: "She is worrying about the effect on her unborn child from the sound of jackhammers."

  • So they're doing construction and the people here are laughing because

  • they can see that this woman who is so concerned about the jackhammers affecting her unborn child

  • is holding a lit cigarette.

  • You've got to get really good at saying

  • "I've got to focus my time and energy on the things that matter

  • and not worry about the things that don't."

  • Now I'm not a medical doctor and I don't play one on TV

  • but I'm willing to bet that if I were the fetus I'd be saying

  • "Put the cigarette out mom!! I can deal with the noise!!"

  • Alright. So

  • In terms of I want to tell you a little story about

  • effective versus efficient.

  • I actually was going to give this talk a couple of weeks ago and I talked with Gabe about it

  • and

  • we were going to come up here because as a surprise for my wife

  • her favorite musical group in the whole world is The Police and has been

  • for a long long time a wonderful group

  • and

  • and so we saidhey we're going to drive up to Charlottesville and see them and we actually got some tickets

  • and I said "Well honey as long as we're up there

  • I promised Gabe a long time ago that I wanted to give my time management talk"

  • and she said okay because

  • it's about an three hour drive so it's very efficient

  • to couple these two trips together. And about two days later she said: "You know honey

  • I know how you are with talks.

  • And before you give one for a couple of days you start to obsess."

  • And....

  • As we talked through it she said: "So we're going to go up in this couple's time away

  • we've gotten our sitter to watch the kids

  • and this couple's time away

  • is going to be eaten up by you obsessing over preparing this talk."

  • I thought about it I said "Okay so

  • obviously the right solution is we should keep our couple's time

  • our couple's time and we'll go up and see the concert

  • we'll have our time together

  • and I'll just schedule a different day and I'll go up on a one day trip and I'll do the talk!"

  • And she said: "Wowthat was easy!"

  • And that's right! Once you've framed it in the right way you say:

  • "Yeah the cost here is that I have to do the drive a second time."

  • But it turns out I'm doing the drive with my nephew Christopher

  • and we talk and my mom turned up so

  • the time wasn't even dead time so there is no loss at all.

  • But the key thing was we said

  • it's not about efficiency it's about effectiveness and best overall outcome.

  • And of course one of the nice things was that we did get to the Police concert

  • and I really want to thank Gabe and Jim Aylor because we really went to the concert!

  • And my wife was very happy.

  • I'm the guy in the back saying:

  • "She's not paying any attention to me today!"

  • But it was wonderful and he is a charming gentleman in person he is

  • absolutely charming.

  • So say about procrastination.

  • There's an old saying: "Procrastination is the thief of time."

  • Procrastination is hard and I have a little bit of an insight here for you:

  • We don't usually procrastinate because we're lazy.

  • Sometimes people rationalize their procrastination. They say: "Well gee

  • if I wait long enough maybe I won't have to do it."

  • Alright

  • That's true. Sometimes you get lucky.

  • But Other people say: "Gee if I start on it now I'm just going to spend all the time on it.

  • If I only give myself the last two days

  • I'll do it in two days because that's the work expands to fill the time available Parkinson's law."

  • That's marginally true

  • but I think the key balance here is to understand

  • that doing things at the last minute is

  • really expensive.

  • And It's just much more expensive than doing it just before the last minute.

  • So if you're doing something and you can still mail it through the U.S. mail

  • you've suddenly avoided the "oh my god I've got to do the whole FedEx thing".

  • Now I love FedEx.

  • FedEx supports our whole universal habit of procrastination.

  • But it also allows us to get stuff there when it really has to be there in a hurry

  • so that's a wonderful thing.

  • But I think you have to

  • you have to realize that if you push things right up to the deadline

  • that's where all the stress comes from.

  • Because now you can't reach people

  • if somebody is out of the office for just one day your whole plan is upset

  • so you really have to work hard on this kind of stuff.

  • The other thing is that deadlines are really important.

  • We're all essentially deadline-driven so if you have something that isn't due for a long time

  • makeup a fake deadline and act like it's real.

  • And that's wonderful because those are the deadlines when push comes to shove

  • you can slip on by a couple of days and it's all right

  • so they are less stressful.

  • If you are procrastinating

  • you've got to find someway to get back into your comfort zone.

  • Identify why you are not enthusiastic.

  • Whenever I procrastinate on something there's always a deep psychological reason.

  • Usually it's I'm afraid of being embarrassed because I don't think I'll do it well

  • or I'm afraid I'm going to fail at it.

  • And

  • Sometimes it involves asking somebody for something.

  • One of the most magical things I've learned in my life is that

  • sometimes you just have to ask

  • and wonderful things happen.

  • But you just have to step out and do that.

  • - I won the parent lottery I have just wonderful parents.

  • My dad unfortunately passed away not too long ago.

  • But this is one of my favorite photographs because my dad was such a smart guy

  • I could almost never surprise him or impress him

  • because he was that good!

  • But we were down at the family vacation at Disney world

  • and the monorails were going by and we're going to board the monorail

  • and we noticed that in

  • in the front up here in the cabin I don't know if you can see it in this picture

  • but there's an engineer who drives the monorail and there are actually guests up there with him

  • which is kind of unusual.

  • My dad and I were talking about that

  • and I knew

  • because I've done some consulting for Disney.

  • My dad's saying: "Oh

  • "they probably have to be special VIPs or something." I said: "Oh there is a trick.

  • There is a special way you get into that

  • cabin.

  • And he said: "Really? What is it?" I said: "I'll show you.

  • Dylan come with me." And Dylan who's - the back of his head you can see there

  • we walk up and I whisper to Dylan:

  • "Ask the man if we can ride in the front!"

  • And we go to the attendant and the attendant says:

  • "Why? Yes you can." And he opens the gate and my dad is just like...!

  • I said: "I told you there was a trick I didn't say it was hard!"

  • Sometimes all you have to do is ask.

  • And it's that easy.

  • Let's talk about delegation. Nobody operates individually anymore

  • and you can accomplish a lot more when you have help.

  • However most people delegate very poorly.

  • They treat delegation as dumping.

  • "I don't have time to do this you take care of it."

  • And then they micro-manage and it's just a disaster.

  • The first thing if you're going to delegate something to a subordinate

  • is you grant them authority with responsibility.

  • You don't tell somebody:

  • "Go take care of this but if you need to spend any money

  • you've got to come back to me for approval."

  • That's not empowering them that's telling them you don't trust them.

  • If I trust you enough to do the work

  • I trust you enough to give you the resources and the budget

  • and the time and whatever else you need to get it done.

  • You give them the whole package.

  • The other thing is delegate but always do the ugliest job yourself.

  • So when we need to vacuum the lab before a demo

  • I bring in the vacuum cleaner and I vacuum it.

  • Do the dirtiest job yourself

  • so it's very clear that you're willing to still get the dirt on your hands.

  • Treat your people well.

  • People are the greatest resource

  • and if you are fortunate enough to have people who report to you

  • treat them with dignity and respect and

  • to sound a little bit corny the kind of love that they should have from someone

  • who cares about them and their professional development.

  • And for crying out loud staff and secretaries are your life line!

  • If you don't think you should treat them well because it's the decent thing to do

  • at least treat them well because if you don't they will get you.

  • And they will get you good

  • and you will deserve it and I will applaud them.

  • My giving a talk with Alf Weaver in the audience

  • - where is Alf? There he is. -

  • that's like talking about surviving the Johnstown flood if Noah was in the audience.

  • One of the things that Alf Weaver taught me is

  • whether it's to a colleague or to a subordinate

  • if you want to get something done

  • you cannot be vague and he said:

  • "You give somebody a specific thing to do

  • a specific date and time

  • - "Thursday" is not a specific time.

  • "Thursday at 3:22" gets somebody's attention.

  • And you give them a specific penalty or reward

  • that will happen if that deadline for that thing is not met"

  • and then he paused and he said:

  • "And remember the penalty or the reward has to be for them

  • not you!"

  • - "I will be screwed over if you don't meet that deadline!"

  • "Oh bummer."

  • This is an important point to not get wrong.

  • Challenge people.

  • I've been told that

  • one of the tricks is you delegate

  • until they complain.

  • I don't know about until they complain

  • but what I've found is that under delegation is a problem.

  • People are usually yearning for the opportunity to do more

  • they want to be challenged

  • they want to prove to you and themselves they can be more capable so let them.

  • Communication has to be clear.

  • So many times people get upset with their bosses

  • because there's a misunderstanding.

  • And particularly in a time of email

  • it's so easy to communicate via email. Even if you've had a face-to-face conversation

  • send a two-line email just to be specific afterwards.

  • And it's not we're trying to be all lawyer-like

  • it's just that as judge Wapner said: "Get it in writing!"

  • if you remember the People's Court

  • and judge Wapner said:

  • "If there isn't a problem it's not a problem it didn't take you much time

  • but if there ever is a problem

  • well - wait a second there won't be a problem because there is a written record."

  • And that's the magic.

  • There won't be a confusion because you can't disagree about the written word.

  • Don't give people how you want them do it

  • tell them what you want them to do. Give them objectives not procedures.

  • Let them surprise you with a way of solving a problem

  • you would never have imagined.

  • Sometimes those solutions are mind-blowing.

  • Good or bad.

  • But they're really much more fun than just having them do it the way you would have done it.

  • And you know what if you're at an university

  • your job should be to have people smarter than you

  • i.e. your students

  • and they will come up with stuff you would never have thought of.

  • The other thing is tell people the relative importance of each task.

  • I meet Some people say: "My boss is an ogre they gave me five things to do!"

  • I'm like: "Oh did they tell you which one was the most important?"

  • - "Oh yeah.

  • "I guess I could ask that."

  • Knowing that if you have five things which are the ones to get done

  • is really important because if you're flying blind

  • you've got a 20 percent chance of getting them done in the right order.

  • Delegation can never be done too young.

  • Does everyone see the difference in the two pictures?

  • This is my daughter Chloe I love her to death

  • but I want her to grow up

  • to be a wonderful person and I know the sooner she holds her own bottle

  • the better.

  • Sociology. Beware upward delegation.

  • Sometimes you try to delegate and people try to hand it back to you.

  • One of the best things I ever saw was someone

  • who had a secretary trying to say "I can't do this you'll have to take it back"

  • and he just put his hands behind his back and took a step backwards.

  • Then he waited.

  • And then eventually the secretary said:

  • "Or maybe I could find this other solution." And he said:

  • "That's wonderful! I'm so proud you thought of that."

  • It was just an elegant gesture.

  • Reinforce behavior you want be repeated.

  • One of my favorite stories

  • in the One Minute Manager is he talks about

  • did you ever wonder about how they got the killer whales

  • to jump through the hoop?

  • If they did it like modern American office managers

  • they would yell at the killer whale: "Jump through the hoop!"

  • And every time the killer whale didn't jump through the hoop they'd hit it with a stick.

  • This is how we train people in the office place.

  • Read the book if you want to see how they actually do it because I'm curious.

  • I know now. But it's really cool how they get them to do it.

  • So Reinforce behavior you want repeated. When people do things that you like

  • praise them and thank them.

  • That's worth more than any amount of monetary reward or a little plaque.

  • People really like to just be told straight up:

  • "Thank you I really appreciate that you did a good job."

  • The other thing is that if you don't want things delegated back up to you

  • don't learn how to do them!

  • I take great pride I don't know how to run photocopiers and fax machines

  • and I am not going to learn it.

  • That's certainly not how I'm going to spend my remaining time.

  • Meetings. The average executive spends more than 40% of his or her time in a meeting.

  • My advice is when you have a meeting

  • lock the door unplug the phone and take everybody's BlackBerrys.

  • Because if it's worth our time it's worth our time.

  • If it's not worth our time it's not worth our time

  • but I don't have any interest in being in a room with six people who are all half there.

  • Because that's very inefficient.

  • I don't think meetings should ever last more than an hour with very rare exception.

  • And I think there should be an agenda.

  • I got into a great habit a couple of years ago when I just started saying:

  • "If there's no agenda I won't attend."

  • The great thing about that is whoever called the meeting had to actually think

  • before they showed up

  • about why we were supposed to be there because otherwise it's like:

  • "Why are we here?" - "Because we're having a meeting. It's on all of our calendars."

  • It's just a classic Dilbert moment.

  • So

  • Most important thing about meetings and again this comes from the One Minute Manager

  • one minute-minutes.

  • At the end of the meeting

  • somebody has to have been assigned to inscribe

  • and they write down in one minute or less

  • what decisions got made

  • and who is responsible for what by when

  • and to email it out to everybody because if you don't do that

  • you have your next weekly meeting next week

  • and you're all sitting around going like "Who was going to do this?"

  • It's very inefficient.

  • And it's so fast you just do these one-minute-minutes.

  • Let's talk about technology.

  • I'm a computer scientist so they say: "Which gadget will make me more time-efficient?"

  • And I don't have any answer for that it's all idiosyncratic

  • but I will tell you that my favorite comment about technology comes from a janitor at the UCF

  • who said: "Computers are faster they just take longer."

  • That's Zen right there.

  • So

  • That's another way of saying only use technology that's worth it and worth it is

  • in the end did it make me more efficient?

  • That depends on how you work and we're all different.

  • Remember that technology is getting insane

  • I walked into McDonald's

  • and I ordered Happy Meal number two and they said:

  • "Would you like a cell phone with that?"

  • I went to the grocery store to buy 16 slices of American cheese

  • and you get Grolier's Encyclopedia so

  • with 16 slices of cheese you get all of men's knowledge for free!

  • That's just spooky scary!

  • Remember that technology really has to be something

  • that makes your life better you guys may have seen this

  • I just find it very humorous.

  • So

  • Only use technology that helps you!

  • I find that technology is good if it allows you to do things in a new way.

  • Just doing the same things

  • \\a little bit faster with technology is nice but when technology changes the work flow...

  • So I was carving pumpkins a few years ago and this is F.M. a good friend of mine

  • And

  • if you can see itdown by her right knee is a pattern

  • and you lay this pattern over the pumpkin and you get this little special carving knife

  • and you can instead of these amateurish pumpkins like I made

  • you get this "howling at the moon"

  • and her husband Jeff and I thought this was really cool

  • but in sign of a reactionary burning man kind of a moment

  • we grabbed our power drills

  • and we carved our pumpkins that way!

  • Use technology if it changes the way you do things because -

  • believe me the results of a power drillyou get these little - oh it's just gorgeous.

  • Let's talk briefly about email because email is such a large part of all our lives.

  • First off don't ever delete any of it.

  • Save all of it. I started doing this ten years ago.

  • An interesting thing is that

  • all the historians talk about "Oh it's such a shame

  • we don't have

  • people keeping diaries we don't know what their days are like" and I'm like: "You fools!"

  • We have just entered a society circa about ten years ago and I'm a living example of it.

  • Every piece of my correspondence

  • is not only saved

  • it's searchable.

  • If I were a person of merit a historian - which is a big stretch

  • a historian could actually look at my patterns of communication

  • much better than the most compulsive diary writer.

  • Now we could talk about whether or not I am being introspective

  • that's about content

  • but in terms of quantity

  • it's great and of course you can save your email and you can search it

  • and that's just wonderful because you can pull back stuff from five years ago.

  • So never delete your email.

  • Here's a big email trick.

  • If you want to get something done

  • do not send the email to five people.

  • "Hey could somebody take care of this?"

  • Everyone of these five recipients is thinking one and only one thing:

  • "I deleted it first!"

  • Alright So

  • - "The other four people will take care of this I don't have to."

  • So you send it to one and only one person.

  • But if you really want it to be done

  • send it to somebody who can do it

  • tell them watch again Alf Weaver: specific things specific time

  • and the penalty can be more subtle like you just CC their boss.

  • And the other thing i had have teach -

  • I had this conversation with every student in my entire career because they send email

  • and then they just wait

  • for the person to respond.

  • And I say: "If the person has not responded within 48 hours

  • it's okay to nag them

  • and the reason it's okay to nag them:

  • Because if they have not responded within 48 hours

  • the chance that they are ever going to respond is zero."

  • Maybe not zero. Maybe that small.

  • But in my experience if people don't respond to you within 48 hours

  • you'll probably never hear from them so you just start nagging them.

  • Let's talk about the care and feeding of bosses.

  • There's a phrase: Managing from beneath.

  • Because we all know that all bosses are idiots.

  • That's certainly the expression

  • the sense I've gotten from everybody who has a boss.

  • When you have a boss write things down do that clear communication thing.

  • Ask them: "When is our next meeting?

  • What do you want me to have done by then?" So you've got sort of a contract.

  • "Who can I turn to for help besides you because I don't want to bother you?"

  • And remember your boss wants a result not an excuse.

  • General advice on vacations.

  • Phone callers should get two options:

  • The first one is - the first option is:

  • "Contact John Smith not me I'm out of the office this person can help you now if it's urgent."

  • Or: "Call back when I'm back."

  • Why? Because you don't want to come back to a long sequence of phone messages saying:

  • "Randy can you help me get care of this?"

  • and you call them back and you've been on vacation for a week they already solved it.

  • The other thing is that it's not a vacation if you're reading email.

  • Trust me on that.

  • It's not a vacation if you're reading email.

  • I can stay in my house all weekend and not read email and it's a vacation.

  • But if I go to Hawaii and I've got a Blackberry

  • But if I go to Hawaii and I've got a Blackberry I'm not on vacation.

  • And I know this when I got married my wife and I got married

  • and we left our reception in a hot air balloon

  • which did not have wireless on it

  • And

  • dean Jim Morris at the time -

  • we took a month long honeymoon which was great but not really long enough

  • - and I said: "I'm not going to be reachable for a month." And Jim said: "That's not acceptable."

  • I said: "What do you mean it's not acceptable?"

  • He said: "Well I pay you.

  • So that's the "not acceptable" part."

  • And I said: "Okay. So there has to be a way to reach me?"

  • He said "yes". And I said "Okay".

  • So if you called my office there would be a phone answering machine message that said:

  • "Hi this is Randy I'm on vacation. I really took 39 to get married.

  • And so we're going for a month.

  • And I hope you don't have a problem with that.

  • But apparently my boss does

  • so he says I have to be reachable. So here's how you can reach me.

  • My wife's parents live in blahblahblah town.

  • Here is their names if you call directory assistance you can get their number.

  • And if you can convince

  • my new in laws that your emergency

  • merits interrupting their only daughter's honeymoon

  • they have our number."

  • Here's some more of my most important advice

  • we close with some of the best stuff: Kill your television.

  • People who study this say the average American watches

  • 28 hours of television a week.

  • That's almost three quarters of a full time job.

  • So

  • So if you really want to have time back in your life

  • you don't have to kill your television but just

  • unplug it and put it in the closet and put a blanket over it.

  • See how long it takes you to get the shakes.

  • Turn money into time

  • Turn money into time especially junior faculty members or other people

  • who have young children.

  • This is the time to throw money at

  • the problem.

  • Hire somebody else to mow your lawn

  • do whatever you need to do

  • but exchange money for time at every opportunity

  • when you have very young children

  • because you just don't have enough time

  • it's just too hard.

  • The other thing is eat and sleep and exercise above all else!

  • You always have time to sleep.

  • Because if you get sleep deprived

  • everything falls apart.

  • Other general advice: Never break a promise but renegotiate them if need be.

  • If you've said: "I have this done by Tuesday at noon"

  • you can call the person on Friday and say

  • "I'm still go to my word but I'm really jacked up

  • and I'm going to have to stay and work over the weekend to meet that Tuesday deadline.

  • Is there any way there's any slack on that?

  • And a lot of times I say: "Thursday's fine."

  • Because I really needed it Thursday but I told you Tuesday.

  • " Or they'll say: "It's no problem I can have Jim do that instead of you. He has some free time."

  • Now if they say: "No there's no wiggle room here"

  • you say: "That's okay no problem I'm still go to my word."

  • If you haven't got time to do it right you don't have time to do it wrong that's self-evident.

  • Recognize that most things are pass/fail.

  • People spend way too much time

  • - there's a reason we have the expression "good enough".

  • It's because the thing is

  • "good enough"!

  • The last thing is get feedback loops.

  • Ask people in confidence

  • because if someone will tell you what you're doing right or doing wrong

  • and they'll tell you the truth

  • that's worth more than anything else in the whole world.

  • I recommend these two books.

  • Time management is not a late breaking field both these books are old books

  • but I recommend them highly.

  • It's traditional to close a talk with this

  • like "Here's the things I told you about."

  • I'm not going to tell you the things I told you about

  • I want to tell you the things that you can operationally go out and do today.

  • First thing: If you don't have a day-timer or a Personal Digital Assistant

  • a Palm Pilot or whatever go get one!

  • Put your To Do list in priority order you can use the four quadrants or do what I do

  • just put a number from zero to nine but

  • sort it by priority.

  • And do a time journal and if that's really too much effort

  • just count the number of hours

  • you watch of television in the next week.

  • That's my gift to you.

  • The last thing is once you've got your day-timer

  • make a note

  • make a note for 30 days from today - it's okay if that one goes "ding" to remind you!

  • - and revisit this talk in 30 days. It will be up on the web courtesy of Gabe

  • and ask:

  • "What have I changed?"

  • If I haven't changed anything

  • then we still had a pleasant hour together.

  • If you have changed things

  • then you'll probably have a lot more time

  • to spend with the ones you love.

  • And that's important.

  • Time is all we have.

  • And you may find one day

  • you have less than you think.

  • than you think.

  • Thank you.

  • Gabe Robins:

  • Well that was amazing.

  • When me and Randy first talked about him giving this talk

  • I said: "We'll pick the biggest auditorium on campus

  • Cabell Hall right here 850 people."

  • And he said: "Do you really think we can get 850 people in a room to listen to this?"

  • And I said:

  • "Not only we'll do that but we'll have to turn people away and

  • it will be the biggest attendance since the Dalai Lama came here and gave a talk." And he said:

  • "Big hitter the Lama."

  • And after I started getting hundreds of emails from all of you and many other people who

  • couldn't find seats here but who will have to see it on the web I called Randy and I said:

  • "We're gonna need a bigger boat!"

  • And that's how it went.

  • So Randy thanks again we love you

  • and it was great.

Gabe Robins:

字幕與單字

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A2 初級 美國腔

時間管理,英文字幕,蘭迪-保施,2007年11月。 (Time Management with English Subtitle by Randy Pausch, November 2007)

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