Helpful Score: 1
I look to this book time and time again, reminding myself of the difference between "important, but not urgent" and "urgent, but not important" tasks. It's a superb primer on best practices for time management, and well worth the time for any new manager who feels they have so much to do, too little time to do it, and no idea where to start. In conjunction with other priority-setting books and exercises, this helps develop a very effective personal "to-do list" and goal-setting plan. Recommended!
(from back cover)
The one hour it takes to read this book could save you a hundred...
This little book may help you end all the problems you've ever had managing your time. For postponers and workaholics alike, it contains a treasury of wonderful, time-saving advice on everything from cutting you paperwork in half, overcoming metal blocks, making lists, meeting deadlines to changing your sleep habits. It eve tells you how to get rid of that number one killer of all time - procrastination.
The one hour it takes to read this book could save you a hundred...
This little book may help you end all the problems you've ever had managing your time. For postponers and workaholics alike, it contains a treasury of wonderful, time-saving advice on everything from cutting you paperwork in half, overcoming metal blocks, making lists, meeting deadlines to changing your sleep habits. It eve tells you how to get rid of that number one killer of all time - procrastination.
One of the best time management books - the basis for the work of Steven Covey. In fact, it appears that Covey took all of Bliss's ideas as his own.