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Twelve Time Management Habits to Master in 2013

Posted: January 08, 2013

2013 is here, yet a 300 year old approach to learning new habits can still be relevant today. Time management is something most of us struggle with on a daily basis. Read on for tips on more effectively managing your time, and how you can use Benjamin Franklin's approach to stick with them.

2013 is here, yet a 300 year old approach to learning new habits can still be relevant today. Time management is something most of us struggle with on a daily basis. Read on for tips on more effectively managing your time, and how you can use Benjamin Franklin's approach to stick with them.

Nearly three hundred years ago, Benjamin Franklin came up with an approach to changing habits that has yet to be surpassed. A young adult seeking to straighten out his act, Franklin developed a list of thirteen virtues, jotting down a brief definition of each. These were character traits he took to be important, but in which he found himself lacking. He knew that nurturing these habits would bring about positive change in his life.

Starting at the top of the list, Franklin spent one week working on each virtue. In the morning he thought about how he would reinforce the new habit throughout the day. During the day he looked at his notes to remind himself of the new habit. At the end of the day, he counted how many times he fell back into the old habit.

While Franklin was surprised at first to see how “faulty” his behavior was, he was so resolved that he pressed on, working through the entire list in a thirteen-week cycle, and completing four such cycles in a year. As for results, he noted in his autobiography that while perfection was unattainable, he could see big improvements.

Modern psychologists recognize three key elements in Franklin’s three-hundred-year-old procedure for changing habits:

  1. He started out committed to the new behavior.
  2. He worked on only one habit at a time.
  3. He put in place visual reminders.

Applying Benjamin Franklin’s Method

Here are 12 time management habits for the new year. Tailor these as you like, but whatever you do, work on one each week using Benjamin Franklin’s method:

Habit 1: Strive to be authentic. Be as honest with yourself as you can about what you want and why you do what you do.

Read the entire article Twelve Time Management Habits to Master in 2013 at Forbes.com.