Monday, May 28, 2007

What's on Your Plate?

I've taken 3 months off from Blogging because I had too much on my plate. Now that things are winding down with the extra commitments I've taken on due to my daughter getting a role in a play, my son starting baseball season, and the regular routine of work and life commitments, I've re-committed to regular weekly or bi-weekly blogging to support super busy people and delivery of my e-newsletter twice monthly.

Ironically, during March, a colleague had advised me to use my expertise to develop a timely program specifically for Administrative Professionals during Administrative Professionals week the end of April. I came up with a program called "There's Too Much on My Plate" that helps super busy professionals clearly acknowledge everything on their plate and begin taking ownership and control for everything there is to manage at work and home.

I had the pleasure of visiting American Standard and delivering a keynote to inspire better control of the balancing act. And, now, I'm working with teams at several key corporations to deliver customized programs to meet the needs of their super busy administrative professionals.

One thing I learned first-hand from the last few months is the absolute importance of staying very focused on the most important things and declining other requests and opportunities. Even when there was time to attend another meeting or networking event in the evening, I found that by pushing and having too much on my plate, I was exhausted and wasn't able to apply the focus and energy to those things that mattered most.

When deciding what's most important, realize that it may not be forever, but it's for now. My daughter's had rehearsal for her play usually 3 days a week for 2-4 hours at a time almost an hour from home. I often brought work with me to do while I waited, dialed into a conference call for my own professional development, or shopped in the local area. It was a great experience for her but the lesson for me, put more boundaries around my time, seek more help, and accept the help that's offered. And, importantly, negotiate expectations, communicate fully, and be fully present where ever I am.

As my program for "There's Too much on My Plate" continues to evolve, I will have many experiences to share from participants and from my own experiences. Stay tuned!!


Sincerely yours,


Coach Natalie Gahrmann
natalie@nrgcoaching.com

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