Do 
you find yourself getting to the end of the day and wondering where the 
time went? Maybe you started out prepared to accomplish some very 
specific tasks, but somehow you just didn’t get to them. Putting out 
fires and dealing with lesser issues can pull people away from 
longer-term goals. But if that happens every day, chances are you won’t 
be in business much longer.
Here are eight ways to prevent letting distractions damage your productivity:
Make and post a list
There’s no point in making a list if it 
ends up under all of your unopened mail at the end of the day. Post it 
right where you will see it every time you look up, answer the phone or 
turn to your computer. By keeping it within your field of sight, you can
 also keep it top-of-mind.
Shut your door
This seems like the opposite of good 
management practice. Aren’t you supposed to be available to employees 
when they have a problem? Well, if you aren’t focusing on your business,
 they will definitely have a problem — finding another job. Right now as
 an entrepreneur, it’s company first, employees second. And maybe if 
they can’t reach you they will take some initiative and solve their own 
problems.
Stand up when someone comes into your office
This means that your visitor can’t sit 
down and most people will get tired of standing and leave when their 
business with you is done. If someone is particularly long-winded 
despite standing, come around your desk and walk them out the door and 
down the hall. Then excuse yourself and head back to your office.
Limit outside attention grabbers 
How often do you check email, Facebook, 
your cellphone? Do you take your own calls or leave that to a 
front-office person? Can potential suppliers get instant access to you 
when they walk in your office door? Every one of these is pulling you 
away from your main business. Schedule specific times to address these 
outside issues so that you have uninterrupted time to do your real job.
Get to the bottom of procrastination 
Putting something critical off may be a 
matter of emotion rather than distractions. Are you afraid that you 
don’t have the skills to accomplish something important to your 
business? Do you feel that you don’t have enough information to do a 
good job? Are you nervous about the next step after your current 
project? Really spend time with a pencil and paper looking at the 
reasons why you aren’t tackling something and then figure out how to fix
 them.
Take small bites 
This is anti-procrastination advice but 
it’s true whenever you have a hectic work day and don’t seem to get to 
those large projects. If you get started, you can accomplish more than 
you think with an extra 15-20 minutes every now and then throughout the 
day. Don’t wait for large blocks of time to get started or you may never
 get to it.
Clear your desk 
If you’re ready to dive into a large 
project, clear your work area of other smaller duties. It’s so easy to 
catch sight of something that will only take a couple of minutes and 
stop working on the big stuff to address the little things. Don’t let 
visual distractions cost you important focused time.
Just do it 
Close your door, turn off your phone, 
clear your desk and get started. Put a sign outside your office door 
with something like, “If it’s not bleeding, burning or quitting, tell me
 tomorrow.” If you remove all excuses and distractions, you may actually
 accomplish some of your main business goals even sooner than you 
expect.
 
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