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Friday
Feb072014

5 Time Management Tactics Every Musician Must Know

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The discussion of the intersection between independent musician and entrepreneur is not a new one. Both are responsible for shaping their own careers, building their own teams, setting their own goals and working towards the proper milestones that will turn dreams into reality.

Musicians and entrepreneurs also suffer from a similar issue: time management.

And rightfully so… whether you are a solo artist working on your own, or have a band that you can share the responsibilities with, the amount of time it takes to get through the never-ending task-load can very quickly surpass the number of hours in a day, week or year.

If you want to make a business out of your music, the act of making the music is just one small part of the puzzle:



  • Recording

  • Marketing

  • Booking

  • Touring

  • Community Management

  • Content Creation

  • Email/ Communication

  • Analysis

  • Meetings


And let’s not forget that just because you are a musician doesn’t mean you don’t have outside obligations that need to be fulfilled:


  • Family

  • Friends

  • Exercising

  • Running Errands

  • Sleep!


Believe it or not, February is National Time Management Month. That’s right… we all need help with this so badly that an entire month of the year was dedicated to focusing our efforts on doing it more effectively. So what better way to kick off the blog this month by diving into ways that you can effectively manage your time.

Below are 5 tactics that have been an immense help for me personally to be highly effective with my own time management.

Planning is the Key


Mapping out your plan isn’t just essential, it is literally the answer to effective time management. It is the foundation with which the rest of your time management strategies rely on, so let’s discuss this one first.

Whether it is at the top of the year, quarter, month, week or day, you should have a plan of attack.

This plan should includes:

Goals and deadlines

Comprehensive list of tasks that are required of you on a daily, weekly or monthly basis.

Content schedule for social media content (tweets, Facebook posts, YouTube videos, blog posts, newsletters, etc.), new music releases, show dates, etc.

For the entire year of 2014, we are going to be giving our mailing list monthly calendars with all of the monthly and daily holidays/ events on them (such as National Time Management Month!) to help making the content creation and scheduling even easier. Sign up to our newsletter to take advantage of the 2014 Cyber PR Content Topic Calendar.

 

Prioritize


It’s important to understand that not all of your tasks hold the same weight. By treating all of your tasks as equally important, you are adding unnecessary stress to your day because while you work on one task, you will naturally feel as though there is something else you need to be doing or checking.

Last year I read a book by Brian Tracy called Eat that Frog! and it was transformational. The concept is very simple: take a look at all of the tasks you have to do - determine which tasks are most aligned with your goals and do those tasks first.

Whether these are daily tasks that are required of you that you’ll do when you wake up, or weekly tasks that you’ll handle as soon as you dive in on Monday morning, by accomplishing the most important tasks first, you are removing the stress and resistance of handling other tasks later on because you know you’ve already handle the things that are most critical.

Carve Out Time for Total Focus


In a recent interview for NPR, Clifford Nass, a communications professor at Standford studied the contrary effects of multitasking vs. mono tasking:

“… We have scales that allow us to divide up people into people who multitask all the time and people who rarely do, and the differences are remarkable. People who multitask all the time can’t filter out irrelevancy. They can’t manage a working memory. They’re chronically distracted.”

I found myself becoming a slave to my email inbox. I was not only making it a priority (a big mistake!) over other tasks, but I was constantly checking it while doing other things, which meant that my focus on any other task was consistently being interrupted.

By holding off on checking my inbox, and carving out time for just email, I was able to get through in inbox in an hour or so, instead of the 3 that it would take me checking it off-and-on throughout the day. This same tactic can be used for social media engagement, blog reading / writing, music studies or music writing, etc.

Automation Strategy


There are many small tasks that we have in our daily lives that we simply must do to maintain our vision, presence, brand, schedule, etc. Most of these small tasks, such as sharing your most recent blog post to Facebook and Twitter, are harmless on their own, but when added up together can take a significant amount of time out of your day, and a significant amount of focus away from your prioritized task list.

Enter If This Than That (IFTTT). This platform allows you to batch and automate tasks through a very simple process of connecting your digital channels (at time of writing there are 79 channels available for you to connect) and answering the simple question: If ___ Than ___.

In other words, If [a new blog is published to my Wordpress blog], Than [share the link on my Facebook Fan Page].

On Hypebot, Clyde Smith recently published a fantastic walkthrough of IFTTT which I highly suggest you read and get yourself set up with.

Commit!


Are you a procrastinator? It’s okay to be honest here… most of us are. A few years ago I read a book called The War of Art by Steven Pressfield which focuses on the concepts of ’resistance’ in our daily lives and how that leads us to procrastinate from ‘going pro’, which is to approach our work from a professional and focused view.

If you feel like you are procrastinating more than average, and it’s holding you back from accomplishing your goals, I strongly suggest you read this book. It will help you, as it did help me, to identify the areas of my life that were causing resistance and how to remove (or correct) those issues so I could work at going pro.

It’s important to note that only a few short months after reading this book I was hired to become the new PR Director for Cyber PR®. This stuff works.


 

Get the 2014 Cyber PR® Content Topic Calendar!


For the entire year of 2014, we are going to be giving our mailing list monthly calendars with all of the monthly and daily holidays/ events on them (such as National Time Management Month!) to help making the content creation and scheduling even easier. Sign up to our newsletter to take advantage of the 2014 Cyber PR® Content Topic Calendar.

 

5 Time Management Tactics Every Musician Must Know

Reader Comments (2)

Great article with great tips. Thanks!
I would even add "turn off" Facebook or twitter while working. It can be really distracting!

Eric John Kaiser
"Parisian Americana"
http://www.ericjohnkaiser.com

February 11 | Unregistered CommenterEric John Kaiser

Great Post! Time management is a requirement for almost everyone now
Time management.

April 3 | Unregistered CommenterTerredean

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