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Super Mario Brothers or Super Departmental Research Administrator? Super Mario Brothers or Super Departmental Research Administrator? Avoiding pitfalls and accomplishing tasks to win the game NCURA REGION V SPRING MEETING HOUSTON, TEXAS APRIL 19-22, 2015
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Presenters ● Kay Gilstrap, CRA Business Manager II – Research Dept. of Educational Psychology, Special Education, & Communication Disorders Georgia State University ● Jennifer Lyon, Ph.D., ELS, CRA Director of Strategic Research Initiatives Office of the Dean, College of Natural Sciences University of Texas, Austin
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Today we will: ● Share tips on prioritizing tasks ● Discuss workday structure and how to make progress on tasks and projects ● Share tools to organize tasks, including, the big time pit, email ● Have open discussion
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Prioritizing Tasks Pre-Award: ●What can you do? ● PI responsibilities ● Central Office ● Proactive Tasks ● Communication with PIs
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Prioritizing Tasks – cont. Pre-Award: ●What should you do? ● Boundaries ● Commitments ● Beware of traps!
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Prioritizing Tasks – cont. Post-Award: ●Deadlines: How to manage? ● Chairs ● Deans ● Central Office ● Sponsors ● Others
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Prioritizing Tasks – cont. Post-Award: ● Relationships ● Learning your faculty ● Others on campus
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Prioritizing Tasks – cont. Post-Award: ● Recurring Tasks ● When ● Why ● Examples: subaward processing, payments, reports, effort reporting, _________________ ● Daily activities? Think about it
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Prioritizing Tasks – cont. Emergencies ● Is it really an emergency? ● Who is asking? ● When is action required? ● If we’re already late, then what? ● Allow flexibility in your schedule ● Set realistic expectations
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Making Progress Tasks vs. Projects ● Tasks: ● Often quick(er) to accomplish, but recurring ● Examples: certify effort; collect biosketches ● Progress is made by completing tasks and checking them off your list
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Making Progress – cont. Tasks vs. Projects ● Projects: ● Take longer (days, weeks, months) to accomplish ● Examples: Draft annual expenditure report for chair; create resource webpage for new faculty ● Progress is made by first breaking projects down into tasks, then completing tasks
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Making Progress – cont. Tasks vs. Projects Managing multiple projects requires balancing your time spent each day on related tasks
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Daily Workday Structure “Eat a live frog first thing in the morning, and nothing worse will happen to you throughout the day.” - Mark Twain
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Workday Structure – cont. Daily: ● Jot down two projects to focus on ● Pick one to focus on before lunch, and one after ● Put the “live frog” first ● Don’t cheat! ● Aim to spend 1 to 2 hours on each project
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Workday Structure – cont. Daily: ● “Eat your live frog” first ● Then focus on your second project ● The remaining 4 to 6 hours is flex time for: ● Shorter-term and routine tasks ● Email correspondence ● Interruptions, distractions, emergencies
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Workweek Structure Weekly: ● Make a list of as many as 5 live frogs ● One for each day of the week ● Determine priority order ● Some weeks it might be a giant, 5-headed frog ● Remain flexible
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Tools to Help You Organize What works for you? ● Are you a note-taker? ● Prefer digital or analog? ● Need visual reminders?
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Tools to Help You Organize High-Tech (and free!): ● Todoist (www.todoist.com) ● Create to-do lists ● View by project or by due date ● Change due dates quickly and easily ● Share lists with colleagues ● Also available as an app
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Tools to Help You Organize High-Tech (and free!): ● Evernote (www.evernote.com) ● type notes and organize into “notebooks” ● save URLs, images ● search your notes by keyword ● share notes with colleagues ● Also available as an app
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Tools to Help You Organize Low-Tech (and cheap!): ● Daily Planners ● Composition notebook(s) ● Colors!
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Tools to Help You Organize The one tool we all have: Email ● Can function as a note-taker ● BCC yourself on messages and archive or file them ● Can function as a “reminder system” ● Set follow-up reminders on messages ● Can function as a filing system ● Create archived email folders with the same names as those on your hard drive
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Tools to Help You Organize Organize your email: ● “Cleaning an inbox is like cleaning your house” ● Employ the 5-minute rule ● Filter listserv items to dedicated folders ● Respond quickly, but act on your schedule ● Make sure you’ve eaten your frog first
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Tools to Help You Organize Beware of Email Pits: ● Inbox as your only organizational tool ● Acting on every email the moment it arrives ● Failing to respond until you know everything ● Starting with a negative statement ● Lengthy responses – is a phone call faster? ● Poor archiving today is time wasted tomorrow
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Summary ● Only do what you can do and should do ● Develop relationships – it’s worth the time! ● Allow for emergencies ● Allow for flexibility ● Organize – use what works for you!
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Questions?
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Contact Information: ● Kay Gilstrap: kay.gilstrap@gsu.edu ● Jennifer Lyon: lyon@austin.utexas.edu
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Thank You!
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