The 80/20 rule is one of the most helpful concepts for life and
time management.
According to this principle: 20 percent of your activities will
account for 80 percent of your results. It can change the way you set goals
forever.
The 80/20 rule is also called the “Pareto Principle” named after
it’s founder, the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto from 1895. He noticed that
people in society seemed to divide naturally into what he called the “vital
few,” or the top 20 percent in terms of money and influence, and the “trivial
many,” or the bottom 80 percent.
Later, he discovered that virtually all economic activity was
subject to this principle, in that 80 percent of the wealth of Italy during
that time was controlled by 20 percent of the population.
We can take Pareto’s 80/20 rule and apply it to almost any
situation. In particular, we can apply it to goal setting and productivity.
How
to apply 80/20 rule to Goal Setting
First, take a piece of paper and write down ten goals. Then ask
yourself: If you could only accomplish one of
the goals on that list today, which one goal would have the greatest positive
impact on your life?
Then pick the second most important goal. What you’ll find is, after you
complete this exercise, you will have determined the most important 20 percent
of your goals that will help you more than anything else.
You should continue to work at those goals that you’ve chosen as the
most valuable all the time.
Eat The Biggest Frog First
You often see people who appear to be busy all day long but seem
to accomplish very little. This is almost always because they are busy working
on tasks that are of low value while they are procrastinating on the one or two
activities that could make a real difference to their companies and to their
careers.
The most valuable tasks you can do each day are often the
hardest and most complex, but the payoff and rewards for completing them can be
tremendous.
Before you begin work, always ask yourself, “Is this task in the top 20
percent of my activities or in the bottom 80 percent?”
The rule for this is: resist the temptation to clear up small
things first.
If you choose to start your day working on low-value tasks, you
will soon develop the habit of always starting and working on low-value tasks.
Always Work Towards Your Main Goal
Finally, I want to tell you about a study that has just been
done about the attitudes of rich people versus poor people in regard to goal
setting. What they found is that 85% of rich people have one big goal that they
work on all the time.
So, if you want to be wealthy, do what wealthy people do. Pick
one big goal and work on it all the time, and if you do, it will change your
life.
Prof. Sonia Chaudhari
Bhagwan Mahavir College of Business Administration, Surat
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