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Yes, you can access Grip by Rick Pastoor in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Personal Development & Self Improvement. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Topic
Personal DevelopmentSubtopic
Self ImprovementPART 1
GRIP AND YOUR WEEK
Whether youâre a student or CEO, public servant or president, starting a new job or starting your own business, you have exactly seven twenty-four-hour days at your disposal each week. No more, no less.
Want to get more done with less hassle? Donât look at how much time you have. Look at how you spend it.
Youâll make better use of the hours we all have if you pick a path and then spend time on what matters most. Picking a pathâand sticking to itâsounds pretty straightforward. But with all the things life throws at you, it can be anything but. Not to worry. Weâre going to start simple, by defining exactly what that path is (your priorities) and planning out a single workweek.
In the first part of this book Iâll show you how to work strategically. In practical terms, weâll look at how to get a better grip on the hours in your workweek. How you can use your calendar, to-do list, and email to get your work done faster and better. And how to handle all the unexpected stuff that comes your way.
Whenever people ask me for suggestions about how they work, my first question is always: âWhatâs your schedule look like this week?â The answer tells me right off whether they have a plan for their week before they dive in. And whether they have a strategy. Now you might say: âOf course I put all my appointments on my calendarâtell me something I donât know!â
Challenge accepted.
1. YOUR CALENDAR IS YOUR ROCK
Setting priorities, scheduling your work, and making it happen
Your calendar is the basis of everything. Okay, glad we got that straight.
In a workweek where plans can change at any moment, you want one thing you can always rely on. Something solid you can look to when things get chaotic. Make that thing your calendar.
Much as I like trying out new tools, I always come back to my trusty calendar in the end. It has helped me tremendously over the yearsânot just to keep track of appointments, but to structure my workweek. In fact, itâs the bedrock I build my week on. Whatever else happens, my calendar tells me what really matters. I spend less energy wondering, âWhat should I do first this morning?â because I can just check my calendar.
To make your calendar work for you, it has to be up to date. Want your calendar to be rock-solid reliable? Want to never again overlook a critical deadline or appointment? Then from now on, just do what your calendar says. Period. If youâre scheduling time there for things youâre not doing, nowâs the time to scrap those appointments. Be brutal. That recurring meeting you never attend? Cancel it. The old reminders for bookkeeping that you always ignore? Delete them.
Start fresh with only those items you know youâll stick to.
FOUR REASONS TO LOVE YOUR CALENDAR
1. Your calendar is finite
Your calendar only has so much room, and that can feel limiting. Just think: if there were more hours in a day you could park your whole to-do list in your calendar. But a calendarâs limits are actually its most brilliant feature. Thatâs how it protects you from overextending yourself.
You probably already put important meetings and appointments on your calendar, but what about day-to-day work? Most people donât bother scheduling time for their own tasks. But when you add your own work to your calendar, it makes your true workload visible at a glance. Youâre less likely to pile too much on your plate because you know when itâs full. That makes it much easier to say no when you need to.
More important, itâs what empowers you to say: âYes, Iâd love to!â to that exciting new opportunity that comes up. Because youâll know you can fit it in.
2. Your calendar is like a navigation system
A navigation system does more than give you directions from A to B. Most will show you where traffic is backed up and guide you to the nearest gas station when you need one. All so you can keep your eyes on the road. Thatâs convenient because you only need to keep track of one system, and one system keeps things simple, right?
I bet you also already use some kind of calendar. So why not take full advantage of everything this familiar tool can offer? No need for extra apps or add-ons. Your calendar will help get you where you want to go each week. And with less hassle.
3. Your calendar keeps track of how you spend time
By setting aside time in your calendar for your own tasks, youâll get used to figuring out how much time you need for those tasks beforehand. After all, itâs hard to schedule time to do research for a new client, prepare a presentation, or draft a quote without first estimating whether you need half an hour or two. And when you finish a task, youâll know right away if your estimate was on the long or the short side. Youâve created a direct feedback loop thatâs going to help you plan more accurately. Another huge benefit: getting good at these estimates and delivering your work on time helps build trust with bosses, colleagues, and clients.
4. Your calendar is public
Most companies now let staff share their calendars so everybody can see when everybody else is available. If your employer does this, itâs another excellent reason to schedule all your work for the week ahead. That way your coworkers and managers can see what youâre working on, which is especially helpful when working remotely. But the biggest benefit of scheduling your work? Colleagues wonât automatically assume youâre free.
USING YOUR CALENDAR
Okay, enough theory: time for action! Now weâre going to plan your week in six steps, blocking time for all the most important stuff. Not sure what those things are? Donât worry, weâll figure that out as we go.
Step 1. Choose a calendar
When choosing a calendar, go for the digital kind that you can access on all your devices (laptop, smartphone, office computer, tablet, or whatever else you use for your work). Pick one you like using.
A paper calendar may get the job done, but Iâm not a fan and hereâs why. For starters, you miss out on loads of helpful features. A paper calendar wonât send you reminders and you canât share it easily with other people. Plus plans tend to change, and that can be a pain on paper.
Personally, I like Google Calendar. But similar planning tools like Microsoft Outlook and Appleâs iCloud work fine too. Go to gripbook.com/apps and Iâll help you decide which calendar to use.
Step 2. Use your calendar for meetings of all kinds
The first thing to put in your calendar: plans youâve made with other people for the coming week. Youâve probably done that already, but double-check just to be sure nothingâs missing. If youâre meeting off-site, youâll want to make sure you know where and include those details too.

Step 3. Determine the stop time
A third detail you need to decide when planning an appointment is: What time will it end? In the next step Iâll show why itâs important to include specific stop times in your calendar, but for now just go ahead and make your best guess. If you know from experience that meetings with certain people tend to run over, factor that in too. The key is to be realistic.
Step 4. Send out invites to people
When Iâm the one scheduling meetings, I try to make a point of sending out invites to everyone. Digital calendars let you do this easily by adding peopleâs email addresses. That way they also have direct access to the meeting details. If itâs a virtual meeting, donât forget to include the info people will need to join. Another reason I recommend sending out invites: it forces you to consider the length of your meeting. Iâve noticed it makes me more mindful of other peopleâs time. Say I want to schedule coffee with a client to get acquainted. Clearly, two hours would be asking too much of their time. But what about one hour? Or should I keep it to a short-and-sweet thirty minutes? By scheduling both a start and stop time in your calendar, you let others know what to expect. Sometimes Iâll ask the other person to send me an invite. Itâs a gentle way of saying: âYou decide how much time you have for me.â

Step 5. Travel, prep, and postmeeting time
Donât forget to include time on the road. Travel can take up an important chunk of your schedule, yet itâs easy to overlook. A simple way to avoid this pitfall is to make a habit of scheduling travel time when you plan an appointment.
Also, donât forget about prep time. Preparing for meetings is the easiest way to make your time together more effective. To figure out how much time you need, ask yourself: What will it take to make this meeting run smoothly? You can break it down using this checklist:
CHECKLIST
- How much time do I need to get to the meeting?
- How much time do I need to prepare?
- Can I prep on the day itself, or does it need to be earlier?
- Do I need to send any materials to people ahead of time?
- Is there anything I need to order or buy beforehand?
- Are there any meeting outcomes I can anticipate and plan for now? Should I go ahead and set aside time for those actions?
You can schedule time separately in your calendar for meeting prep, travel, and postmeeting tasks. In the example shown, I prepped for a meeting on the day itself. In most cases, that works fine. The result might look like this:

I can see right off that my day is blocked almost solid with three meetings, but that thereâs enough leeway to arrive prepared and on time, and to work through what was discussed in the team meeting and brainstorming session right afterward.
Step 6. Use your calendar for your own work
This last step is key: adding your own work to your calendar. Of course meetings are part of that, too, but here I want to focus on your most important day-to-day activities. Hereâs where your calendar can make all the difference.
Think for a second about how you spend money. Especially with big purchases, we tend to be critical, running down a mental checklist before deciding whether an expense is worth it. Somehow weâre not nearly as careful with our time. Precious hours slip through our fingers like sand. So letâs try a little thought experiment. Iâd like you to think back to your last vacation. More specifically, to the week before you left.
That final weekâbefore you switch on your out-of-office reply and shut down your computer for some much-deserved time offâfeels different from other weeks. Why? Because you have a hard deadline and a clear picture of where you want to be at weekâs end. Youâre fueled by a healthy pressure because after that week your timeâs up. Your thinking gets black-and-white: Whatâs critical? Whatâs fea...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Praise for Grip
- Copyright
- Note to Readers
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part 1: Grip and Your Week
- Part 2: Grip and Your Year
- Part 3: Grip and Your Life
- Bonus chapter: Keeping better notes: Using an app to jot down your thoughts (and find them again)
- Bonus chapter: GRIP on vacation: How to take off and come back with a clear head
- Bonus chapter: GRIP and managing a team: Keeping an eye on the big picture when youâre in charge
- Recommended reading
- Sources
- Thanks
- Notes
- About the author
- About the Publisher