Wednesday, June 15, 2011

On to-do lists and organisation

Said I was going to post every day this month. Uhm, that's been going well, hasn't it?

I've been thinking lately about prioritising work. Most libraries are short-staffed, so we're all doing more than, in an ideal world, we should. But how do we get the most of out of our days while at the same time delivering a good service to our patrons?

My (seemingly endless) daily to-do list goes something like this:

- Prepare work for student assistants - ensure they have enough to get on with for at least an hour or two without bothering me.
- Check to-do list for really urgent stuff that can't wait and deal with those.
- Check email for ditto.
- Quality check stuff that students and staff members have done the day before.
- Create derivatives of stuff they've done and package and send to requester.
- Upload yesterday's theses to digital repository and email requester with link.
- Prepare new projects for students and staff by deciding on file names, creating digital folders, deciding on metadata fields and metadata to be used.

Other stuff I do includes being on the marketing team and the work that that entails, dealing with issues to do with the digital repository, like display problems or downtime, maintaining twitter accounts for various depts.

Ok, there's more, but I've lost the will to list it all.

To keep on top of things, I maintain a to-do list on an Excel spreadsheet that I open at the start of the day and keep checking throughout the day. I also change the status of particular emails that I can't deal with right away to "follow-up" and check those regularly.

How do you arrange your working days so that you don't get behind on important stuff?

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