Productivity: Get Motivated, Get Organised and Get Things Done

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Productivity Is Personal!

When it comes to your own productivity, the smartest thing you can do is to learn what works best for you.

Personal development author Gill Hasson helps you to discover how to manage your time and get things done with less stress and more efficiency.

Being productive involves finding your own rhythm and getting things done in a way that works best for you; according to your circumstances, your skills and abilities and the time, energy and resources you have.

Productivity helps you to identify what might currently be getting in the way of you being more productive. It has plenty of ideas and suggestions, tips and techniques to help you get organised and be more productive.

Develop a personal productivity mindsetIdentify your optimum times of dayPlan your time purposefullyManage difficulties and setbacks

Rather than work harder, work smarter. This book shows you how!


From the Publisher

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“Planning is not just sensible, it’s the rope that guides you through the wilderness.” – Emma Donoghue

Being productive means making things happen and getting things done.

What being productive doesn’t mean, though, is squeezing every minute of every hour of every day to become some sort of productivity machine. Being productive doesn’t mean working harder – it means working smarter; getting things done effectively and efficiently.

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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Capstone; 1st edition (May 6 2019)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 136 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0857087843
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0857087843
Item weight ‏ : ‎ 1.05 kg
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.46 x 1.02 x 20.83 cm
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5 reviews for Productivity: Get Motivated, Get Organised and Get Things Done

  1. Colin F.

    This book really is great in helping you get organised whilst not getting stressed. Many of us think we are organised but we are not and in no time you are getting more and more disorganised. This book will teach you ways how you can get yourself organised in a stress free way.

  2. James

    Great book

  3. Mr J D Clay

    V good insightful guide to various factors on productivity. useful writing to do listings and using your time productivity and a lot more. Good value too.

  4. Team B

    You kn ow a book is going to be a good read for you when you open it, read a list of ‘does this situation sound familiar to you?’ and you recognise that that do at least 80% of them! procrastinate? low confidence? distracted? perfectionist? etc all yes yes yes! (yikes).The book explains the difference between persistence and stubborness. It goes on to tell you what you need to stop doing. This involves going through your list of commitments and discarding things. This is probably important if you are a yes person and just agree to do everything (this is me).This is a book i defintely need in my life, ive never thought of myself as being unproductive but it appears i could definitely be better. I look forward to less mental mess and stress and more productivity!

  5. Chappers

    I’m always looking for inspirational new ways to get organised and so I thought I’d have a read of this book. To be fair, I’ve come away from it thinking I’m already pretty organised. Perhaps this book is aimed at people far less organised than my own perceived standards. In particular the section at the back that is entitled ‘Look after yourself’ – I do all of those things already.Ultimately, a lot of these issues stem from being able to take a step back, reflect on your situation and make some necessary changes to bring about an improvement, which is a lot harder for some people than others.Whilst this book hasn’t really taught me anything new, it has at least reaffirmed what I already know about how I conduct my daily life.If I were to offer up any criticism though, it is in the layout and text size of the book itself, in that it is present in a fairly large font – perhaps to stretch out the number of pages, and even still it only manages to muster up around 114 principal pages of sub-A5 paper with fairly wide margins. The pages are just large blocks of text so it isn’t really very ‘bite-size’ or perhaps as easy to absorb for some people.At a price of £7.40 (at time of review) it’s merely ‘ok’ in my book, just because I didn’t really get anything out of it, but to someone in more a chaotic state than me, they might find it a useful prompt to make some small changes.

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