Track Your Time With a Time Log
A time log is a powerful time management tool. It will help you track how you're using your time, so that you can plan how to make better use of it.
Where is all my time going?

How many times have you caught yourself saying the following:
- "I just don't have enough time!"
- "Where did the time go?"
- "It can't be 5:00 p.m. already. What have I been doing all day?!"
- "There are so many things I wish I could do, if I could only find the time!"
If you're like most people, you probably say these things often. Fortunately, there's a tool that you can begin to use right away, which will help you to take control of your time. That tool is a time log.
By keeping a time log you'll be able to keep track of how you're spending your time, analyze the data, and then decide what changes you're going to make.
This article will show you how to create and use a time log.
What do I need?
There's no need to download software or buy an expensive gizmo to use this technique. One of the beauties of keeping a time log is its simplicity.
To create a time log all you need are the following:
- A notebook
- A pen or pencil
Tools
Daily Moleskine |
Do you know where your time is going?
The Process In a Nutshell

Here are the basic steps for keeping a time log:
- Decide on the amount of time during which you'll keep a time log. You should track your time for a period of 5 to 10 days.
- Keep your notebook and pen with you at all times and record all of your activities as they occur. Don't wait until the end of the day and then try to write down what you did all day from memory.
- Enter a priority for each item. Is it a high priority, a medium priority, or a low priority task?
- At the end of the period you decided on, go over your time log. Analyze how you're spending your time. Are you happy with the way in which you're spending your time? Can you identify time-wasters? What changes do you need to make?
- Create a time budget. Now that you know how you're spending your time, you can decide how you want to spend your time from now on. Decide on categories, such as the following: Commuting; Meal Preparation; House Cleaning; Income Generating Activities; Sleep; and so on. Now decide what percentage of your time you want to devote to each category.
- Once you've created a time budget, keep track of how you spend your time for another period of 5 to 10 days in order to make sure that you're sticking to your plan.
- Every 6 months or so go back through the process of keeping track of how you're spending your time for a few days to make sure that you haven't reverted back to your old behavior.
(Image: Railroad Watch)
Fabulous Time Management Books
Priority
Instead of categorizing your activities as high, medium, or low priority, you can use the categories that Stephen Covey recommends in his best-seller, "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People".
These are the following:
1. Important and Urgent
2. Important, Not Urgent
3. Urgent, Not Important
4. Not Urgent, Not Important
Questions to Ask

As you're analyzing how you're spending your time, ask yourself questions such as the following:
- Are you spending too much time on trivial matters?
- How much of your time is devoted to doing the things that are most important to you?
- How much of your time is devote to doing things that you enjoy?
- Is there a common interruption (one person, event, or circumstance that keeps getting in the way of your productivity)?
- Can you think of ways to minimize interruptions?
- Do you procrastinate between tasks?
- Look at each task and ask yourself: "Does this really need to get done?" and "Am I the best person to be doing this task?"
- Is there anything that you can outsource or delegate?
Happiness Log
Another use of your time log is to keep track of how the activities that you engage in make you feel. Just as you're going to write down the priority of each activity, make a note of how you felt while you were engaged in the activity.
During the analysis stage of the process, make sure to take notice of which activities make you happy, and which do not. Obviously, the idea is to move away from the activities which you don't enjoy, and do more of the things which make you happy.
Time Quote
“Do we have a shortage of time? No, we don’t. Time is the medium in which we exist. To complain about a shortage of time is like a fish in the sea complaining that it has a shortage of water.”
— Mark Forster
More Time Management Tools
Stop Procrastinating by Creating An Unschedule
How to Stop Procrastinating
How to Stop ProcrastinatingDisclosure: This page generates income for authors based on affiliate relationships with our partners, including Amazon, eBay, Google and others.


















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