25 productive actions that take 5 minutes or less

Advertisement
25 productive actions that take 5 minutes or lessThe end of the year always seems like it should be slow. After all, half your coworkers are out of the office, and the other half have their minds on holiday planning and not on work.
Advertisement

But for many businesses, a lot needs to happen at the end of the year. The combination of multiple deadlines and fewer resources can be deadly for productivity.

If you're starting out this week feeling like the proverbial chicken with its head cut off, the goal is to focus — even if it's just for short periods of time.

Only have five minutes to spare? There's still a lot you can do to make incremental progress on your goals.

Next time you're waiting for a meeting, between projects, or stuck on hold with tech support, take out this list. Something on here will help you cross off a task, reset your brain, or see things from a new perspective. You only need five minutes to make a big impact.

Advertisement

1. Answer an email
Pick an email with one clear question — as opposed to multi-paragraph scroll-a-thon from your most verbose colleague — and respond to it.

2. Update your to-do list
Look at your tasks, and ask yourself what needs to happen today, and what can wait until tomorrow, next week … or next year.

3. Add something to your to-do list that you've already accomplished
It sounds like cheating, but really, you're only giving yourself credit. Call it a “Done List,” if you want, but give yourself the boost.

4. Compose a tweet or retweet something
Advertisement
Social media can be a time-suck, but without it, it's nearly impossible to maintain a personal brand in the 21st century.

5. Take PayScale's Salary Survey
Find out if you should be earning more money.

6. Throw something away
Even if you're a committed member of Team Messy Desk, you need to purge the clutter at some point. Now's a good time. Spend five minutes throwing out papers you don't need.

7. Endorse a friend on LinkedIn

Advertisement
8. Go outside and take a deep breath
This time of year, it might be your only chance all day to see the sun.

9. Make a list of questions you need answered by a colleague

10. Stretch at your desk

11. Assess your skills and decide what you want to learn next
If you get stuck, looking at LinkedIn profiles for people with your same job title — or the one you want next — can help.

Advertisement
12. Clean (as in, disinfect) your workspace
It's cold and flu season, after all.

13. Eat something green

14. Organize your apps
Delete the ones that you no longer use.

15. Look at your calendar for tomorrow and next week
Make note of upcoming priorities.
Advertisement

16. Ponder your next career move

17. Take something off your resume
For example, the objective, if you still have one listed, or those jobs from 15 years ago that no longer apply.

18. Add something to your resume
For example, that new skill or certification that you've been meaning to add.

19. Write down three things you accomplished this year
Advertisement
Note whether these were part of your goals for work, your personal goals for your career, or extra.

20. Write down three goals for the coming year
Think about what you need to do to accomplish them.

21. Find a new dream job
Even if you like what you're doing right now, it pays to consider alternate paths. You never know when opportunity will knock, or when your industry might begin to decline.

22. Email a former colleague or friend you haven't spoken to in a while
Arrange a coffee date. Networking is really another name for maintaining relationships.
Advertisement

23. File something, physically or electronically

24. Read an article from a publication that's not on your usual reading list
We all have our old favorites; expand your horizons and read something new.

25. Say hello to a coworker you don't normally see around the office
Get to know your colleagues, even if you don't work with them every day. You never know where you'll find your next job. It could be right under your nose.

Read the original article on PayScale. Copyright 2016.

(Image Credits: Thinkstock)

Advertisement