
Shedding the Corporate Bitch
Welcome to Shedding the Corporate Bitch – the podcast that challenges the status quo and empowers bold professionals to ditch outdated expectations, rewrite the rules, and rise into leadership on their own terms.
Hosted by transformational coach and unapologetic truth-teller Bernadette Boas, each episode delivers raw insights, unfiltered conversations, and practical strategies for ambitious corporate professionals, executive leaders, and HR trailblazers who are ready to level up—without selling out.
Whether you're navigating toxic cultures, battling burnout, or aiming for that next big role, this show is your weekly dose of motivation, straight talk, and real solutions that get results.
Follow now—and start shedding what no longer serves you, so you can build a career and life that actually fits you.
Shedding the Corporate Bitch
Your People Need Time With You
We all have the same amount of time in a day. So, why are some managers better people leaders than others?
In this episode of the Shedding the Corporate Bitch Podcast, host Bernadette Boas delves deep into a common challenge faced by corporate and entrepreneurial leaders alike: effectively managing time to prioritize your people. Bernadette shares her insights and strategies for putting your team first, highlighting the pivotal role employees play as the number one asset in any organization.
Key Challenges Addressed:
- The conflict between existing commitments and dedicating time to employee engagement.
- Leaders’ struggle to make their people a top priority due to overloaded calendars.
- Difficulty in setting boundaries and learning to say "no" to less critical tasks.
Key Talking Points:
- The Priority of People: Bernadette challenges leaders to question if they’re truly making their people their number one asset. Through global client experiences, she reveals the disconnect many employees feel despite leadership’s intentions.
- Time Management and Prioritization: The episode dives into practical methods for time management, urging leaders to re-evaluate their schedules. Bernadette emphasizes the importance of creating ‘white space’ on calendars to engage with team members.
- Setting SMARTY Goals: Bernadette introduces her unique approach to goal-setting, integrating the idea of personal accountability (the ‘Y’ for ‘You’) and aligning leadership goals with these metrics.
- The Four Ds Strategy: Delegation, Delay, Deletion, and Doing – learn how harnessing these can streamline tasks and safeguard time for people-focused activities.
- Time Blocking as a Tool: Discover how strategic time-blocking has transformed productivity and well-being for leaders and can create a balance between professional obligations and personal life.
For leaders eager to elevate their approach, this episode is a valuable resource for understanding and overcoming time management barriers. Tune in now to uncover ways to truly put your people first!
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Call To Action: If this episode resonates with you, consider booking a discovery call with Bernadette Boas to discuss transforming your leadership and team engagement strategies.
Keep shedding, keep growing, and keep thriving as a leader.
Today, I'm challenging you as to whether or not your people are truly your number one asset, and the reason why I say that is I work with clients all around the world who have teams of two to hundreds, and yet, when you start digging in and having conversations with their employees whether that's through 360 assessments or through focus groups or some other form of communication all of a sudden they're voicing a whole different take on whether or not they feel that they are the company's number one asset, whether they are treated as the company's number one asset and, given the opportunities, as the company's number one asset. So today I'm going to really have you think about what can you be doing to manage your time in such a way that you can indeed put your people first? We're going to talk all about the tips and the strategies and tools you could be using in order for you to really be the powerhouse time manager for your people, for your company and for your own success.
Speaker 2:Welcome to Shedding the Corporate Bitch, the podcast that transforms today's managers into tomorrow's powerhouse leaders. Your host, bernadette Boas, executive coach and author, brings you into a world where the corporate grind meets personal growth and success in each and every episode. With more than 25 years in corporate trenches, bernadette's own journey from being dismissed as a tyrant boss to becoming a sought-after leadership coach and speaker illustrates the very essence of transformation that she now inspires in others with her tips, strategies and stories. So if you're ready to shed the bitches of fear and insecurity, ditch the imposter syndrome and step into the role of the powerhouse leader you were born to be, this podcast is for you. Let's do this.
Speaker 1:So what is it that makes it so hard for company leaders to really put their people first? Well, ask that question to any corporate or entrepreneurial leader and they'll basically tell you time. My immediate response to that, however, is well, you make time for what is important to you, and at first, their reaction will then be no, I'm in meetings all day. I have a to-do list pages long. I have people calling and barking at me all day long. I don't have the time. Well, let me ask you this. Don't have the time? Well, let me ask you this If there was something that you really, really, really wanted, say it was that new, beautiful, just released, souped up car that just rolled off the dealer showroom floor and that starts beckoning you to purchase it and to be that first, or one of the first people to have it, what steps and what actions do you take to make that happen?
Speaker 1:You probably will start saving. You'll probably start sacrificing and compromising on where you are spending your money so you can put away the monies for this new toy, whether it's a car or a big trip or a big adventure that you want to go on. When you really truly want something, when something's really important to you. You make it a priority, you find the time, you rework whatever you need to rework in your life in order to achieve it. Don't you Think about it for yourself? It could have been a diet in the past. It could have been a car, or a new toy, a new house that you wanted, even a new relationship, a new career opportunity. And the minute you made the decision that that's what you wanted, you all of a sudden started getting very active in putting together a plan for how you were going to achieve it. What sacrifices, what compromises, what time schedule, what form of coordination needed to go in to you actually being able to pursue and eventually accomplishing that goal and objective that you have for yourself? Same thing that you do at work, right, same thing that you do at work. You're given a task, given a goal, and especially if it has incentive around it, and you get very laser focused on being able to to achieve it. Well, think about if your goal of making people being your number one asset a reality, just think of what you actually might be able to all of a sudden put into motion in order to make it happen.
Speaker 1:And that's where the conversation around time management, and time management specifically for leaders came to me Because I've been having a lot of conversations with a lot of my corporate executive clients corporate executive clients and it all centers around their people, both from an employee engagement perspective to a manager effectiveness perspective. And the number one key issue and challenge that is coming up is employees don't feel connected and engaged and valued and included, and yet their managers just don't have the cycles, they don't have the time, they don't have the white space on their calendars in order to provide the employees what it is that they really need. But without their employees, the manager's never going to. You are never going to accomplish the goals and the dreams and the metrics that you've set out for yourself, and I'm going to say both personally and professionally, because obviously you know you're working your tail off in the workspace so you can have what you want in your home space. So what we as leaders need to then do is figure out okay. So then, what do I need to do in order to raise up the focus on my people, in order to then raise up the success chance that I have in getting and achieving the goals that I have for myself, my team, my family, my whole life? And so I want to share some tips and strategies for you in order to be able to do that. All right, and the first one would really center around making it a goal. I'd like to say tell you the second tip first, which is priority. But I think priority only comes when someone really puts laser focus on a goal. So we're going to start there.
Speaker 1:So you, as a leader, have the choice to make people a goal of yours, officially, non-officially, on paper, not on paper, communicated to a group or not communicated and just kept for yourself. But that is the goal that you set for yourself is I want to make my people the number one asset of my team and of the business. It's a win-win for everyone. After all. Right, you know, you make yourself, you make the people and put the attention to the people as their number one asset. The people thrive and you thrive.
Speaker 1:Serving others serves you. That is a mantra or a saying, actually a quote from the Bible that I all of a sudden clung on to seven or eight years ago. Didn't understand it at first, thought it was very selfish. Wait a minute, I'm not going to serve others, to serve me. But then realize that, no, take care of those around you, those that are in more need, those that have wants and desires of their own, and you'll be taken care of too. So the first thing would be to let's define a goal around your people, and if that goal is I want to make my people the number one asset on my team, then you can get even more specific around that, and we talk a lot about smart goals here in the Shedding, the Corporate Bitch community and in my work in Ball of Fire coaching, and I call it smarty because I add Y at the end, which is you.
Speaker 1:So make your goals really centered around what you want, and in this case, it's to make your people the number one asset of your team. Make it as specific as possible. Determine how you're going to measure yourself in doing that. There's a lot of ways. Of course, we have employee retention, engagement, satisfaction, but even make it more personal. Make it about the fact that you're having better relationships with them. You're really empathetic and compassionate and a good listener for them. You're there for them, you have their back, you can listen to their ideas, you consider them, you even implement them. There's a lot of different ways that you can measure your success. Making your people, your number one asset. All right, then, of course, you need some actions as part of the smart smarty methodology. You need some actions against it. So what can you be doing differently with your people in order for them to feel more engaged, to feel more included, to feel more valued, to contribute more, which will elevate their productivity and effectiveness, which will ultimately be a win-win for everybody? All right, so define the actions to go with those goals and then, of course, you know, make them realistic and make them time bound.
Speaker 1:Now, these goals that you set, there could be multiple goals. You know I want to be a mentor and a coach and develop my people to where they are elevated, you know themselves, in their own career. I want to see my people, you know, climb the ladder and and and succeed and achieve as well. I don't need them just to be a taskmaster for me. I do want them to, you know, have their own path that they take. So my goal is to be a mentor and a coach. My goal is to be a good listener. I'm not going to be just someone who listens so I can respond and tell them what to do or what not to do, or what's a good idea. What isn't a good idea, it's to really listen, understand them, walk in their shoes and really, you know, experience them for who they are. So come out with whatever those people goals are, and even you can share them with your team or you can, again, you can keep them to yourself. You can put them in your personal or professional goals for your development plan or your performance plan, or you can keep them to yourself.
Speaker 1:As a coach, especially to executives, I always strongly advocate that team leaders for themselves, their peers and their own people, actually put them into their yearly performance goals, make it measurable, make it accountable, make them, you know, have to, you know, be responsible and to report out on it and to be ultimately compensated for it. But, you know, taking this on for yourself, you can, you know, take it on formally, so to speak, or you can just take it on for yourself. Then find yourself an accountability partner. Now, this can come in two ways when it comes to your accountability partners and your goals. If you shared them with your team, for instance, then ask your team to hold you accountable to them. If you said that you were going to be meeting with them once a month, you were going to make sure that you had some face time with each one of them. Well, ask them to hold you accountable to that, you know. Ask them to, you know to follow up with you that you are, you know, taking the actions that you stated that you were going to be taken. Again, serving others serves you and therefore it's a win-win for everybody. But the other form of accountability partner could be that you do ask a peer or a manager or a friend to hold you accountable to following through on what it is that you said, or a friend to hold you accountable to following through on what it is that you said.
Speaker 1:Now I will advise as well is not many business functional leaders really leverage strategically their HR partners? And when it comes to your personal professional development, leadership type of goals, such as your people goals, they make great, great partners. As you know, they should all the time anyway and you building and establishing and managing and and achieving your business goals, but at the same time, when you have something to where, okay, I have these goals for myself and I'd like to kind of lean on you as an accountability partner to ensure that I'm, you know, taking the steps that I've committed to and I'm following through. So they make great accountability partners. But find someone that, again, you can share your goals with, how you're going to measure, what actions you're going to take, what timeline you put to them, and you know that individual can then be there to kind of challenge you ask. You know how things are going. They could even go as far as providing tips or advice, for you know whatever you might be dealing with or you're challenged with, but find someone that can ensure that you're following through on what it is that you need Because, just like outside of work, you know if you do go on a diet plan or a fitness program or whatnot. You know you always are like, oh, I wish I had somebody that was kind of over me telling me you know to get out of bed or to get off the couch or don't open that refrigerator door. Yes, I'm talking about myself, but you know. So look at having an accountability partner, even for your business goals, all right. So you know, get your smarty goals in place and you know, and just put the focus on making your people their number one asset. Now add a layer to this.
Speaker 1:And when it gets complicated for many leaders and I totally appreciate and understand. It is then when life comes into play, which it always does, but especially work life and work demands, and the demands of your people, the demands of your bosses, the demands of your customers, the demands of HR, whatever the case might be, the demands of the marketplace and the economy puts a lot, a lot, a lot of pressure on managers and, tactically, that can look like where all of these people, all these tenants, are coming in and they're demanding your time. And the next thing you know, your calendar white space is now completely full, sometimes even overlapped with meetings and obligations, and you can't even open up a space for any people time that you then had already laid out as goals to have people time. Well, this comes down to priorities. This comes down to priority, and so many managers, slash leaders that I talk and meet with, whether one-on-one or in a group, will raise up the challenge that they have as far as being able to follow through on making their people their number one asset and they'll say I just don't have the time. Look at my calendar, look at my to-do list and I'll remind them. If it is a priority for you, you'll make the time Because, like anything else, if it's a priority and really important to you and you truly believe that in every cell of your being, then you will do whatever it takes to follow through on that goal that you set for yourself.
Speaker 1:And if you don't believe me, think outside the workplace of other goals and dreams that you have and aspirations that you have for yourself, how far you will go to achieve them, and it could be even the workplace if it has anything to do with a raise or a promotion or a new business opportunity. When you're starting to question or doubt or make excuses which is the challenge that I then put back on to the executives is are you sure they're not excuses? Times and places, even currently, that maybe you're. You know you're kind of being hypocritical, almost, and you're contradicting yourself because you certainly put the priority and the emphasis and the sacrifices and the compromises elsewhere, and yet you know, in this particular situation that we're talking about, they are bubbling up as more excuses than anything.
Speaker 1:So making something a priority takes a daily practice and discipline for anything you know, looking at your goals, looking at your tasks, looking at that you know that calendar of meetings and really ensuring that you have a very laser focused clarity around where the priority lies. That's not something that could be looked at, you know, once a week, once a month, once a year. It has to be on a daily basis. What can I, you know, be doing and what do I need to be doing in order to keep my focus and attention on the goal? It might slip a day or two, it might slip even a week, yet I'm not losing focus and I'm not losing the priority that I have for this particular goal.
Speaker 1:In this instance, it's around people. So look at it daily, okay, question it daily, challenge it daily, which brings me to my next point around priority, and that is too many leaders have a very difficult time saying no, no to that meeting, no to that extra task, no to that new project or new initiative or new workload. That's not even coming to you, maybe it's coming down to your people and they have a hard time saying no. Well, it's my fault, well, I have to. Well, it's coming from a different function and I have to do it. Well, do you? Is the challenge that I would give you to be thinking about. Do you need to go to that meeting? What will happen if you don't go to that meeting? Do you even need to have this particular meeting. Maybe you're adding to your own pressure when it comes to not having that time, to your own pressure when it comes to not having that time. Do you need to, you know, fill this time block with something that isn't as priority as something else or as this people goal that you've set for yourself? So learning to say no is absolutely critical for anyone, from floor level to the CEO office, and yet it's even more and more and more important for people leaders to be able to find those places where you can say no, and so you can always open up or keep white space on your calendar for your people. It's absolutely critical, and if you truly believe people are your number one asset and they're going to be the ones that and are the ones that you know help you and get you to achieve your goals, then you need to prioritize finding how you can keep them engaged, included, valued and with the opportunities that they're looking for. So you have to look at saying no.
Speaker 1:Now, another little formula I use with my clients as well, whether that be corporate or entrepreneurial, quite honestly, is what I call my four Ds. So you're looking at your list of to-dos, you're looking at your list of meetings, you're looking at your list of other obligations that you have and you get laser focused on making a decision around. Is there a way to delegate, delay, delete, or I have to do it? So let's break these four down delegate, delay, delete or do so, delegate.
Speaker 1:It's shocking to me how many things are on many, many managers to-do list that could be delegated out, and the reasons that they don't are many. One is I don't have time to teach them. Two is you know I don't want to give it up, I like doing it. It's easy, it's simple, it doesn't take a lot of time, to the extreme of that person you know, kind of identifying themselves as controlling a job, security that you know. Intimidation and fear of. You know that person that they delegate to does a better job that they do. A lot of reasons why they don't delegate and very few reasons why they do.
Speaker 1:And I'm telling you, if you could, as a powerhouse leader, what will differentiate you from anybody else is ensuring that you can not dump. That's another D, but I don't like to use it. Not dump, but delegate activities, initiatives, whole projects that are on your plate. Delegate them to somebody else. Because, again, if you want a surefire way of elevating employee engagement and employee satisfaction and retention, it's to provide them opportunities to actually contribute, do something new, do something different, even if there's a risk that they could fail at it or not do a good job.
Speaker 1:But that's your job as a leader. Your job as a leader is to develop others, regardless if they're ready for it or not. Give them the opportunities to challenge themselves, push themselves, stretch themselves, even fail, so they can then learn and then move on, so delegate, and then there is delete. I could have a laundry list of to-dos that my manager will show me, my client manager will show me, and I can easily go through and in a conversation with them, we can get 20% of those things off their list. That is on their list, but they just one automatically think they have to do it, or two that you could go back to delegate and they keep it on the list. And again, there's a lot of different reasons for you know for that, and but yet what you want to do as a powerhouse leader and as someone who's putting your people first, is you really want to open up that white space for your people, make that time for your people, and therefore you have to be able to delete things off Now.
Speaker 1:There's also the other D, which is delay. You know, again, this is an area where many of my clients struggle with the fact that people just throw work at them and everything's a priority to everybody. Oh, it needs to be done immediately. Oh, it needs to be done by the end of the day, oh, it needs to be done by tomorrow. And yet if you, as a leader, would challenge them to say a couple of things, challenge them to say or ask them is this really a priority for today? Do you absolutely need it today? And, if so, for what reason and how is it going to be used?
Speaker 1:If I was to take time today to get it done, you'd be surprised that all of a sudden, somebody will be like, once they're challenged, will be like oh, no, no, no, I don't need it for a few days, or I don't need it even till next week. So that's one thing is to challenge whether or not the priority or the timeline that they've put on a you know task or or a activity they need you to do is actually real, because in a lot of cases it is not Okay. The other one would the other angle to take with this is show them your to-do list and this goes to your boss, this goes to anyone that comes to you with something. Show them your to-do list and say okay, so if you want me to get this done today, what do you suggest? I not get done Because they all say that they need it today, tomorrow, by the end of the week, so which one of these should be deprioritized so I can tell them that you had a higher priority item? You ask them that question and it's not a question that anybody should feel intimidated by. If all of a sudden, you're like I'm not going to say that to my boss, why not by?
Speaker 1:If you know, if all of a sudden you're like I'm not going to say that to my boss, why not? You're engaging them and you know, and actually you're also, you know, kind of passing accountability to them of this is all the work that I have to do, and they all have high priority, and you're just simply asking me to do something, and I'm just trying to understand what's going to have to give in order for me to then bring in and do what you need me to do. You will be surprised 99% of the time and I am not exaggerating someone will say to you oh no, no, no, I don't need it right away. Oh, no, no, no, those are. You're right, those are more important. Or they may say okay, no it. You know, this is more important than this one and I'll I'll talk to them and I'll get you a delay, an extension on on on that activity, on that initiative, whatever the case might be. So you know, you're just engaging them in your priority setting and it's absolutely if you could learn that.
Speaker 1:One skill that will elevate your productivity, elevate your success in accomplishing your goals whether it's your people goal or any other goal is if you could learn that discipline. One, say no. Two, using the delegate, delete or delay and challenging the priorities people are giving you. And then the last D is do. There are gonna be things that you absolutely must do and those, if you absolutely must do them and you can't delegate, delay or delete, then they then go into that priority process that you're looking at on a daily basis. That then could take precedence to you having any white space for your people. But still there's going to be other overlapping schedule, overlapping meetings, meetings you really don't need to be at and meetings you shouldn't be at, even though you might be feeling, oh well, I want to stay in the know, or, you know, I want to be part of it. You again, if you want something really, really bad, you will make the sacrifices and the compromises to achieve it, won't you? And therefore, treat your goal around your people the same way. Don't make it as an excuse that, oh, I have too much to do. Same way, don't make it as an excuse that, oh, I have too much to do. If people are that important and they should be then that's what you want to do. Okay, all right.
Speaker 1:So we talked about goals, we talked about priority. The last one would be time blocking, and this is a specific tool you could be using around time management. Okay, is time blocking and I've been doing this probably for 15 years now and trust me when I say for myself and for my clients, it has been a booster to productivity, to achievement, to sanity, to breath, to peace and calm, to opening up tons of white space. Personally, let alone from a work perspective is time blocking? Now? What is it? Time blocking basically means that you treat and we're just going to be talking about your work calendar right now, but you're going to treat your work calendar as seriously as you treat your personal calendar. Now I'm going to sound almost contradictory because there's going to be some personal things that all of a sudden get into your work calendar. But what I'm talking about is your nine to five assume nine to five is your work hours. That calendar is what we're talking about. From you time blocking it.
Speaker 1:Okay, so there's typically from time blocking. It simply means create the blocks of time and put them on your calendar of those things that are of priority that you've just determined based on the goals that you have. And the goals, again, could be business, you know, and personal, personal being like your people leadership, development, personal business goals and making sure your calendar is reflective of you being able to put time toward any goals that you've set for yourself or others have set for you. And so, in this calendar, the first, the easiest things to do, is to put like standard meetings that you have on your. You know that you have on your calendar, but the must attend meetings, not the meetings that you're optional or you're even on the list, but you know what. It has nothing to do with you, but you never say no to it. I'm not talking about those. I'm talking about the must, must, must, meetings that you have to have, whether you're hosting them or you're a participant.
Speaker 1:So you lay those out on your calendar first, then I would move to all right, what are those time blocks that I want to put toward a specific goal, such as your people goal? I want to put toward a specific goal, such as your people goal. So I do this very similarly with my administrative office day. I have my own business, so I have to take care of my clients in the main blocks of time. But then I need time to get all my other stuff done. And I do work to where I want my personal time to be completely free of any business activity. So to do that, I have to get very, very focused on when I plan my time and how I plan my time. So I put certain blocks of time for administrative office work, clean out the desk, so to speak, before I would be able to freshly go off into my personal life. And you want to do the same as well. You want to look at your calendar as well and say what must, must.
Speaker 1:That goes back to priority. Must I do you know to and accomplish this day or this week so I can end my day and go and play pickleball, like I do, or go with the family, meet some friends out, or ensure that Friday at four I can take off and have my weekend without being disruptive other than what I call 911s with my clients. But you might have 911s with work to where they might interrupt, you know, interrupt your weekend. But you've done everything in those that goal setting and that daily prioritization, to ensure, and now you've blocked your, your calendar to where you can ensure that by the end of the week you've done what you need to do and you can go off and have life, okay. So time blocking, you know, literally means blocking periods of time.
Speaker 1:Now let's break it down. It could be 15 minutes of your daily prioritization or goal setting. Okay, you can have a block of time for 15 minutes. It could be where you put 20 minute walk. Maybe you need to get out of the office and just you know, you know, get some fresh air, whether you work in an office or at home. Maybe it is where you have a critical, you know, doctor's appointment or some other personal appointment that cannot not because you choose not to, but cannot be scheduled outside of the work time. But you know because, well, let me finish this first time. But you know because, well, let me finish this first.
Speaker 1:And so you also then fill your calendar with blocks of time for those things that you know you have to do, and then you would have that white space for things that come up at the last minute or things that are added, especially by others, and now they can see that you do have some white space. But I would ensure that you have those blocks of time of your goals, especially when it comes to people, that if you should decide that, okay, fridays between 12 and four, I'm gonna block it out and it's just gonna be for touching base with my people, whether that's face-to-face or via phone call. But you're ensuring that, excuse me, you're ensuring that you have all of those blocks of time put on your calendar. Again, if you want it and it's important to you, you'll prioritize it and you'll do it, okay. So consider that for your people, or your number one asset goal.
Speaker 1:Now, going back to what I was saying, too often I find that you know, even corporate, let alone entrepreneurial, but corporate leaders will put appointments on their calendar, personal appointments on their calendar that they could have scheduled outside the work time. Now they often do that. I will do that because they want a break. They want to do it on business time work time as opposed to their own personal time. But again, I'm going to go take you back to priority.
Speaker 1:If you don't have time in your calendar and yet you have this people asset goal for yourself in your calendar and yet you have this people asset goal for yourself, but you're filling up your work calendar with personal appointments, well, you're losing the opportunity to use those blocks of time, just like you prioritize them for your doctor's appointment or your personal appointment for your people. And so when clients tell me they don't have time for their people, I do it with some clients, not all my clients. But I just want to say I want to see your calendar for the next three months and the past six months, because I'm going to rip it apart and find all of those spaces, those blocks that were put toward things that could have been done outside of the availability of their people, to where they actually did have time for their people. And I challenge you as to whether or not that's true for you as well. Challenge you as to whether or not that's true for you as well. So consider your calendar of time blocks, appointments that you take as seriously outside of work, and use some for inside people appointments, and then, when you are, you know kind of time blocking. When you are, you know kind of time blocking.
Speaker 1:Another key aspect of that as well is to set expectations with those around you, whether that's your team members, your peers, your bosses, not only about your goals but more so, the expectations around you. Know your calendar, your appointments. So, when it comes to meetings, set the expectations that you're going to come if it's absolutely mandatory, you know if, if I'm, if you specifically have a piece of the agenda, you know set the expectation but I'm not going to come if I'm just optional. Just so you know. If you don't see me in these meetings that I'm CC'd, not sent as a to, but I'm CC'd, I'm not going to be there. So set also the expectation. So then they're not questioning or, you know, kind of disappointed when you don't show up because you've set the expectations.
Speaker 1:Set expectations with everyone around you around how you want to manage your time, because you do have this goal that you want. You need to make time for your people, so communicate that out. We talked about the sharing of your goals. When it comes to your time blocking, share that as well. There are times I'm putting on my calendar for my people and my team that I, you know, I will not and cannot compromise on Now. If all of a sudden you have, you know, people, even your boss, challenging you on that or disrespecting that by planning meetings or that, well, that just tells you a lot about other people. But stay true to what your goal is if it's that important to you. So, when it comes to overall time management for leaders, you have the time. If you want the time for anything, so define those goals, set those priorities, look at them daily, because they will change, and then time block your calendar and stay true to it.
Speaker 1:Now I'm making it sound really easy, you know, and making it sound just so general, without all the noise that is, you know, bombarded around you, and I understand that and I totally get that. Trust me, I do. So. If you are having challenges, if you do have questions, if you are curious as to really how you could be implementing any of these tips or strategies, then be sure to book a call with me and let's talk about it. You can go to coachmebernadettecom forward slash discovery call and let's have a conversation about it. Let me give you some tips and strategies. Let me look at your calendar, let me, you know, kind of challenge you on various things Because, again, if it's important to you, you know you'll do it. So it's just making the decision as to where do your people fit into what it is you're trying to accomplish. All right, I am so grateful that you were here with me this week on this particular episode and I'll look forward to having you on our next episode. I'll talk to you soon.
Speaker 2:Bye. Thank you for tuning into today's episode of Shedding the Corporate Bitch. Every journey taken together is another step towards unleashing the powerhouse leader within you. Don't miss any of our weekly episodes. Subscribe to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, spotify or wherever you love to listen. And, for those who thrive on visual content, catch us on our Shedding the Bitch YouTube channel. Want to dive deeper with Bernadette on becoming a powerhouse leader? Visit balloffirecoachingcom to learn more about how she helps professionals, hr executives and team leaders elevate overall team performance. You've been listening to Shedding the Corporate Bitch with Bernadette Boas. Until next time, keep shedding, keep growing and keep leading.