Angela Crocker

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How to Spend Your Time, Talent, and Treasure

02.08.2021 by Angela Crocker // 1 Comment

Think of time, talent, and treasure as the currencies we all use to get things done. This framework allows us to think critically about how we’re using the resources available to us at any given moment. Together, time, talent, and treasure form a currency worth more than money.

I first learned about time, talent, and treasure mid-career. At the time, my job was to cultivate relationships with a nonprofit’s corporate sponsors. Some of those sponsors donated volunteer hours (time). Others contributed special skills (talent). Most contributed cash (treasure).

A vintage analog alarm clock with white face, black numbers, and pink bells to illustrate time, talent, and treasure.

I often introduce this concept to my business students as they learn how to strategically implement digital marketing. On the job, they’ll need to know how to budget for every element of each campaign, from video editing to social media analytics and much more. Deciding whether to take photos with a staff member’s mobile phone (using available time) or to hire a professional photographer (spending treasure) is a juggling act for every marketing team. Time, talent, and treasure becomes a helpful lens that applies to organizations of all sizes, from that of the solo entrepreneur to that of a large corporation.

I also apply this in my everyday life. My family and I only have so many hours, so many skills, and so much money to run our household. Sometimes, our individual priorities are different so how we spend our time, talents, and treasures requires some extra negotiation.

The Time, Talent, and Treasure Trifecta

Ideally, every household, or every company has access to all the resources it needs. In practice, we all have to prioritize and plan around limited resources. Figuring out the winning combination of resources creates the perfect trifecta.

What about time?

Time is a finite commodity. We each have 86,400 seconds (that’s 24 hours) to spend every day. Only a portion of that is spent working. We’ve also got to budget time for sleep, meals, exercise, and leisure.

The more people on your team, the more time you have. At home, my family of three has less time available than a family of six. But then, the more people you have, the more laundry to do!

At work, the available hours vary depending on the size of your team. The solopreneur has to do it all, while a larger company will assign tasks to specific employees.. A marketing coordinator might take on blog writing while a marketing intern looks after podcast editing.

If you work at home, your available time is stretched between family tasks and work tasks. That juggle isn’t always easy. Time limits impact us all.

Who has talent?

Talent is about skills and know-how. At home and at work, people have different talents. For example, I know how to do the laundry but, in our household, my husband takes care of this weekly task. Meanwhile, our teenage son is on a learning curve in the laundry room!

Sometimes tasks fall to the person with the talent even if they hate the task at hand. At work, you may have a colleague who excels at digital decluttering even though they detest file management. Work has to be done even if someone’s talent means they get the dirty jobs.

My content planning students learn a wide range of digital marketing skills from developing audience profiles to analyzing metrics. I constantly encourage them to practice content-related skills while they are students. Those hired right after graduation are often those who experimented with text editing, photo editing, video editing, audio editing, and more.

While learning at leisure is much less stressful than learning on the job, ongoing professional development enhances the talents available to any team. Everyone can learn something new.

Intermixed with hands-on skills are supporting talents. Some are technical, like those of the helpful folks in the IT department. Others are soft skills or more informal roles such as team leadership, morale boosters, or mentors. These skills show up at work and at home. They are wonderful talents to have.

Treasure hunt

As Jerry Maguire said, “Show me the money!” Think of money as treasure.

Everything we do has a potential cost. If we take on a task ourselves, we spend money on tools to complete the task. If we’re short on time to complete a task, we hire help. If we don’t know how to do something, we hire more help or invest in training to learn how.

At home, our treasure is the total take-home pay, savings, and borrowing power we have available to us. We spend our treasure on groceries, transportation, clothes, entertainment, and so on.

At work, investments and revenue are spent on people, services, space, and equipment. That expenditure is our outlay before we consider the costs to produce goods or services. For example, staff cost money in salaries, benefits, perks, and office space. Services are an expense as well. For example, there’s no such thing as free internet so, at a minimum, you’ll pay an internet service provider.

Equipment needs may be capital costs but they add up, too. Computers, software, cameras, microphones, tripods, and more are all expenses. Tools are an ongoing cost, often with a fee to pay monthly or annually. These might include a social sharing dashboard, analytics monitoring, graphic design apps, and other services.

Time, Talent, and Treasure Budgets

With limits on time, talent, and treasure, everyone has to think about where to spend their available resources and where to conserve.

Some things can only be obtained with cash. You’ve got to buy those things first.

Everyone has different talents. Play to your strengths. Learn what you can. Share what you know.

Time is finite. Spend yours to maximum effect. Don’t forget rest!

What To Do When Resources Are Scarce

We’re all short of resources sometimes.

At home, we may have unexpected expenses or an ever-growing grocery bill. (Did I mention I have a teenage son?)

Workwise, the size of the company influences the volume of available resources. Often, employees are asked to do extra tasks on unpaid time to fill the void. (This is a problem to discuss another day.)

Tough decisions have to be made. Sometimes, we’ll compromise quality. Other times, we’ll postpone a project. When needed or desired, we’ll seek out extra time, talent, and treasure.

Even when resources are limited, tasks at home and at work still need to be done. Using the time, talent, and treasure framework we can decide how best to spend the resources we have for maximum effect.

Categories // Blog Tags // budgets, framework, productivity, resources, scarce, talent, time, treasure

Say No. Just No. Practice.

03.21.2016 by Angela Crocker // Leave a Comment

Digital Cleanse Day 21:

Say no. Just No. Practice.

Say no.

Really. Right now. Say it out loud.

“No.”

And again.

“No. No. No.”

(Just be careful you don’t sound like a whiny preschooler!)

 

Quote tile: No is a complete sentence. ~ Julie Cole

There’s great power in that two letter word. You can use it to save time, declutter your data, free up your calendar and reduce your reading list. Model these sentences:

  • “No, I don’t want to go to gonna-hurt-tomorrow fitness.”
  • “No, I don’t need to save this 46 GB video clip.”
  • “No, thank you,  I’m unable to attend your event.”
  • “No, I’m not going to read this email newsletter.”

See how that works? It’s powerful, right?  As Julie Cole said at the National Mompreneur conference, “No is a complete sentence.”  Use it often. Use it wisely.

And you can use that power to say no to new social networks. For example, do you Snapchat? You don’t have to. Sure, social media marketing gurus tell you its the latest and greatest thing. And it might turn out to be HUGE.  But you don’t have to be an early adopter. You can say no. If at some later date you realize Snapchat is ideal for your project or business model, then go ahead and change that no to a yes.

Using “no” successfully requires you to be clear on your current priorities. At work, what is your focus? Are you focused on a product launch?  Are you, like me, writing a new book? Are you making family time a priority? Is this a vacation week?  Remember each day you have 86,400 seconds to spend. You get to decide how to spend them. Every “no” frees up seconds for something else that fits your priorities. Keep your time in perspective. Each day you’ll use:

  • 25,200 seconds to sleep
  • 7,200 seconds to commute
  • 5,400 seconds to eat
  • 3,600 seconds to exercise
  • 2,700 seconds to shower, etc.

42,300 seconds remain. That’s 11 hours and 45 minutes. How will you spend your time?

More on the 30 day #digitalcleanse tomorrow. Hope to see you then!

(If you missed yesterday’s installment, take a couple extra minutes to explore Pick Subscriptions that Serve You. For links to the complete Digital Cleanse series, click here.)

Categories // The Digital Cleanse Tags // #digitalcleanse, 86400 seconds, declutter data, digital cleanse, Julie Cole, no, save time, Snapchat, time

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Contact Angela

Angela Crocker
Email
Voice: 604.727.6974
By Mail:
225 - 255 Newport Drive,
Port Moody, BC V3H 5H1

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About Angela

Angela Crocker helps businesses communicate. She’s a writer, a teacher and an information organizer. Trained as both a business writer and a technical writer, Angela draws on her twenty years of business experience in marketing, fundraising, entrepreneurship, leadership and teaching. A published author, Angela’s currently celebrating her latest book, The Content Planner. On a personal level, Angela collects Star Wars novels, adores choral music and doodles with fine art supplies. Learn more…

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