How to Manage Priorities With Excel

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How to Manage Priorities With Excel

Writing your priorities on paper works if you’re able to knock them off in an afternoon. With a torrent of incoming tasks at home or work, many get carried over to the next day (or week or month). This Excel spreadsheet watches approaching deadlines and shifts task priorities accordingly. In 20 minutes the steps below provide a more effective way to manage your priorities.

Steps

  1. Create a "Home" or "Office" tab. Open a new Excel spreadsheet. Right click on the "Sheet1" tab at the bottom and click on Rename. Type in "Home" or "Office".

    Click on Rename and enter "Home"
  1. Rename Sheet2 as "Template" and Sheet3 as "Points" by repeating Step 1.

    Tabs for Priorities Spreadsheet
  2. Create the Importance table. On the Points tab, fill in columns A, B and C:

    Importance table
  3. Define the name "Importance". Select from Cell A2 to C7. Click on Insert Name Define

    Image:Excel_Priority_Define_198.JPG

    Define the name as "Importance" and click OK.

    Click OK when done
  4. Create the Effort Table. Repeat steps 3, 4 and 5 to create the Effort table in columns E, F, and G. Select cells E2 to G6 and give them the name "Effort".

    Select Cells E2:G6 and define as "Effort"
  5. Create the Urgency table. Repeat steps 3, 4 and 5 to create the Urgency table in columns I, J and K. Name them "Urgency".

    The Urgency points table
  6. Enter headings on Home tab. Click on the Home tab and insert headings in row 1:

    • A - Priority A formula, 1 for the most important task, but can be over 100
    • B - Task Name of the task.
    • C - Importance An A, B, C, D, E, or F from the table.
    • D - Effort A 1-5, from the Effort table.
    • E - Urgency A formula based on Due date.
    • F - Due Date when the task should be finished. Due dates are not hard and fast. Ramp Up tells you how early you could start the task and Extension tells you how many days it could slide. Getting a haircut might have a Ramp Up of 5 and an Extension of 4 - it doesn’t make sense to get a haircut 2 weeks early and people might notice if it was more than 5 days late.

    • G - Ramp Up Days prior to Due date you could start task.
    • H - Extension Automatic extension of Due date
    • I - Days Left Formula. Number of days before Due date; negative if Due date has passed.
    • J - Finished Date task was actually completed.
    • K - Comment Any details for the task.
  7. Enter your list of tasks. Note Priority, Urgency and Days Left are left blank. They will be filled in with formulas. Here’s a sample of home tasks.

    Sample Tasks for Priority Spreadsheet
  8. Enter formulas for Days Left, Urgency and Priority. The formulas below are for row 2.

    • I (Days Left) =F2-IF(ISBLANK(J2),TODAY(),J2)
    • E (Urgency) =IF(I2>G2,5,IF(I2>0,4,IF(I2=0,3,IF(I2+H2>0,2,1))))
    • A (Priority) =VLOOKUP(C2,Importance,2,FALSE) + VLOOKUP(D2,Effort,2,FALSE) +VLOOKUP(E2,Urgency,2,FALSE)
  9. Change the format for Cell I2 to Integer by right clicking on the cell, selecting format and make it a Number with 0 Decimal places.

    Format cell as Number
  10. Copy formulas for Priority, Urgency and Days Left to the remaining cells in each column. Select cell E2 and type CTRL-C. Select cells E3 to E10 and click CTRL-V. Repeat to copy cell I2 to cells I3 to I10. Finally, repeat to copy cell A2 to cells A3 to A10. Ignore the odd values you get for undefined tasks.
  11. Sort the rows by Priority. Select from cells A1 to K, for as many rows as you have data. Then click on Data Sort.

    Sort rows by Priority
  12. Save your priorities spreadsheet, including the date for versioning.
  13. Mark tasks Finished. As you complete tasks, mark the date in the Finished column. Remember CTRL-; (control key and semi-colon) immediately enters the current date.
  14. Watch Priorities change each day. Here are the priorities over several days. On July 13 all tasks are before the Ramp Up period, so have large numbers. On July 20th, higher priorities (smaller numbers) appear for four tasks, including Mow Lawn which has hit its Due date. On the 21st, the priority is higher because we're in the Extension period and on July 23rd it's even higher because it's beyond the Extension period. Pay bills also goes through an escalation on the 23rd and 25th.

    Priorities escalate over time


Tips

  • Keep separate Excel files for family/home and work.
  • Split large tasks into smaller ones.
  • Read articles listed below on prioritizing and time management.
  • Sort the task list every day if necessary.
  • Copy recurring tasks to the Templates tab, so you can find and recopy them back easily.
  • Add conditional formats on Due date to indicate when it is overdue.

    Format overdue tasks in Red Bold
  • Weekly, monthly (or perhaps double that) count the number of completed tasks in each period. This may be the only positive feedback you might get on your work.
  • Feel free to change the points given for each part of priority.
  • Feel free to add more columns - who assigned the task, category, etc.
  • Use AutoFilter to select past due tasks (Urgency=1) or highly important tasks (Importance="A")

Warnings

  • Save the spreadsheet every few sessions for recovery.
  • The calculated priorities are not ordinal numbers. Completing a “1” priority task doesn’t shift all the others up. Priorities can range to over a hundred and not all numbers are possible. Focus usually on priorities between 1 and 12.
  • Don't worry about having too many tasks - even two months of tasks can wait at the bottom of the list until their due date approaches.
  • Time management is highly personal and this spreadsheet may not fit with your needs and preferences. It may feel intrusive or just too demanding to visit daily. It may work for you, but not your friends or vice versa.
  • Instead of carrying your Excel files with you all the time, use Google Spreadsheet so your files will always be available to you.
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Housing starts and permits tumble in July

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Home building projects started in July fell 11 percent to the lowest annual rate in more than 17 years, while building permits tumbled 17.7 percent, the Commerce Department reported on Tuesday.

The annual pace of housing starts at 965,000 slimly beat Wall Street's expectations of 960,000, but it was the lowest since a 921,000 unit rate in March 1991. In June, housing starts rose 10.4 percent, revised up from the previously reported 9.1 percent.
Building permits, an indicator of future construction, dropped to an annual rate of 937,000, well below the 970,000 analysts polled by Reuters had forecast.
The magnitude of the drop in permits was the biggest since a plunge of almost 24 percent in February 1990, while the number was the lowest since March this year, when they were 932,000.

Single family homes, which constitute the bulk of new housing, were especially weak. The annual unit rate of 641,000 single family homes started in July was the lowest since January 1991, when they were 604,000. Building permits were 584,000, the lowest since 523,000 in August 1982.

U.S. stocks extended their losses and U.S. Treasury bond prices pared their gains after the data were released.

In June, new home construction was boosted by a change in New York City building codes. But July's national numbers hinted that the United States may still be mired in a housing downturn.
"It can be seen as a payback in June from the building code change in New York City. We may see another decline in August," said Dana Saporta, economist at New York's Dresdner Kleinwort Securities LLC.

"The fundamentals in housing are still poor," Saporta added.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert, Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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