Benita
Sen finds ways to keep up your ‘drive’ when you’re working on
your own.

The most committed of us feel jaded at times - especially when you
are on your own, and you don’t have a boss for a battery charger. But
don’t let ennui get to you. If you feel it does, take a couple of hours
off, park yourself at a cafe, fish out a pen and paper, recall where you began
from and list all that you have achieved. And remind yourself, that even in our
times, not many women are in complete charge of their professional
lives!
“Sometimes,” says J Kiran, who runs a small marketing
agency, “I look around and feel pretty small. Then, I pull myself out of
this self-pity and look at what I began from — three years ago — a
single-woman workforce from my dining room!”
PASS THE BUCK
No boss worth her blue bottomline will shrug off responsibility.
But there are many small chores that need to be taken off your shoulders and
passed on to the team’s, so that you can move on to more important
decisions. Take stock of where you can delegate work and who can be trusted with
what. Try not to feel threatened that you won’t have enough work.
“Delegating responsibility gives me the distance to look at my
office a little more objectively,” admits Shashikala, who runs a
consultancy firm. It also leaves her with more time to plan at the macro level.
The world awaits! And generally, every employee wants to impress her boss
with a sense of responsibility, so you won’t be sorry for delegating. It
will also give you more time off from mundane matters and keep you from feeling
frazzled at the end of the day.
PLAN FOR PROSPERITY
Running a home is said to be more challenging than running a
business. And most women run a pretty decent home with basic planning. Get away
for a little while from mundane work to plan regularly, rather than
sporadically. “I keep Saturday to set my schedule, although the general
trend is to earmark Monday. But planning on the last day of the week gives me a
direct view of what has happened and what to look forward to the next
week,” says Kiran.
Take stock of the past week or month. What were
your plans for that time? Which plan worked? Don’t let minor setbacks
discourage you. Rather, consult your colleagues, recognise what went wrong and
set goals. You’ll soon feel your business is being monitored closely and
fewer things take you by surprise.
CHANGE COURSE
With regular reviews, you will soon learn to identify what’s
not working. Even if it was something dear to your heart, learn to accept a
decision that didn’t work, think of something in its stead that may, and
move on. Often, we burn out trying to make a difficult relationship or decision
work for us.
If you’ve given it a try and it still lags, learn to
let go. As the saying goes, one door closes and another opens. “When we
opened shop, I told suppliers, the shelf life of any product would not be more
than three months. If it doesn’t move after that, they take it back. This
ensures their money is not blocked, my shelves don’t stock things that are
not appreciated by my customers and I have a constant flow of new
products,” shares Rita Bakshi, who runs a gift shop.
BLOW THAT TRUMPET
You may be shy of publicity, but in a competitive market, just as
you must sustain standards, publicity has to be regular too. Business promotion
is one of the most important tasks that you must perform. And do it in style.
Women, after all, are credited with more creativity! Even if you have hired the
services of a marketing agency, follow-up regularly with them to review policy.
ME-TIME!
Expand your horizons. Apart from reading and catching up with
market news, meet, network and socialise. Drop that guilt about business
lunches. It’s work! Get yourself to join lifestyle courses like
meditation, where you not only help your soul, but meet more people. Interaction
will give you new ideas and fresh contacts.
Says entrepreneur Mala Sharma,
“I’ve started playing golf with a small group of like-minded women.
Through golf, which I find calming, I have met so many people in similar
positions that my office work has become that much easier.”
In the
new age, it pays to get fresh. Fresh ideas, fresh strategies and fresh starts!
GOT COMMENTS OR QUESTIONS? E-MAIL US AT
femina@timesgroup.com WITH ‘strategies — REFRESH, RECHARGE AND
REV!’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE