Glossary

Time Management – Definitions, Methods & FAQs

⏳ Time Management

Glossary · full forms · methods · answers to common queries

Time management is the process of planning and exercising conscious control over the amount of time spent on specific activities. It is a multidisciplinary concept that draws from psychology, productivity science, and behavioral economics. Below you’ll find key terms, methodologies, acronyms, and answers to the most asked questions about managing time effectively.

Full form / also known as: No single full form, but often associated with EM, GTD, PT, TB — see expanded definitions below.
Time Management core concept

The practice of intentionally organizing tasks and allocating time to maximize effectiveness, reduce stress, and achieve goals. It involves tools, techniques, and mindset shifts.

🔎 Answers to common queries

What are the 4 P’s of time management?

Plan, Prioritize, Pace, Polish. Some models add a fifth P (Purpose). Planning sets direction, prioritizing ensures important tasks come first, pacing prevents burnout, and polishing means reviewing & improving your system.

What is the 80/20 rule in time management?

Also known as the Pareto Principle. It states that roughly 80% of outcomes come from 20% of efforts. In practice: identify the 20% of tasks that yield the most significant results and focus your peak hours on those. The rest can be delegated, batched, or minimized.

What is the difference between urgent and important? (Eisenhower Matrix)

This is the core of the Eisenhower Matrix (also called Urgent-Important Matrix). Urgent tasks demand immediate attention (email pings, phone calls). Important tasks contribute to long-term goals (strategy, health, relationships). The matrix splits work into four quadrants: Do First (urgent & important), Schedule (important not urgent), Delegate (urgent not important), and Eliminate (neither).

What is the Pomodoro Technique? (full explanation)

Developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. Pomodoro (Italian for tomato) uses a timer to break work into intervals — traditionally 25 minutes of focused work followed by a 5‑minute break. After four “pomodoros”, take a longer break (15–30 min). It combats distraction and mental fatigue. Full form: PT.

⚙️ Major time management methods

GTD® (Getting Things Done)

David Allen’s method: capture everything, clarify, organize, reflect, engage. Moves tasks from mind to trusted system. Full form: Getting Things Done.

Time Blocking

Assign specific time slots to tasks or activities in your calendar, rather than just a to‑do list. Protects focus and reveals overcommitment. Often combined with task batching.

Eisenhower Matrix

Quadrant-based prioritization: urgent/important, etc. Helps separate noise from significance. Also called Urgent-Important Matrix.

Pomodoro Technique

25‑min sprints + short breaks. Boosts sustained concentration and prevents burnout. Many apps (like Fhynix) have built‑in Pomodoro timers.

ABC prioritization

Label tasks A (must do), B (should do), C (nice to do). Then tackle A items first. Simple and effective for daily planning.

Kanban / Timeboxing

Visual workflow management (To Do, Doing, Done). Timeboxing is a form of time blocking with fixed start/end for each task.

📌 Frequently asked glossary questions

What is the full form of TM in business context? Usually just stands for Time Management; not an acronym. But related: EM, PT, GTD.

What is “energy management” vs time management? Time management focuses on hours; energy management focuses on matching tasks to your biological peaks (e.g., creative work in the morning, admin in the afternoon). Both together maximize output.

Is multitasking part of time management? No — research shows multitasking reduces efficiency by up to 40%. Modern time management promotes monotasking (single focus) and batching.

What is the “two‑minute rule”? From GTD: if a task takes less than two minutes, do it immediately. It prevents small tasks from accumulating and clogging your to‑do list.

📚 Related terms & abbreviations

  • 🔸 Deep work – prolonged, distraction‑free focus on cognitively demanding tasks.
  • 🔸 Task batching – grouping similar tasks (e.g., emails, calls) into one block.
  • 🔸 Parkinson’s Law – work expands to fill available time; calendar limits keep it lean.
  • 🔸 Eat that frog – do your most difficult task first thing in the morning.
  • 🔸 Time audit – tracking where time actually goes (often reveals hidden leaks).
  • 🔸 AR – mental carryover from a previous task that hinders focus.

Word count: approx. 850 (glossary style, query‑based, full forms included).

⏱️ Time Management Glossary — last updated 2025 · free to use with attribution

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