shinebeach.com
  Home Page :> About Us :> Add Url :> Privacy of Info :> ToS :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Get Free Links
 

Tour & Travel

Technology & Science

Children

Academics & Learning

Self Healing

Sports

Property & Agents

Employment & Careers

Law & Politics

Food & Recipe

Entertainment

Business & Companies

Indoor Games

Shopping Online

Lifestyle & Fashion

Healthcare & Treatment

Creative Arts

Computers & Software

Banking & Finance

People & Society

Vehicles & Automotive

Issues & News

Health & Hygiene

Home Family & Garden


 

Home Page › Self Healing › Time Planning
 

The Vital Few & The Trivial Many

 

Author: Robin Stephens

In 1906, Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto created a mathematical formula to describe the unequal distribution of wealth in his country. He observed that 80% of the land in Italy was owned by 20% of the population. After Pareto, many others observed similar phenomena in their own areas of expertise.

In the 1940s, Quality Management pioneer, Dr. Joseph Juran, recognized a universal principle which he called the vital few and the trivial many. A lack of precision on Jurans part made it appear that he was applying Paretos observations about economics to his own observations. As a result, Jurans vital few theory became known as Paretos Principle commonly known as the 80/20 rule.

The 80/20 Rule states that with anything time, resources, space, priorities, goals, and activities only 20% are vital and 80% (many) are trivial. Or 20% of the resources produce 80% of the results. In Paretos case it meant that 20% of the people had 80% of the wealth. In Jurans initial work, he identified that 20% of the defects caused 80% of the problems.

Are any of these true for you?

? 80% of what you file is never looked at again. The other 20% is referenced occasionally or frequently.

? 20% of your products or services account for 80% of your sales.

? 80% of your measurable results will come from 20% of the activities on your To Do list.

? 20% of your people produce 80% of your results.

? 80% of decisions come from 20% of all meetings.

? 80% of your managerial concerns are caused by 20% of the identified problems.

? 80% of a managers interruptions come from the same 20% of persons.

? 80% of customer complaints concern the same 20% of your products or services.

You need to focus 80% of your time, energy, and resources on top priorities. This principle alone will give you maximum productivity and results. Try it!

Author Bio:
Robin Stephens is a eminent columnist. Robin likes to write articles about this subject.
You can also reach this article by using: time management, time management skills, time management tips, time management tools
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Barriers to Prosperity
 
Give Yourself The Greatest Gift
 
Extraordinary People in Mediocre Times
 
Innovation Management - 5 Ideas An Hour
 
Three Myths of Home Organization
 
It's Not Over Until You Win!
 
The Mirror Man
 
Speed Reading For Information Hungry People.
 
Learning Life's Lessons Through Adversity
 
Limited Thought, Limited Experience
 
 
 
Home Page :> Privacy of Info :> ToS  
© 2006-2008 www.shinebeach.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.