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<!-- start content here --><font size="3" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Chronically Late</b></font>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">A reader wrote recently, "No matter how 
  hard I try, I always seem to be late. Maybe I am a poor judge of time. Getting 
  to work by exactly 8:30 seems almost impossible. I will be a few minutes late 
  to a meeting, and am often rushing to meet deadlines. Why does this keep happening 
  despite my best intentions?"</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>What You Can Do</b></font></p>
<ol>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Your internal clock, that facility that 
    provides you with time-related information, is set a little fast. You underestimate 
    how long it will take you to. . . drive there, review that, gather the information, 
    pack, etc. The easiest way to remedy the situation is not to try to reset 
    your clock. Learn, rather, how far "off" it is, then add ten or fifteen minutes 
    to whatever your internal estimate says.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Even though you run habitually late 
    does not mean that things cannot change. Teach yourself to think differently. 
    Begin to see yourself as someone on time instead of thinking/feeling/saying, 
    "my parents were like this, too. . ." or "Oh, late again. Well, they will 
    expect me to be late anyway." New messages that counteract this are very useful. 
    Think of a person you like and respect who is on time. What does he or she 
    do? Imitate that.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Although it is tempting, do not do that 
    "one last thing" before you walk out the door. If the telephone rings, let 
    the machine answer it. Walking out the door at 7:30 means just that. It does 
    not mean looking for the keys, locating the sunglasses, or brushing your teeth 
    after a meal. Those things take time--not just "one minute" as you may think.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Start eliminating some of the excess 
    tasks and responsibilities from your life. Being late can be a way of rebelling--a 
    way of saying, "Oh yeah, you can make me attend, but not participate or be 
    on time." If you have too much to do, begin to cut back. Volunteer less, skip 
    a season, and say "no" more often--even to little things.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Be aware of grandiose thinking, such 
    as believing that you can: squeeze thirty appointments into a day, do all 
    the fundraising for that special event in four hours, or arrive at Chicago 
    O'Hare airport on Friday afternoon at 3:30, get your luggage, and be in downtown 
    for a 4:30 meeting. If you are a chronic over-booker or over-extender, estimate 
    the time that each item on your to-do list will take. Then add it up. Remember 
    to add 20% extra for the unexpected. If you are already over ten hours, you 
    can get help or consider other strategies.</font></li>
</ol>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>If You Are the Manager</b></font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Occasional tardiness is understandable, 
  but when you are faced with chronic tardiness, that behavior has some undesirable 
  effects on operations and service, not to mention other staff members. Here 
  are some suggestions to turn around that behavior.</font></p>
<ol>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Clarify the rules. Remind all employees 
    about the importance of promptness and the policy about tardiness. Make sure 
    that everyone on staff has a copy of the written attendance policy. Speak 
    to the latecomer in private about his or her tardiness.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Explore the causes. Sometimes it is 
    a scheduling problem, for example, with day care or public transportation. 
    There might be other causes, such as an illness in the family. The lateness 
    is not always an indication of disinterest, boredom or rebellion.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Search for accommodation. Is flex time 
    an option? Often, staggered working hours can be a way to retain a valuable 
    employee. Within reason, try to create schedules that accommodate individual 
    needs. Is there training available that would be helpful--say, on planning 
    or setting priorities?</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Explain the consequences. Make clear 
    that being late creates a burden on others. Caution the employee about the 
    inevitable results of continued tardiness. Will there be written warnings, 
    pay docking, or suspensions? A verbal discussion followed by a written warning 
    also helps make things clear. Documenting the lateness and every discussion 
    about the problem is important. It can be critical in the event of future 
    disputes or, in the worst case, litigation. However, with clear rules, the 
    problem will, hopefully, never get that far.</font></li>
</ol>
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