Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The When-to-Do-Everything Guide

    By Kimberly Fusaro

    News flash: You don't have to spend your lunch break waiting in line at the DMV. No, you can't add extra hours to your day (if only!) but you can use the hours you have more efficiently. In an effort to help you tackle that never-ending to-do list, we reached out to planning and productivity experts to get their take on the best time to visit the dentist, get a customer service rep on the phone and more. Follow their guidelines and you'll breeze through your day-and maybe even find yourself with a few spare minutes to relax at night.

    Before 8 a.m.: Exercise
    The longer you put off exercising, the less likely you'll be to actually do it, says registered dietitian and certified wellness coach Elizabeth Di Biase. Once other responsibilities get in the way, the best-laid plans to exercise often go out the window. And since most exercisers hit the gym later in the day, you're likely to score more space and available machines in the a.m. "Plus, research has shown that morning exercisers stick to their exercise plan more often than those who exercise later," she says. Photo: Shutterstock





    Before 9 a.m.: Place Online Orders

    Get your Internet shopping done early in the day, suggests Paul Shrater, cofounder of e-commerce company Minimus.biz. "An order placed earlier in the day has a better chance of getting filled the same day and onto the shipping dock at the company's warehouse," he says. Photo: Thinkstock




    After 9 a.m.: Call Customer Service
    Give customer service reps a few minutes to have their coffee, too, urges professional organizer Sarah Long. If you call right at 8 a.m. (or whenever the business opens), they'll be scrambling to answer your call while dealing with messages from the night before. Just make sure to get someone on the phone before noon, because everyone else will be calling during their lunch break. Also, try calling on a Tuesday or Wednesday, after the customer service reps have had a chance to put out fires from over the weekend. Photo: Thinkstock


    Before 11 a.m.: Go to the DMV
    Most people try to squeeze in a visit to the DMV (and post office and other state or government agencies) before work or on their lunch break, says time coach Elizabeth Grace Saunders. If you can sneak away from the office, beat the crowds by dropping in midmorning. Photo: Thinkstock





    After 11 a.m.: Make Dinner Reservations
    If you call your favorite restaurant first thing in the morning, you'll probably speak with a waitress or busboy or someone who's doing meal prep. To finagle a reservation, try calling just after 11 a.m., when maƮtre d's generally arrive, suggests productivity expert Neen James. Generally, the person in charge of reservations is the only one who can rearrange the books to accommodate you, so don't waste your time dealing with the rest of the staff. If you can't get through at 11, try back around 4-after lunch is over, but before the dinner rush begins. Photo: Thinkstock




    Before Noon: Meet for Lunch
    Get your important lunch dates in early, suggests Saunders. If you meet clients between 11 and 12, before the lunch rush, the restaurant staff will be relaxed and more eager to serve you. You'll also be able to land a choice table without waiting. Photo: Shutterstock







    After 1 p.m.: Go to the Doctor or Dentist
    Dentists generally reserve the earliest appointments for emergency patients, and lots of doctors spend their mornings doing rounds at a hospital, so it's easy for either to already be behind schedule when they start officially seeing patients around 9 a.m. Instead of asking for the first appointment of the day, professional organizer Geralin Thomas suggests requesting the first slot after lunch, which is generally when doctors and dentists have "caught up" from their morning. Photo: Thinkstock


    Discover other ways to reduce the amount of time you spend in the waiting room.

    After 5 p.m.: Reach Senior-Level Executives
    Lots of execs have "gatekeeper" assistants manning the phones from 9 to 5. If you feel your messages aren't being relayed to the head honcho, such as a store's manager or a business's owner, try calling after the assistants have gone home for the day suggests Shrater. Many higher-ups get to work early and leave late, so if you call after-hours, you'll have a shot at bypassing the assistant. Photo: Thinkstock



    After 6 p.m.: Fuel Up Your Car
    The worst possible time to buy gas is when you're running late in the morning, when everyone else is fueling up, says James. (Even if you're not running late in the morning, the long lines at the gas station will likely push you into running-late territory!) Make a habit of checking your gas gauge when you leave work at night. If it's below a quarter-tank, swing by the gas station on your way home. Photo: Thinkstock



    After 9 p.m.: Buy Groceries
    If someone else can tend to the kids, head to a 24-hour supermarket late at night, suggests Teri Gault, founder of The Grocery Game, who shops for groceries even later-around 11 p.m. "It's just me and the workers who stock the shelves," she says. "They're listening to music and having fun, and there's someone to help me in every aisle." If you can't make it to the market at midnight, try a weekday afternoon. Just avoid the grocery store on the weekend, when people are shopping for the week, and right after work, when everyone's picking up last-minute things for dinner. Photo: Shutterstock


    After 10 p.m.: Get Tech Support
    When your Internet router's down or your computer's on the fritz, consider calling tech support in the middle of the night, suggests Gault, who says she built The Grocery Game between the hours of 12 and 4 a.m. Lots of tech-minded companies offer 24-hour support-by catching the staff "when they're bored," Gault says you can get one-on-one attention for as long as you feel like talking. Photo: Thinkstock



    Original article appeared on WomansDay.com.

    Related Articles at WomansDay.com:

    How to Break Time-Sapping Habits
    Save Time Anywhere
    10 Easy Ways to Streamline Your Day

    Loading...
     

    160 comments

    • AmyP  •  11 months ago
      Good tips!
    • Mrs. X  •  1 year 0 months ago
      Some grocery stores fill a list you submit and pay for online and all you have to do is drive up and they load up your car. Your list is saved on their site, so once you have done it, you just tweek and resubmit. They charge a minimal amount or let you accumulate points with their loyalty cards and pay with your points. I did this at Lowe's foods in Raleigh NC and it was great. The meats and produce they pulled for me were of the best quality. I think it was better that was out on the floor! Why spend time in their aisles at all when you can do this?
    • Sara  •  1 year 0 months ago
      wow, people really like to just cry about stuff. Get over it, take it or leave it.
    • LOL  •  1 year 0 months ago
      i do all my errands in the morning...regardless of whatever it is. gas, dr's appt., dentist, groceries, etc. if i cannot squeeze in all the errands in one day i just sit back and relax at home doing all the cooking, cleaning, laundry...anything that is indoor is being done in the afternoon, period.
    • j  •  1 year 0 months ago
      I don't think this author is suggesting that you do ALL of these things in one day, folks. These are simply suggesting the best times to do these errands if you NEED to do them. Pull your heads out.
    • glorious gloria  •  1 year 0 months ago
      im retired so i have more time to do stuff and not on a timetable...sounds like good advice,but is it safe to go shopping at midnite.
    • Jan  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Well, at my age I finally figured out that the best time to go to the DMV is NOT early/first thing in the morning. You'll be in line with dozens of other people who had the same idea. I like to go at 3:30-3:45 in the afternoon, and it's amazingly faster -- plus, they pretty much have to serve you if you get into the building before the locks are activated (about 4:30 where we live). we've done it for the last 3-4 times we've gone, very successfully. Also, it's usually not too hard to just take an hour of 1.5 hours off work to just go hit it and get it overwith without losing too much personal time.
    • HANZ T  •  1 year 1 month ago
      stupid
    • Alternate City  •  1 year 1 month ago
      The down side to grocery shopping late ...
      fewer cashiers,
      isles blocked with boxes of stuff to be stocked,
      isles blocked with floors being waxed,
      other weirdoes doing late shopping (oh wait, never mind this one).
      Anyway, you get the point. It ain't all music and laughter.
    • Hunter  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Ummm, I just read a complaint about when you actually work. I don't know about you, but I don't do this all on one day.
    • FERNANDO  •  1 year 1 month ago
      They are full of ideas in this consumption/polluting obsessed society... ideas that do not mean or solve anything for all the "slave robots" out there following them everywhere...
    • Pakula  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Calling tech support during the midnight hours will most likely get you routed to overseas tech support. Enjoy the sweet smell of language barrier between you and your script-reading tech support agent.
    • Schteve  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Best time to read Yahoo articles: When you feel your brain shutting down after a long day. This will finish the job.
    • Perry  •  1 year 1 month ago
      What's the best time to take a nap?
    • jand  •  1 year 1 month ago
      You are crazy about the doctor's appointment after lunch. They work through lunch and then sit down to eat about the time of their first "after lunch" appt. Don't mind keeping you waiting and breathing garlic on you when you finally get in!!
    • jared  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Stupid article!!! Somebody had time to waist!
    • Zach  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Been shopping for groceries at night for a long time now. The thing about online orders is new to me, might have to do that from now on so I don't have to 2-3 days for something to ship. Now tech support. It seems funny to even call them anymore. I don't have the patience to push buttons to get to the right department, then wait for someone to answer, and then to be transfered to someone that can actually help me. Just look online for a solution, most likely there's a video on youtube about.
    • KM  •  1 year 1 month ago
      Obviously the person who wrote this never actually WORKED FOR A DOCTOR... or SPOKE to someone that has... FYI to all of those people that think that is accurate... It's not! Each doctor is different... but usually the best time is the first appointment of the day.
    • chelseeey  •  1 year 1 month ago
      actually i head to the dmv about an hour before closing time, its always empty and goes by extraordinarily fast (i don't know why) and the workers want to go home so they move faster. i waste more time in line if i go during the morning or noon.
    • Nelson  •  1 year 1 month ago
      The octane rating of gasoline doesn't change with temperture, only the density. However, since all gasoline tanks at service stations are buried, their temperture only changes over a long (days or weeks) time, not with night and day. Even then the amount of volume change with temprature is very slight. Finally, newer gas pumps are required to compensate for temperture. You will never notice any difference in the ammount of gas you receive day or night. A bigger source of error is the calibration of the gas pump and the age of that pump. If you want the maximum ammount for your money, gas up at a new pump and one that has been calibrated recently, there should be a sticker on it. But, you will burn more gas than you save by driving to a more distant pump.