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Minimizing stress and avoiding burnout
1. Chapter 9: Minimizing Stress and Avoiding Burnout
A Guide to Customer Service Skills forthe Service Desk Professional
Fourth Edition
2. Objectives
In this chapter you will learn:• The causes of stress
• Effective coping skills to reduce the negative
effects of stress in your life
• Proven techniques to manage your time
wisely and achieve personal success
• The connection between time and stress
management
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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3. Minimizing Stress and Avoiding Burnout
• Customer service is a stressful occupation• Good self-management skills are needed
• Self-management skills – The skills, such as
stress and time management, that people need
to complete work efficiently and effectively, feel
job satisfaction, and avoid frustration or burnout
• Self-management skills also include the ability to
get and stay organized and continuously and
quickly learn new skills
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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4. Reducing the Negative Effects of Stress
• Stress is a normal and unavoidable side effect ofliving
• Stress - The adaptation of our bodies and minds
to the demands of life
• Properly managed, stress is an excellent source
of motivation and can be a positive part of life
– Eustress
• Conversely, high levels of stress can sap your
motivation and become a negative
– Distress
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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5. Reducing the Negative Effects of Stress (continued)
• Too little or too much stress can lead tohealth problems
• Health problems related to stress include:
– Alcoholism
– Back and muscle aches
– Depression
– Drug abuse
– Eating disorders
– Serious illness
– Fatigue
– Headaches
– Sleeplessness
– Low energy and
concentration levels
– Premature aging
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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6. Determining the Causes of Stress
• A service desk is a particularly stressful placeto work because analysts are exposed to
multiple sources of stress
– Institutional
– Situational
– Personal
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7. Sources of Stress
• Institutional stressors - The stressors thataccompany the type of business you are in or
the state of the organization where you work
• Your challenge is to figure out which
institutional stressors you want to experience
• You have very little ability to influence
institutional stressors
– You can, however, choose where you work
very carefully
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8. Sources of Stress (continued)
• Situational stressors - The stressors thataccompany the type of work you do
• Like institutional stressors, situational stressors
exist anywhere you work
• You have a greater ability to influence situational
stressors by developing a positive attitude and
skills
– You can, for example, strike negative phrases
from your vocabulary or use the techniques
described in this book to become a better listener
or to communicate more effectively
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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9. Sources of Stress (continued)
Conflict with coworkers
Difficult customer situations
Heavy workload
Inability to predict or control
workload
• Insufficient training
• Insufficient time for training
• Insufficient tools such as
incident management
systems, knowledge
management systems, and
remote control systems
• Insufficient knowledge
resources such as tools,
procedures, and resident
experts
• Interruptions
• Lack of career opportunity
• Lack of management
commitment and direction
• Poor product quality in terms
of the products supported by
the service desk
• Response time restrictions
• Understaffing
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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10. Sources of Stress (continued)
• Personal stressors – The stressors thataccompany your individual life experience
• Even positive life experiences can cause
stress
• You have the greatest ability to influence your
personal stressors
– You can determine ways to either eliminate
the stressor or minimize its effects on your life
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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11. Sources of Stress (continued)
• Layers of stressors may cause you to feelcompletely overwhelmed
• Take the time to identify the real source or
sources of your stress
• Ask yourself the following questions:
– Do you like the business you are in?
– Do you like the work that you do?
– Are you happy with your personal life?
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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12. Developing Effective Coping Mechanisms
• Two key factors that affect how people respondto stress are:
– How much control a person has over a stressor
– Whether or not a person chooses to be exposed
to the stressor
• How much control a person has over a stressor:
– You cannot always control what happens around
you or what other people do
– There is always something you can do
– You can choose whether or not to expose yourself
to a stressor
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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13. Developing Effective Coping Mechanisms (continued)
• When you cannot control a situation, you havetwo choices:
– Change the situation
– Control the way you respond to the situation
• Once you accept a stressor, stop complaining
• Complaining simply makes you unhappy and
may even magnify the stressor in your mind
• Determine what you can do to minimize the effect
that the stressor is having on your life
• Be positive and continuously remind yourself that
you are accepting this stressor for a reason
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14. Developing Effective Coping Mechanisms (continued)
• Accepting responsibility for the stress you areexperiencing is the most important step you
can take in terms of coping with stress and
avoiding burnout
• Burnout - The physical and emotional
exhaustion caused by long-term stress
• People often experience burnout when they
are not managing their stress day-in and dayout
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15. Developing Effective Coping Mechanisms (continued)
• To manage stress effectively, remember thatthere is always something that you can do
• Determine the best course of action to take by
staying calm and in control
• If you feel yourself losing control and becoming
incapable of making a good decision, use
calming techniques:
– Take a deep breath
– Take a sip of water
– Use positive self-talk
– Use positive imagery
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16. Developing Effective Coping Mechanisms (continued)
• Stress is a normal part of life• You cannot eliminate it altogether
• You can learn to identify the causes of stress
in your life and develop effective coping
mechanisms
• You can also learn to use stress as a positive,
motivating force
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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17. Learning to Master Change
• Advances in technology have dramatically changed when,where, and how people work and live
• Today’s business economy is shifting more and more
toward technology-related services and knowledge work
• Success in today’s business world belongs to people who:
– Embrace change
– Are ready and willing to reinvent themselves as needed to
contribute to the company’s goals
• Companies want people that can quickly abandon
outdated tools and methods
• Career opportunities go to people that look to the future,
anticipate coming changes, and quickly adapt
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18. Learning to Master Change (continued)
• Tips for mastering change include:– Recognize learning as the labor of the
Information Age
– Develop flexibility
– Speed up
– Develop project management skills
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19. Learning to Master Change (continued)
• Recognize learning as the labor of the Information Age:– Technology changes quickly and it doesn’t take long for
technical skills to become obsolete
– Take the time to continuously update and improve your
technical skills as well as your business, soft, and selfmanagement skills
• Develop flexibility:
– Expect on any given day to be asked to do something new,
something you’ve never done before, perhaps even
something you will never do again
– Develop the ability to quickly figure out what needs to be
done and do it
– If you need help, ask for it
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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20. Learning to Master Change (continued)
• Speed up:– Approach all of your work with a sense of urgency
– The goal is to get it done, get it done right, and get it
done quickly
– Strive for excellence and do it fast
• Develop project-management skills:
– Anyone who has to juggle more than one task at a
given time can use project management skills
– Good project management skills take time to develop
and can improve only through experience
– Project management skills are highly transferable and
will serve you well now and in the future
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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21. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit
• Coping with stress and mastering change takesphysical and emotional energy
• Stressful situations, left unchecked, can lead to
illness
• Fight-or-flight reaction - A set of physiological
changes that occur when the mind, upon perceiving a
stressful event, triggers an alarm that mobilizes the
body for action
• Today, people are not aware of their bodies’ minuteto-minute responses to stressful situations
• In time, this tension can accumulate and lead to
serious health problems
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22. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
Techniques for staying fit include:Exercise
Drink plenty of water
Practice good nutrition
Avoid the use of stimulants
Get a good night’s sleep
Align your workspace ergonomically
Take breaks
Let your sense of humor shine through
Commit yourself to relaxation
Set realistic goals
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23. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Exercise – Provides a way of releasing the muscletension that can accumulate from stress
• Drink plenty of water – It increases your energy level
and mental capacities – there are many sources of
water
• Practice good nutrition – Eating the right amount of
food at the right time helps you sustain energy level
and maintain an even temperament
• Avoid the use of stimulants – Stimulants exaggerate
all of the body’s stress responses by causing a surge
of adrenaline and other hormones
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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24. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Get a good night’s sleep – Healthy habits, a bedtimeschedule, and a bedtime routine help overcome the
physical and mental effects of inadequate sleep
• Ergonomically align your workspace - A poorly designed
workspace can cause physical symptoms
– Ergonomics - The applied science of equipment design
intended to maximize productivity by reducing operator
fatigue and discomfort
– Repetitive stress injuries (RSIs) - Physical symptoms caused
by excessive and repeated use of the hands, wrists, arms,
and thumbs or from performing tasks using force, strenuous
actions, awkward postures, and poorly designed equipment
– Carpal tunnel syndrome – A RSI that affects hands and
wrists and is linked to repetitious hand movements
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25. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
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26. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Take breaks - Working nonstop often leads to fatigueand burnout
– Take time throughout the day to rejuvenate yourself
• Let your sense of humor shine through – Laughter
helps you relax when you are feeling tense and can
restore your sense of optimism and self-confidence
• Commit yourself to relaxation – A relaxing activity is
one that leaves you free of tension and refreshed
both physically and mentally
– A relaxing activity should consume you to the extent
that you temporarily forget about your stressors and
focus on your personal well-being
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27. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Set realistic goals - Realistic goals are attainable.• The most successful people have written short- and longterm goals as well as professional and personal goals
• At work, ask your supervisor or team leader to help you
establish reasonable goals along with a timetable for
reviewing your accomplishments
• Make sure you understand your team’s goals and how
your personal goals fit in with them
• Not having goals can also lead to stress
• Goals give you a purpose in life
• Knowing where you want to go and what you want to do in
life allows you to focus your energies and avoid, or more
easily tolerate, distractions along the way
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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28. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Case Study: Ergonomically aligning yourworkspace
• The placement and use of your chair, monitor,
keyboard, and mouse are related and must be
aligned properly with each other and with you
• Chair – Adjust until your back is erect, slightly
back, and firm against the backrest
• Thighs and legs should be relaxed and feet
should be flat on the floor
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29. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Monitor - Directly in front of you at, or just below, eye level– When sitting straight with your head erect, the monitor
should be no more than 24 inches away from your eyes
• Keyboard and mouse - Keep your wrists straight and
avoid resting them on hard surfaces
– Press keys gently
– Grip the mouse (when used) loosely
– Consider an ergonomic keyboard or wrist wrest
• Telephone - Either directly in front of you or at less than a
25 degree angle and no more than 10 inches away
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30. Getting and Staying Mentally and Physically Fit (continued)
• Headset - Should keep your head and neck in a neutralposition and free your hands for activities such as
keyboarding
– Do not use a headset that encourages you to tilt or hang
your head
• Lighting – The brightness of your workspace can greatly
affect your well-being
– Too much lighting: Reduce glare by spraying an antiglare
coating on the glass surface or by installing an antiglare filter
– Too little lighting: Use adjustable task lighting on the desk
that provides directed lighting to supplement the overhead
lighting
• Make a conscious effort to look out a window and
experience natural light periodically throughout the day
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31. Managing Your Time
• Service desks are high-activity places to workand some days can be very hectic
• Analysts who manage time wisely are able to feel
in control during exceptionally busy times and
stay motivated during slow times
• Good work habits, such as getting and staying
organized, enable you to:
– View work as a challenge to be enjoyed
– Maintain physical and mental fitness on the job
– Achieve personal success
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32. Getting and Staying Organized
Techniques for getting and staying organized• Create a beginning of day checklist
• Create a “What I Need to Know” list
• Create a “What Coworkers Need to Know” list
• Keep up with administrative tasks
• Log all incidents and service requests in real
time
• Check the status of your open tickets
regularly
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33. Getting and Staying Organized (continued)
• Strong organizational skills are the hallmark of anexcellent service provider
• How you manage your workload will influence:
– Customer satisfaction
– Your relationship with other service providers
– Your personal stress level
• Create a BOD – A beginning of day (BOD) checklist is a
list of tasks an analyst performs at the start of each
workday
• Create a “What I need to know” list - A list, placed in clear
view, of important telephone numbers, file names, dates,
etc. that analysts need on a fairly regular basis
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34. Getting and Staying Organized (continued)
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35. Getting and Staying Organized (continued)
• Create a “What co-workers need to know” list – Alist of important information co-workers may need
to know if an analyst is out of the office for a
period of days or weeks
• Keep up with your administrative tasks –
Completing tasks in a timely fashion takes less
time because information is fresh in your mind
– Your coworkers and your supervisor or team
leader appreciate your keeping items up-to-date
because then they have the information they need
to do their work if you are not available
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36. Getting and Staying Organized (continued)
• Log all contacts real time - Writing customer andincident or service request data on a piece of paper
during the contact and then logging the information
later is an unproductive practice
– Logging contacts real time ensures that other analysts
know an incident or service request exists and enables
service desk managers to know and show when the
service desk is short-handed
• Check the status of your open tickets daily - Learn to
create online reports or run queries that list all of the
tickets you own so that you can stay organized
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37. Coping with Deadlines
• Deadlines are a normal part of life and can bea positive, motivating force
• The best way to cope with deadlines is to:
– Clearly define the work to be done
– Be realistic about what you can accomplish
each day, week, and year
• Overcommitting is a major cause of stress
and can diminish your ability to do highquality work
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38. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
• Avoid procrastination - Putting off a task until thelast minute can cause you to miss a critical
deadline or produce a low-quality product
– Break large tasks into smaller ones and try to
complete the task a little bit at a time
– Set a time limit and work on a task for at least that
period of time
– By breaking large tasks into smaller ones, you will
know a lot sooner whether you can meet your
deadline and can then inform your supervisor or
team leader
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39. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
• Manage your priorities - Create a “To Do” list thatshows all of the tasks you are required to
complete
– Assign a priority to each task
– Check for a balance of priorities
– When faced with too many “A” tasks, consider the
following:
• Who asked me to complete this task?
• What is the risk if I don’t complete this task? What
is the value if I do complete this task?
• When am I expected to have this task done? What
is my deadline?
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40. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
Simple priority scale• A – Urgent: Must do today
• B – Important: Should do this week
• C – Do when time permits
• D - Delegate
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41. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
Simple priority scale• A – Urgent: Must do today
• B – Important: Should do this week
• C – Do when time permits
• D - Delegate
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42. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
• Electronic organizers can be used in lieu ofassigning priorities to tasks on to-do lists (e.g.,
Evernote, LeanKit Kanban, OneNote, Todoist)
• Regardless of system, collect all to-do tasks,
ideas, and project-related data in one place
or system
• Develop the habit of regularly maintaining
that system
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43. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
• Use your peak productivity times – Determineif you are an early bird or a night owl
– If possible, schedule your work to take
advantage of the time during which you
function best
• Eliminate time robbers – Avoid activities that
take up time and do not add value to the work
you perform
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44. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
Use the following techniques to avoid time robbers:• Log contacts as they come in
• Avoid distractions
• Avoid gossip and excessive socializing
• Ask for help when you really need it
• Keep your desk and files organized
• Suggest constructive ways to make
improvements
• Automate recurring tasks
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45. Coping with Deadlines (continued)
• Companies are increasingly askingemployees to do more work, often with fewer
resources
• People who manage their time well can meet
this challenge because they prioritize their
work and stay focused on producing the
desired results
• People who manage their time well also tend
to experience lower levels of stress and
burnout
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46. Understanding the Time/Stress Connection
• Time management involves making an endless series ofsmall and large decisions about what you will accomplish
each day
• Inappropriate decisions, such as those that result in
wasted time, can lower self-esteem and increase stress
levels
• People who maintain a positive attitude, manage their
priorities, and use time wisely, feel good at the end of
each day because they know they have done their best
• Time and stress management skills are tightly linked
• People who are highly stressed may be contributing to
that stress by making poor decisions in terms of how they
use their time
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47. Understanding the Time/Stress Connection (continued)
• Teach and help others so that they can in turn help you• Let your boss or coworkers know when you are feeling
overwhelmed or don’t know which of your tasks take
priority
• Let people know that your plate is full rather than miss a
deadline or let them down because you run out of time
• Calmly ask for clarification about what you should
consider your priorities or state what you can do
– “I was planning on finishing the month-end report this
morning. Does this task take priority over that?”
– “I’m working on a deadline today. Can I get that information
to your tomorrow?”
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48. Understanding the Time/Stress Connection (continued)
• Failing to plan ahead is another common contributor topeople’s stress
• Minutes of planning prior to an event can often mean the
difference between feeling stressed and confused when
the event arrives, or enjoying the event to its fullest; or at
least feeling in control of the event
• Highly stressed people often feel they don’t have time for
time management or for training in stress management
• Remember… you choose the stress you experience each
and every day
• Practicing good time and stress management will help you
take control of your life and achieve your full potential
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49. Understanding the Time/Stress Connection (continued)
• If you choose a career in the service deskindustry, an exciting and rewarding profession
awaits
• It is a rapidly growing and ever-changing field
that offers tremendous opportunities to people
who like working with technology and enjoy
helping customers
• To seize these opportunities, you must hone your
soft- and self-management skills, along with your
business and technical skills
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50. Understanding the Time/Stress Connection (continued)
• In developing these skills, you lay the foundationfor a successful career, regardless of your
chosen profession
• You also develop the “life” skills needed to
handle even the most challenging situations—
whether in your professional life or in your
personal life—with confidence and enthusiasm
• Be optimistic
• With your skills, the future is bright!
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51. Chapter Summary
• Customer service is a stressful occupationand analysts need to develop good selfmanagement skills, such as stress and time
management
– To deal effectively with the stress in your life,
take the time to identify the real source or
sources of your stress
– Develop a plan of action and a stress
management program that will work for you
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52. Chapter Summary (continued)
• Two key factors that affect how people respond to stressare:
– How much control they have over the stressor
– Whether or not they choose to be exposed to the stressor
• Even when you feel a situation is out of your control, there
is always something you can do
– You can change the situation or you can control the way you
respond to the situation
• Accepting responsibility for the stress you are
experiencing is the most important step you can take in
terms of coping with the stress and avoiding burnout
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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53. Chapter Summary (continued)
• The rate of change in today’s business world keepsaccelerating, and it is not likely to slow down any time
soon
– Learn to embrace change and be willing to reinvent
yourself as needed to contribute to your company’s
goals
• Take personal responsibility for your career
– Keep learning, develop flexibility, speed up, and
develop project management skills
– By accepting responsibility for your future, you can
minimize much of the stress and fear that comes from
putting your well-being in the hands of someone else,
such as an employer
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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54. Chapter Summary (continued)
• Coping with stress and mastering change takesphysical and emotional energy
– Take time, every day, to think about your physical
and emotional needs, and devote time to fulfilling
those needs
• Companies are increasingly asking employees to
do more work, often with fewer resources
– People who manage their time well are able to
meet this challenge because they prioritize their
work and stay focused on producing the desired
results
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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55. Chapter Summary (continued)
• Good work habits, such as getting and stayingorganized, enable you to:
– Feel in control
– Make good time management decisions
• When you manage your time well, you will
experience lower levels of stress and burnout
• Time and stress management are tightly linked
• Practicing both will help you take control of your
life and achieve your full potential
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Service Desk Professional, 4e
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