See What Is Killing Your Focus
There’s a satisfying rush
we experience when there’s too much on our plate: we feel needed, challenged,
even productive.
And yet that pleasurable
experience is an illusion.
It robs us of our focus
and prevents us from making progress on the work that matters most.
Sociologist Christine
Carter, Ph.D., an expert at UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, put
it this way: “Busyness is not a marker of intelligence, importance, or success.
Taken to an extreme, it is much more likely a marker of conformity, or
powerlessness, or fear.” Instead of viewing busyness as a sign of significance,
top performers interpret busyness as an indication of wasted energy.
Here are very important
tips on #Productivity from the experts
In recent years, work has
become infinitely more complex.
Technological innovations
have led to round-the-clock work schedules and mounting expectations. Our
assignments have grown more collaborative, requiring more coordination,
conference calls, and meetings.
We now face an endless
barrage of distractions, from the vibrations and alerts on our smartphones to
the breaking news stories and viral videos awaiting us at our desks.
Now, more than ever, we
need strategies for being productive. But where do we start?
Earlier this year, as part
of an online summit taking
place in January 2016, I invited 26 bestselling science and productivity
writers to share their insights for achieving top performance.
Here are nine overarching
themes that encapsulate their advice for navigating a rapidly accelerating
informational landscape and achieving peak performance at work.
1. Own your time.
Our most satisfying work
comes about when we’re playing offense, working on projects that we ourselves
initiate.
Many of us know this
intuitively yet continue allowing ourselves to spend the vast majority of our
days playing defense, responding to other people’s requests.
Many of the experts I
interviewed believe that top performers take steps to ensure a favorable
offense-to-defense ratio. Tom Rath, author of Are You Fully Charged?, recommends
blocking out time to work away from email, programming your phone to only ring
for select colleagues, and resisting emails first thing in the morning until
you’ve achieved at least one important task.
2. Recognize busyness
as a lack of focus.
There’s a satisfying rush
we experience when there’s too much on our plate: we feel needed, challenged,
even productive. And yet that pleasurable experience is an illusion. It robs us
of our focus and prevents us from making progress on the work that matters
most.
Sociologist Christine Carter, Ph.D., an expert at UC Berkeley’s
Greater Good Science Center, put it this way: “Busyness is not a marker of
intelligence, importance, or success. Taken to an extreme, it is much more
likely a marker of conformity or powerlessness or fear.” Instead of viewing
busyness as a sign of significance, top performers interpret busyness as an
indication of wasted energy.
3. Challenge the myth of
the “ideal worker.”
Far too many of us continue
to believe that an “ideal worker” is one who works constantly, often at great
expense to their personal life, but there’s overwhelming evidence to the
contrary.
Being productive requires
recognizing that you can’t work for extended periods of time and maintain a
high level of performance. As humans, we have a limited capacity for focused
attention. And yet, as Brigid Schulte,
journalist and author of the New York
Times bestseller Overwhelmed,
points out, we have been seduced into thinking that if only we try harder and
work longer, we can achieve anything.
Top performers take a
different approach. They recognize and honor their physical limitations by
getting plenty of exercise and sleep, cycling between 90-minute
bursts of focused work and short restorative breaks, and taking
time to disconnect from email for some portion of their off-hours.
4. Intentionally leave
important tasks incomplete.
We often race to finish
assignments quickly so that we can move on to the next item on our list.
But Wharton professor
and psychologist Adam Grant believes
resisting this urge can actually make us more productive.
“I used to sit down to
write and not want to get up until I was done with a chapter or an argument,”
Grant told me. “Now I will deliberately leave sentences just hanging in the
middle and get up and go do something else. What I find when I come back is
that I don’t have to do a lot of work to finish the sentence, and now I also
have a bunch of new ideas for where the writing should go next.” (Note: Hemingway
followed the same strategy.)
What both Grant and
Hemingway are leveraging is the human tendency to ruminate over unfinished
tasks, otherwise known as the Zeigarnick Effect.
If you start a project and
leave it unfinished, you’re bound to think about it more frequently than after
it’s done.
Instead of aiming to
complete important tasks in one sitting, try leaving them incomplete. Doing so
will encourage you to continue thinking about your work in different settings
and, in the process, position you to uncover creative solutions.
5. Make a habit of
stepping back.
In a knowledge economy,
productivity requires more than perseverance — it requires insight and
problem-solving.
Research
indicates quite clearly that we are more likely to find breakthrough
ideas when we temporarily remove ourselves from the daily grind.
This is why the best
solutions reveal themselves when we step into the shower, go for a run, or take
a vacation.
Top performers view time
off not as stalled productivity but as an investment in their future
performance.
6. Help others
strategically.
High achievers, Grant
argues in his 2013 book Give and Take, tend to be Givers — those
who enjoy helping others without strings attached.
While giving can certainly
help your succeed, Grant’s data also reveals that helping everyone with
everything is a recipe for failure.
So how do you do it right?
Top performers, Grant argues, avoid saying yes to every helping opportunity.
Instead, they specialize in one or two forms of helping that they genuinely
enjoy and excel at uniquely.
7. Have a plan for saying
no.
The more commitments we
agree to take on, the more likely we are to experience what author and
consultant Rory Vaden calls
“priority dilution.”
This is when the sheer
number of obligations we’ve committed to prevent us from doing the work that
matters most.
One method of
counteracting priority dilution involves having a
strategy in place for saying no in advance, so that you don’t have
to stop and think about how to phrase your response each time you need to turn
someone down. Create an email template, or write out a script that you can use
when doing it in person.
When dealing with a
manager who is asking you to take on more than is reasonable, think outside the
yes/no paradigm.
Consultant and
writer Greg McKeown recommends
having a conversation with your manager and listing all the projects you’re
currently working on. Indicate which items you think are priorities and invite
your supervisor to share his or her opinion. It’s a way of illuminating the
constraints you’re under without ever saying the word “no.”
8. Make important
behaviors measurable.
To make progress toward
any goal, it helps to track our behaviors.
Bestselling author Gretchen Rubin, an expert on happiness
and habits, sees monitoring as one of the keys to behavior changes, saying, “If
you want to eat more healthily, keep a food journal. If you want to get more
exercise, use a step counter. If you want to stick to a budget, track your
spending.”
Marshall Goldsmith, the well-known CEO
coach, agrees. Every evening, he reviews a 40-item spreadsheet consisting of
every important behavior he hopes to achieve.
Among the items: the
number of words he wrote, the distance he walked, and the number of nice things
he said to his wife, daughter, and grandchildren.
9. Do things today that
make more time tomorrow.
A final theme to emerge is
that top performers look for ways to automate or delegate activities that are
not a good use of their time. Vaden suggests asking yourself, “How can I use my
time today in ways that create more time tomorrow?”
Evaluating your to-do list
through this lens makes it easier to commit to activities that are not
immediately enjoyable, like automating bill paying or creating a “how to” guide
for other team members to help you delegate repetitive tasks more easily.
All of these suggestions
are useful individually, but they also highlight an important trend.
In the 1990s, being
productive mainly required good time management.
Ten years later, the
advent of email led to an expanded workday and productivity requiring you
to manage
your energy, not just your time.
Over the last few years,
we have entered a new age in which managing your energy and time is not enough.
Today, the magnitude of
information rushing toward us from every direction has surpassed our capacity for
consumption.
No matter how much time
and energy you have at your disposal, you can’t be productive without mastering
the art of attention management.
Resisting the lure of
busyness, having a plan for saying no, maintaining a relentless focus on
self-directed goals that only you can achieve — these are the skills we need to
cultivate in ourselves to succeed, both at work and in life.
Original Post: Productivity Tips From Productivity Experts
See What Is Killing Your Focus
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Honestly I like the idea of owning my time
ReplyDeleteit makes lots of sense