Do you bring your laptop to meetings and then
pretend you are taking notes while you surf the net? Do you eat lunch at your
desk? Do you make calls while you are driving, and even send the occasional
text, even though you know you should not?
The biggest cost - assuming you do not crash - is to your productivity.
In part, that is a simple consequence of splitting your attention, so that you
are partially engaged in multiple activities but rarely fully engaged in any
one. In part, it is because when you switch away from a primary task to do
something else, you are increasing the time it takes to finish that task
by an average of twenty-five per cent.
But most insidiously, it is because if you are always doing something,
you are relentlessly burning down your available reservoir of energy over
the course of every day, so you have less available with every passing hour.
The best way for an organization to fuel higher productivity and more
innovative thinking is to strongly encourage finite periods of absorbed focus,
as well as shorter periods of real renewal.
If you are a manager, here are three policies worth promoting:
Maintain meeting discipline. Schedule
meetings for 45 minutes, rather than an hour or longer, so participants can
stay focused, take time afterward to reflect on what is been discussed, and
recover before the next obligation. Start all meetings at a precise time, end
at a precise time, and insist that all digital devices be turned off throughout
the meeting.
Stop demanding or expecting instant responsiveness at every moment of
the day. It forces your people into reactive mode,
fractures their attention, and makes it difficult for them to sustain attention
on their priorities. Let them turn off their email at certain times. If it is
urgent, you can call them - but that should not happen very often.
Encourage renewal. Create at
least one time during the day when you encourage your people to stop working
and take a break. Offer a mid-afternoon class in meditation, organize a group
walk or workout, or consider creating a renewal room where people can relax, or
take a nap.
It is also up to individuals to set their own boundaries. Consider these
three behaviours for yourself:
Do the most important thing first in the morning, preferably without interruption, for 60 to 90 minutes, with a clear
start and stop time. If possible, work in a private space during this period,
or with sound-reducing earphones. Finally, resist every impulse to distraction,
knowing that you have a designated stopping point. The more absorbed you can
get, the more productive you will be. When you are done, take at least a few
minutes to renew.
Establish regular, scheduled times to think more long term, creatively,
or strategically. If you do not, you will constantly succumb
to the tyranny of the urgent. Also, find a different environment in which to do
this activity - preferably one that is relaxed and conducive to open-ended
thinking.
Take real and regular vacations. Real
means that when you are off, you are truly disconnecting from work. Regular
means several times a year, if possible, even if some are only two or three
days added to a weekend. The research strongly suggests that you will be far
healthier if you take all of your vacation time, and more productive
overall.
A single principle lies at the heart of all these suggestions. When you are engaged at work, fully engage, for defined periods of time. When you are renewing, truly renew. Make waves!
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