Here are the
activities I'm going to stop in 2012 — and perhaps you should, too.
Responding Like a Trained Monkey. Every
productivity expert in the world will tell you to check email at periodic
intervals — say, every 90 minutes — rather than clicking "refresh"
like a Pavlovian mutt. Of course, almost no one listens,
because studies have shown email's "variable
interval reinforcement schedule" is basically a slot machine for your
brain. But spending a month away — and only checking email weekly — showed me
how little really requires immediate response. In fact, nothing. A 90 minute
wait won't kill anyone, and will allow you to accomplish something substantive
during your workday.
Mindless Traditions. I recently invited a friend to a
prime networking event. "Can I play it by ear?" she asked. "This
is my last weekend to get holiday cards out and I haven't mailed a single one.
It is causing stress!" In the moment, not fulfilling an "obligation"
(like sending holiday cards) can make you feel guilty. But if you're in search
of professional advancement,
is a holiday card (buried among the deluge) going to make a difference? If you want to connect, do something unusual — get in touch at a different time of year, or give your contacts a personal call, or even better, meet up face-to-face. You have to ask if your business traditions are generating the results you want.
is a holiday card (buried among the deluge) going to make a difference? If you want to connect, do something unusual — get in touch at a different time of year, or give your contacts a personal call, or even better, meet up face-to-face. You have to ask if your business traditions are generating the results you want.
Reading Annoying Things. I have nearly a dozen
newspaper and magazine subscriptions, the result of alluring specials ($10 for
an entire year!) and the compulsion not to miss out on crucial information. But
after detoxing for a month, I was able to reflect on which publications
actually refreshed me — and which felt like a duty. The New Yorker ,
even though it's not a business publication, broadens my perspective and is a
genuine pleasure to read. The pretentious tech publication with crazy layouts
and too-small print? Not so much. I'm weeding out and paring down to literary
essentials. What subscriptions can you get rid of?
Work That's Not Worth It. Early in my career, I was
thrilled to win a five-year, quarter-million dollar contract. That is, until
the reality set in that it was a government contract, filled with ridiculous
reporting mechanisms, low reimbursement rates and administrative complexities
that sucked the joy and profit out of the work. When budget cuts rolled around
and my contract got whacked, it turned out to be a blessing. These days, I'm eschewing
any engagement, public or private, that looks like more trouble than it's
worth.
Making Things More Complicated Than They Should Be. A while
back, a colleague approached me with an idea. She wanted me to be a part of a
professional development event she was organizing in her city, featuring
several speakers and consultants. She recommended biweekly check-in calls for
the next eight months, leading up to the event. "Have you organized an
event like this before?" I asked. "Can you actually get the participants?
Why don't you test the demand first?" When none materialized, I realized
I'd saved myself nearly half a week's work — in futile conference calls — by
insisting the event had to be "real" before we invested in it. As
Eric Ries points out in his new book The Lean Startup , developing the best code
or building the best product in the world is meaningless if your customers
don't end up wanting it. Instead, test early and often to ensure you're not
wasting your time. What ideas should you test before you've gone too far?
Eliminating these five activities is likely to save me
hundreds of hours next year — time I can spend expanding my business and doing
things that matter. What are you going to stop doing? And how are you going to
leverage all that extra time?
No comments:
Post a Comment