A Fine Balance

For the past week, I’ve been sticking to a rigid work schedule. I decided to try it out because, for the previous six months, I had been working “until I was finished”.

Of course, “finished” never came, the quality of my work decreased as the hours increased, and I was starting to get burnt out. I even started to fantasize about going to a beach.

The main problem was not the number of hours, but with so much time allocated to work, I didn’t have to be selective about which tasks I concentrated on. Without constraints, I wasn’t forced to pick and choose the most important things out from amidst the fluff. The result was that I got a lot of things done, but not the right things.

To combat the situation, I did two things: I stuck to a rigid work schedule and, even more importantly, I kept a work journal. From those two practices came three immediate benefits: increased urgency, much-improved focus and a refined selection of tasks.

Urgency

Reducing the time available immediately increased the pressure to perform. I worked faster because I knew that the clock was ticking and I had to ACT NOW in order to complete what needed to get done before my time ran out.

Focus

I think that 99% of people can’t multi-task and the other 1% lie about it. As a committed mono-tasker, reducing the amount of time I had available each day also forced me to reduce the number of Next Actions that I had on my daily list. Rather than sifting through 200+ actions to decide what’s next, I had to reduce my options to a few of the most important. As a result, my motivation increased and I could stay on task until they were complete.

Refined Selection

The work journal acted as a chaperone for my brain. Knowing that I was keeping track of everything I completed, I easily avoided useless distractions. I didn’t want to log “surfed TED site for 40 minutes” or “hung out watching YouTube”, so I didn’t do it.

 

Working “X# of hours” has been abused by tens of thousands of time-focused people who think that putting in time is the equivalent of working. This is obviously a repulsive practice, but putting boundaries around your time can be incredibly productive if it’s results-focused.

Just as embracing constraints is the key to great art, I’m starting to think that it is also the key to doing great work.

Related Posts

  1. How Many Hours Should I Work?
  2. Thick Black Coffee
  3. Bootstrappin’

Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post:

Next post: