This Question Can Make Your To-Do List A Lot More Manageable
Getting the right things done doesn’t have to be complicated. It can
even be a team sport.
Not long ago, one of my team members showed
up to our one-on-one check-in with an admirably thorough list. It included what
they were working on, the areas where they felt blocked, and a few questions
that they had for me. We had a productive chat and both left feeling energized,
but I later realized something was missing.
There was one very important question
they didn’t ask me: “Which items on my list of tasks and
projects are the most important?”
NOT SURE WHAT TO FOCUS ON? JUST
ASK YOUR MANAGER
Most talented people at work cover more
surface area than their managers are aware of. And that’s often because they
pick the right things to prioritize in the first place. But that doesn’t mean
they always do it alone. A few years into my career, I realized that figuring
out what to focus on at work wasn’t a complicated process —I just needed to ask.
Still, most employees tend to think of
prioritizing their workloads as a solo affair. That’s one reason why time
management is so often a major burden. But you work on a team, so why not run
your individual to-do list past the person who heads up that
team? Give it a try; chances are your manager won’t see it as an
imposition.
Once I clued into this, I continued to bring
a list of everything I was working on to my one-on-one meetings with my
manager, but I also added a question into the mix every week: If I have
five things on my to-do list but can only do three of them well in the
time I’ve got, which three should they be? These simple requests
for my manager’s input helped me make sure we both agreed on what I should
focus on, and over time, I got a lot better at focusing on the right things.
I like to think of these as “forced
alignment” conversations. The whole point is for managers and
employees to get on the same page about what’s most important to the
growth of the business and what individual team members are doing to advance
it.
But these conversations do something
else that’s equally important—they establish sustainable boundaries for
employees. Even good managers are often tempted to pile tasks on their
best team members. After all, there’s always more work that needs to be done
than people to do it, and it’s natural to look to high-capacity, ambitious
people to lead the most important tasks. But this can quickly get out of hand.
It can be difficult for people to
say no to work—especially for top performers and people
early in their careers. After all, they want all the opportunities
they can get! The reality, though, is that even the most
talented employees have limited resources. What’s more, not everything is
equally important. The most effective managers know this. That’s why they’re
willing to help their team members decide what their priorities should be.
MAKING PRIORITIZING A TEAM
SPORT
Of course, this is a two-way street. If you
ask your manager, “Could you help me decide which items on my list are the most
important?” they can respond in one of two ways: They can either prioritize
your to-dos just like you’ve asked, or they can tell you that they think
tackling the whole list is a reasonable expectation.
Either way, this gives you the information
you need to prioritize what’s most important, and it allows for a more open
discussion about time management. You can agree on a longer timeline for one of
your to-do list items, for instance, without leaving doubt in your manager’s
mind that you question its value. This is a crucial trap to avoid; you never
want your manager to interpret a missed deadline as a sign of apathy, and this
simple conversation can help you sidestep that risk.
But more often than not, it cuts the other
way. Whenever my direct reports come to me with to-do lists that I think are
unreasonably long, I generally start a forced alignment conversation in order
to help them narrow down, even if they don’t ask for that. As an employee, it’s
your job to look out for your own priorities and boundaries. But it’s the job
of managers to look out for their team members’ priorities,
too—especially if your employees aren’t always confident in pushing back.
So next time you feel like your to-do list is
overwhelming, try running it past your manager and asking what you should
prioritize. And don’t just do it once—make it a regular part of your one-on-one
meetings. These conversations aren’t investments just in your own career
growth, but in the growth of your whole organization. Good businesses
prioritize, but only because they have good employees who know how to do the
same.
BY KIERAN
SNYDER
https://www.fastcompany.com/40416851/this-question-can-make-your-to-do-list-a-lot-more-manageable?utm_source=mailchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=fcdaily-top&position=4&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=05042017
No comments:
Post a Comment