Maximize
Productivity By Practicing These 3 Strategies in Your Downtime:
When we talk about productivity, we always talk
about the “getting it done” side of things.
We
talk about To Do lists and “productivity hacks” and how to sacrifice sleep for
the betterment of the project.
My
theory?
Productivity has more to do with what you don’t do.
Too
often, people focus on how to cram more into less.
Society’s
definition of Productivity seems to be heavily focused on the execution side of
things, with minimal focus on the preparation, the rest, and the quiet that can
ultimately create a much more productive way of life.
Think
of your brain as an engine.
An
engine can only run so long before it needs two things: fuel, and rest. In our
culture, we refer to this “fuel” as “coffee,” and often flaunt our abilities to
keep our engines revving at full speed without ever giving them a rest.
The
big secret?
If you want to be more productive when you’re working,
you need to prioritize a bit more downtime.
1. Slow Down To Speed Up
Have
you ever heard that phrase?
It
means you end up saving more time on the back end if you do your due diligence
on the front end.
Case
in point: If you are holding an egg and you need to throw the egg away, sure,
you could toss it across the kitchen and hope it lands in the trash. If it goes
in, great. You saved yourself 3 whole seconds. If it doesn’t, you just created
a five minute clean up for yourself. Slow down, walk the egg over to the trash
can, do it the right way, and then keep moving.
Slow
down to speed up.
Too
often, we forget this rule in business.
We
think everything has to be done right now. Everyone’s priority matrix is filled
with immediate deliverables.
We over-promise, under-resource, and run ourselves empty
because we fear taking a step back in the beginning.
Instead,
we jump in and get started with a sense of urgency, not realizing the failure
until we’re drowning in the deep end.
Before you run off to the races, take a step back.
What’s
the goal?
What
actions are actually going to move the needle?
Focus on what’s most important, get your mind right, and
then get to work.
2. Prevent, Don’t React
Whether
we’re talking about personal health or maintaining a positive relationship with
your clients, the same theory holds true:
Preventative medicine works a whole lot better than
something reactionary.
Instead
of burning the candle at both ends until your body shuts down, make time as you
go along to take a step back and ask yourself a few simple questions:
·
How do I feel?
·
What does my body feel?
·
When can I make time for that?
And
I’m sure your reaction to that is, “Well I don’t have the time!”
Ok,
yes you do.
You make time for a lot of other things, you can make
time to take care of your most important asset: yourself.
Nothing
is more valuable than that.
If you
don’t have your body and your well being, everything else will suffer.
Keep
tabs on your body each day and each week, and when the warning signs start
flashing, listen. Learn to prevent the engine failure instead of crashing and
then wondering where you went wrong.
Take a
moment — it doesn’t have to be
forever — and give your body what it needs.
Clear your head and then re-approach the work.
You
will be so much more effective.
3. Make Time To Do Nothing
This
holds especially true for the creative types — you need
time to let your mind wander.
If you
are constantly in “Do” mode, you aren’t allowing yourself the freedom or
spontaneity that may result in a brilliant “Aha!” moment.
Time spent doing nothing does an amazing thing to
the mind.
Think
of the toy cars that have to be pulled backwards to be wound up, and then when
released they go shooting across the dining room table. The longer you pull
them back, the further they go.
When you take a step back and allow yourself to
regenerate, you will inherently bring more excitement and drive to your work
when you do return.
This
idea of “time spent doing nothing” is one of the hardest things for
overachievers and driven individuals.
They
can’t help but turn this time into a sweatpants version of a normal workday.
That’s
not the point of it.
The point is to, quite literally, do nothing.
Even
for 30 minutes to an hour.
Go for
a walk without your cell phone.
Read a
book for leisure (when was the last time you did that?).
Go out
for lunch and don’t make it a business meeting.
Do
something that has zero relevance to a task that needs to be completed.
When you
come back afterwards, you will feel so much more energized to do what needs to
get done.
This
article originally appeared on Inc
Magazine
Nicolas Cole
https://theascent.pub/maximize-productivity-by-practicing-these-3-strategies-in-your-downtime-3819187b2693
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