Breaking the Smartphone Addiction
In
her new book, Sleeping With Your Smartphone, Leslie Perlow explains how
high-powered consultants disconnected from their mobile devices for a few hours
every week—and how they became more productive as a result. Such
"predictable time off" might help phone-addled employees better
control their workdays and lives.
Editor's
note:
Check out the crowd at a concert, a movie, a school play, a beach—heck, even a
funeral—and you'll likely see several people sneaking prolonged peeks at their
smartphones. They just can't help themselves. Ringtones and message alerts are siren
songs that lure them back to the world of work, no matter where they are.
"Let's
face it," writes HBS Professor Leslie Perlow. "When that phone
buzzes, few of us have the mental fortitude to ignore it."
In
her new book, Sleeping
With Your Smartphone, Perlow explains how a small group of high-powered
consultants made a concerted effort to disconnect from their devices for a few
predetermined hours every week—and how they became more productive as a result.
The following excerpt from the book describes how the scheduled disconnecting
process, dubbed "predictable time off," helped these phone-addled
employees to take better control of both their workdays and their lives.
Excerpt from Sleeping With Your Smartphone
It
all began with an experiment that my research associate and collaborator,
Jessica Porter, and I initiated in order to explore whether one six-person
"case team" at one of the world's most elite and demanding
professional service firms—The Boston Consulting Group (BCG)—could work together
to ensure that they each could truly disconnect from work for a scheduled unit
of time each week. This modest experiment generated such powerful results-not
just for individuals' work lives but for the team's work process and ultimately
the client—that the experiment was expanded to more and more of BCG's teams.
Four years later, over nine hundred BCG teams from thirty countries on five
continents had participated.
Sleeping
with Your Smartphone
shares BCG's story. It also serves as a guide for anyone who is on a team or
leads a team—whether a junior or senior manager, from big organizations or
small, in the United States or abroad—and wants to make the impossible
possible: turning off more, while improving the work process itself. Sleeping
with Your Smartphone proposes a way to make exactly that happen: a process
tested successfully by BCG teams in North America, South America, Europe, Asia,
and Australia. A process I have seen implemented with good and not-so-good
managers; on big and small teams, with tight deadlines and less pressing
deliverables. A process that I have come to call "PTO"—because at the
core, when people work together to create "predictable time off,"
people, teams, and ultimately the organization all stand to benefit.
To
be clear, PTO won't solve all your problems. Nor is it about being always off
in a world that is always on. Rather, it is about incremental changes that
promise to improve your work-life and your work in ways that make them notably
better.
Creating Change Where No One Could Even
Imagine It
I
chose to conduct the original experiment at The Boston Consulting Group because
there was widespread skepticism about the possibility of such hard-charging
professionals turning off. "It has to be this way," explained one
consultant, echoing many of his colleagues. "It is the nature of the work.
Clients pay huge sums of money and expect—and deserve—the highest-quality
service."
“When people work together
to create ‘predictable time off,’ people, teams, and ultimately the
organization all stand to benefit.”
Most
consultants simply accepted the resulting demands on their time as the price
they had to pay for annual salaries of well over $100,000 for recent business
school graduates to millions of dollars for the most senior partners, as well
as for unequaled exposure to colleagues and clients of the highest caliber
working together to tackle pressing problems faced by the world's leading
organizations, not to mention r�sum� building work experience. Moreover, many
actually thrived on the intensity of the work and did not want it to be
different. Even those who wanted more time for their personal lives presumed
they had no alternative but to leave the firm to achieve it, and many did,
including some of BCG's most talented consultants. I figured that if change
could be fostered here, it could be made to happen most anywhere.
Imagine
my delight then, when four years after we conducted our first experiment at
BCG's Boston office, 86 percent of the consulting staff in the firm's Northeast
offices—including Boston, New York, and Washington, DC—were on teams engaged in
similar PTO experiments. These team members were much more likely than their
colleagues on teams not participating in PTO to rate their overall satisfaction
with work and work-life positively. For example:
·
51
percent (versus 27 percent) were excited to start work in the morning
·
72
percent (versus 49 percent) were satisfied with their job
·
54
percent (versus 38 percent) were satisfied with their work-life balance
We
also discovered that significantly more of those on PTO teams found the work
process to be collaborative, efficient, and effective.
·
91
percent (versus 76 percent) rated their team as collaborative
·
65
percent (versus 42 percent) rated their team as doing everything it could to be
efficient
·
74
percent (versus 51 percent) rated their team as doing everything it could to be
effective
The
happy result for BCG was that individuals engaged in PTO experiments were more
likely to see themselves at the firm for the long term (58 percent versus 40
percent) and were more likely to perceive that they were providing significant
value to their clients (95 percent versus 84 percent). BCG clients reported a
range of experiences with PTO teams from neutral (nothing dropped through the
cracks) to extremely positive (they reaped significant benefits). According to
BCG's CEO, Hans-Paul B�rkner, the process
unleashed by these experiments "has proven not only to enhance work-life
balance, making careers much more sustainable, but also to improve client value
delivery, consultant development, business services team effectiveness, and
overall case experience. It is becoming part of the culture—the future of
BCG."
The Cycle of Responsiveness: The Root of the
24/7 Habit
The
reason PTO can be so effective for both individuals' work-lives and the work
itself: busy managers and professionals tend to amplify—through their own
actions and interactions—the inevitable pressures of their jobs, making their
own and their colleagues' lives more intense, more overwhelming, more
demanding, and less fulfilling than they need to be. The result of this vicious
cycle is that the work process ends up being less effective and efficient than
it could be. The power of PTO is that it breaks this cycle, mitigating the
pressure, freeing individuals to spend time in ways that are more desirable for
themselves personally and for the work process.
The
initial discovery that illuminated all of this emerged from one of the surveys
we conducted of sixteen hundred managers and professionals.
Of
this sample, 92 percent reported putting in fifty or more hours of work a week.
A third of this group was working sixty-five or more hours a week. And that
doesn't include the twenty to twenty-five hours per week most of them reported
monitoring their work while not actually working: 70 percent admitted to
checking their smartphone each day within an hour after getting up, and 56
percent did so within an hour before going to bed. Weekends offered no let-up:
48 percent checked over the weekend, even on Friday and Saturday nights.
Vacations were no better: 51 percent checked continuously when on vacation. If
they lost their wireless device and couldn't replace it for a week, 44 percent
of those surveyed said they would experience "a great deal of anxiety."
And
26 percent confessed to sleeping with their smartphones. Simply put, people
were "on" a great deal.
We
defined on as the time people spent working plus all the additional time they
were available, monitoring their work in case something came up. And, we
discovered that those whose workweek was more unpredictable tended to be on
more. That was not surprising. What caught our attention was that the more
people were on, the more unpredictable their work time seemed to become. By
being constantly connected to work, they seemed to be reinforcing—and worse,
amplifying—the very pressures that caused them to need to be available.
Our
respondents were caught in what we have come to call the cycle of
responsiveness. The pressure to be on usually stems from some seemingly
legitimate reason, such as requests from clients or customers or teammates in
different time zones. People begin adjusting to these demands—adapting the
technology they use, altering their daily schedules, the way they work, even
the way they live their lives and interact with their families and friends—to
be better able to meet the increased demands on their time. Once colleagues
experience this increased responsiveness, their own requests expand. Already
working long hours, most just accept these additional demands—whether they are
urgent or not—and those who don't risk being branded as less committed to their
work.
And
thus the cycle spins: teammates, superiors and subordinates continue to make
more requests, and conscientious employees accept these marginal increases in
demands on their time, while their expectations of each other (and themselves)
rise accordingly. Eventually, the cycle grows (unintentionally) vicious; most
people don't notice that they are spinning their way into a 24/7 workweek. And
even if they begin resenting how much their work is spilling into their
personal lives, they fail to recognize that they are their own worst enemy, the
source of much of the pressure that they attribute to the nature of their
business.
Imagine
instead that people were not so accommodating and decided to find alternative
ways to do the work. Imagine the upside of no longer having to accommodate to
all the pressure to be on.
Imagine
if in the process of making this possible, new ways of working were discovered
that were more efficient and effective. Consider the win not just for
individuals but also for the organization. The power of PTO is that it makes
this all come true—by breaking the cycle of responsiveness.
Reprinted
by permission of Harvard Business Review Press. Excerpt from Sleeping With Your Smartphone. Copyright 2012 Leslie A. Perlow.
by
Leslie A. Perlow http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/6877.html?wknews=05162012
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