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Focus - Leo Babauta [42]

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technique there is, but dont' be disappointed if the other person doesn't decide to follow your example. Be happy with the changes you've made yourself.

Change what you can. If the other person is unsupportive, there might be limits to what you can change. Recognize these boundaries, and work within them.

3: managers transforming office culture


If you're an employee with little control over your schedule, there might not be too many ideas for finding focus that you can implement during your work day. In that case, I suggest you 1) implement what you can; and 2) buy a copy of this book for your manager and/or upper management, and especially point them to this chapter.

The rest of this chapter is for management: CEOs, vice presidents, supervisors, middle managers, small employers. Bosses of all kinds. Anyone who controls the schedules of others, or has influence on the policies and office culture that determine how people work.

The Problem: Modern offices pride themselves on efficiency and productivity, but the truth is they are busy, hectic, overwhelming places (in general). Employees often work in cubicles that are surrounded by distractions, they are constantly interrupted by emails, IMs, texts, calls, notifications, calendar requests, people walking over to talk to them, outbursts in the office, meetings.

These distractions destroy focus. They lead to stress, to information overload. They fragment an employee's day and attention, so that it becomes an extremely bad environment for creating, for focusing on what's truly important, for producing incredible work.

Busywork isn't important work. While an employee can be busy for 10 hours a day, keeping up with all the emails and calls and meetings and nonstop requests, they might spend the day getting nothing done of any real importance. What matters is creating, is producing the next great thing that will become the cornerstone of your business, is improving the quality of your product so that the customer takes notice, is providing truly great service. Busywork isn't what matters, and yet it interrupts us and consumes all of our time and attention.

The Solution: create an environment where focus is possible.

There are many such environments, but to give you a picture of what's possible:

The employee comes in, sits down, and figures out what matters most for today. What are the 3-5 tasks that most need to get done, that will make the most difference for the company or organization? No checking email or voicemail at this point -- just quiet, and focus.

He then sits down and, with a completely clear desk, blocks out all distractions -- no phones or other mobile devices, no email, no notifications, nothing to disrupt. He works on the first task on the list.

Later, he might go through email and voicemail and process everything that needs to be quickly processed, for 30 minutes or so.

During the day, his focus is completely on the tasks that matter most. Very few meetings or calls interrupt these tasks.

At the end of the day, the employee might have a short meeting with you, just to review the day, go over any problems, and perhaps agree on tomorrow's important tasks. Meetings should be held to a minimum, as they are time-consuming and can interrupt the time needed to focus on important tasks. They should also be kept as short as possible.

This is obviously just one way of creating a focused environment, but it won't work for everyone. There are lots of ideas that might help create such an environment, including but not limited to:

Email-free Mondays: Everyone is free from email -- banned from email in fact -- for an entire day, and must work on something really important. Email-free afternoons or mornings are other ideas.

Headphones: Allow employees to wear headphones to block out distractions.

Let employees work from home one or two days a week, reporting at the end of such days what they got done. Allow them to work without the distractions of the office, and see what happens.

Shut down the Internet for a couple hours a day. Disconnecting

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