Modes of Working: Change Your Environment to Change Your Results
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I’m out of the country for the first time in 19 months. During that year and a half, I’ve thought and talked a lot about remote work – why, how and what kinds of work one might do when away from the office.
Yet, I haven’t worked properly remote until now. Yes, I’ve worked from home and from the family cabin, but not abroad, far removed from my everyday circumstances.
Alas, here I am, at some Greek island with my laptop clocking away.
This got me thinking about how changing your location can facilitate a change in your?mode of working.?I think differently when on the move in Greece than when I’m in the office in Oslo, just like I think differently when working from my kitchen table.
This is because we homo sapiens tend to?associate certain mental and emotional states with certain places.?Therefore, some places are more conducive to certain kinds of activity, and certain types or work, than others.
For me, the office is ideal for productivity and getting things done. My desk is optimized for productivity, and my brain associates the office with long days of checking off tasks and making things happen.
Hopping from island to island in Greece, while excessively consuming iced coffee and eggs benedict at shabby cafés definitely creates a different mental state than that of the office. This state is far from ideal for maximum productivity and short-term output. But it is surprisingly conducive to thinking about the bigger picture, and looking into the long term future.
Does this mean I should spend the rest of my career gazing into the Mediterranean asking big questions? No. But it does mean I might consider getting away from the office on a regular basis to help facilitate other modes of thinking and approaching professional challenges.
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The bottom line is this:?location is a powerful parameter you can tweak in order to change your mode of work.
With that said, location is far from the only parameter you can tweak. A few other parameters I’ve experimented with include:
If you become aware of how these various parameters impact you, your state of mind, and your mode of work, you can start to tweak them intentionally. Doing so can yield incredible results.
All of this is essentially just about?setting the stage for doing great work.?It’s basic preparation. The importance of good preparation is much more obvious in the world of physical labour, because the risks of getting injured are so obvious – you would never go out for a long day of chainsawing without spending five minutes to put on protective gear first, for example. You as an office worker might not be at risk of chopping off your legs on any given Tuesday, but?preparing for a good day, week or life of knowledge work is still important.
The bottom line is this:?if you set up your outer and inner environment in an intentional way, then doing your work gets so much more effortless.
So tweak and tinker with all the parameters, see what happens, iterate and repeat until you find what works for you. It might help you do the best work of your life.
Cheerio from Greece,
-Jacob
L?rer - noe hver dag. Wordsmith. Business Developer@anything Microsoft. Experienced Board leader & - member. Chief Editor Bergensia.com @jantesays Bluesky/X/Insta/TripAdvisor-1% contributor
3 年I agree, my own experiences are very much the same, the reason I for many of my workdays choose Espresso House or a different café is not only the great coffee. My experience is that I most often have a higher quantity og original thoughts and ideas in such an atmosphere than at my working table at home.
Web3 Co-Creator & Product manager.
3 年Kul og interessant tekst! Digget det!