Working 90 Hours a Week… and Loving It?

Working 90 Hours a Week… and Loving It?

In Silicon Valley, programmers proudly wear T-shirts that celebrate their workaholic swagger: “90 Hours a Week and Loving It,” the shirts read.

But recently, John Pencavel of Stanford’s economics department challenged this message in a paper, arguing that productivity actually drops dramatically with long hours. In one case he studied, those who toiled away for an extra 14 hours produced exactly nothing more.

We all have the same temporal boundaries – the 24/7 within which we live our lives. So how do some people do so much with this time, while others never make a dent in an ever-expanding “To Do” list, always hovering at the ragged edge of control?

The most common justification for not completing tasks, or for falling into workaholism, is a lack of time. But I’ve found the real problem is that often people have devoted too much of their time to outputs and worrying, and too little to improving their focus.

When you spend too much time on an activity, just as when you have too large a budget, your priorities can become murky. You risk losing the precision and focus that come from having limited resources. In the same way that small, innovative companies disrupt well-capitalized giants, time constraints can be a way to focus energy on what matters most.

As with any shortage, we feel panic when we think we don’t have enough time. Rather than focusing our energies, the panic leads us to squander the time we do have. We bounce from deadline to deadline, priority to priority and task to task.

The most primitive way to manage this anxiety is to reduce the number of claims on us – a tactic that can be costly and unsatisfying in the long run. A better strategy for me has been to shut out phone calls, emails and other interruptions. Indeed, I find that setting aside two or three hours to focus, without interruption, is time-expanding. It has been liberating and time-saving. What I used to think saved me time, simply cost me focus – and thus time. It kept me enervated and prevented me from being “present,” adding, not relieving, pressure.

The choice to focus pays dividends with smaller periods of time, as well. In the free 10 minutes before meetings, I used to squeeze in phone calls or send a few text messages and a couple of emails. But now I block out that time to think about the upcoming conversation, the next meeting, the highest value outcome. This forces me to focus on what’s dead ahead. Freed from interruptions, I’m able to listen and prioritize – to keep my eyes on the prize.

We’ve all gotten more done in a productive hour than in days of procrastinating. But unfortunately for most of us, that experience is a rarity. Our real problem is that we haven’t yet developed the discipline to set priorities – to regularly ask ourselves what our most important task should be today, this week, this month. Without clarity around priorities, the odds are that we’ll wrap up each week exhausted and wondering what we accomplished before heading into a new week feeling behind and overworked.

The key, I find, to feeling energized and excited about getting your work done, is to establish a clear and simple “line of sight” from your many activities to the big goals. With clarity around what’s most important, you’ll find yourself invigorated and with more time than you expected.

To the misguided “90 Hours a Week and Loving It” T-shirt-wearers, Steve Jobs might have invoked the advice he gave in a 1998 Business Week article. “Simple can be harder than complex: You have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple," he said. "But it’s worth it in the end because once you get there, you can move mountains.”

****

To see upcoming posts from Joel in your LinkedIn news feed, connect to his account by clicking the "Follow" button at the top right of the page. Click here to follow Joel on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JoelCPeterson.

@JoelCPeterson's recent posts:

Photo: gemanacom / 123RF

Shiju Mathew

VP-Operations.GlobeGround India Bangalore.

10 年

I agree with you...most times when you have a lot on your plate..your mind gets blocked...and what is life if you don't draw a clear line between office and my time..15hrs in office..? Guess you have to set your priorities and work ahead..

回复

What does it mean work 90 hours a week? just became a workaddict, and are you sure that your productivity is still the same hour after hour and day after day?

回复
Laura Echino

Fractional Executive CPO| Partner at YourCPO - a division of YOURgroup | Procurement & Purchasing Advisor | Indirect Costs Specialist | Trainer

10 年

It's important the quality of working hours not the quantity.

回复

working long hours is detrimental to any occupation. It's been studied that fatigue has costly consequences, such as drowsy driving and not trusting your judgement.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Joel Peterson的更多文章

  • Power from Position or from Trust?

    Power from Position or from Trust?

    To lead, one must be empowered. Stanford professor Jeff Pfeffer, a leading expert in the dynamics of power, describes…

    4 条评论
  • ON CREDULITY

    ON CREDULITY

    Once bewildered by COVID’s origin, lockdowns, and restrictions, many have gone on to embrace once-contentious…

    3 条评论
  • .

    .

    Last week, I made a decision to give up teaching “MGE,” a signature second-year course at Stanford’s Graduate School of…

    82 条评论
  • Opinion: Time to cancel ‘cancel culture’ on college campuses

    Opinion: Time to cancel ‘cancel culture’ on college campuses

    Management guru Peter Drucker once observed, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” Since values are at the heart of…

    69 条评论
  • Growth Through Adversity

    Growth Through Adversity

    It was a delight to host Hamid Moghadam, Chairman and CEO of Prologis, on the Running Stuff podcast. As one of the…

    5 条评论
  • How to Ruin a Meeting

    How to Ruin a Meeting

    The granular work of entrepreneurial leaders comes down to running meetings and having difficult conversations. Every…

    12 条评论
  • In the Era of Big Data, are Job Interviews Passé?

    In the Era of Big Data, are Job Interviews Passé?

    Nothing is more important to the entrepreneurial leader than assembling the right team. In "Entrepreneurial…

    3 条评论
  • Revisiting the Minimum Wage

    Revisiting the Minimum Wage

    Many want to boost the minimum wage to help with lockdown recovery. Others wonder if a minimum wage hike will merely…

    25 条评论
  • Surviving COVID (and other disasters)

    Surviving COVID (and other disasters)

    Pandemics, wars, depressions, panics, natural disasters – each tests our preparedness, ingenuity and character. They…

    5 条评论
  • The World Needs More Entrepreneurial Leaders

    The World Needs More Entrepreneurial Leaders

    I love many things about teaching at Stanford, but one of my favorite parts of the job is spotting people who have the…

    16 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了