TRAVIS BRADBERRY
(Co-author of Emotional Intelligence 2.0
and President at TalentSmart)
Nothing sabotages your productivity quite like bad habits. They are
insidious, creeping up on you slowly until you don’t even notice the damage
they’re causing.
Bad habits slow you down, decrease your accuracy, make you less
creative and stifle your performance. Getting control of your bad habits is
critical, and not just for productivity’s sake. A University of Minnesota study
found that people who exercise a high degree of self-control tend to be much
happier than those who don’t, both in the moment and in the long run.
“By constant self-discipline and self-control you can develop greatness
of character.” -- Grenville Kleiser
Some bad habits cause more trouble than others, and the nine that
follow are the worst offenders. Shedding these habits will increase your
productivity and allow you to enjoy the positive mood that comes with increased
self-control
1. Impulsively surfing the internet.
It takes you 15 consecutive minutes of focus before you can fully
engage in a task. Once you do, you fall into a euphoric state of increased
productivity called flow. Research shows that people in a flow state are five
times more productive than they otherwise would be. When you click out of your
work because you get an itch to check the news, Facebook, a sport’s score, or
what have you, this pulls you out of flow. This means you have to go through
another 15 minutes of continuous focus to reenter the flow state. Click in and
out of your work enough times, and you can go through an entire day without
experiencing flow.
2. Perfectionism.
Most writers spend countless hours
brainstorming characters and plot, and they even write page after page that
they know they’ll never include in the book. They do this because they know
that ideas need time to develop. We tend to freeze up when it’s time to get
started because we know that our ideas aren’t perfect and what we produce might
not be any good. But how can you ever produce something great if you don’t get
started and give your ideas time to evolve? Author Jodi Picoult summarized the
importance of avoiding perfectionism perfectly: “You can edit a bad page, but
you can’t edit a blank page.”
3.
Meetings.
Meetings gobble up your precious time like no other. Ultra-productive
people avoid meetings as much as humanly possible. They know that a meeting
will drag on forever if they let it, so when they must have a meeting they
inform everyone at the onset that they’ll stick to the intended schedule. This
sets a clear limit that motivates everyone to be more focused and efficient.
4. Responding to e-mails as they arrive.
Productive people don’t allow their e-mail to be a constant
interruption. In addition to checking their e-mail on a schedule, they take
advantage of features that prioritize messages by sender. They set alerts for
their most important vendors and their best customers, and they save the rest
until they reach a stopping point in their work. Some people even set up an
autoresponder that lets senders know when they’ll be checking their e-mail
again.
5. Hitting the snooze button.
When you sleep, your brain moves through an elaborate series of cycles,
the last of which prepares you to be alert at your wake up time. This is why
you’ll sometimes wake up right before your alarm clock goes off -- your brain
knows it’s time to wake up and it’s ready to do so. When you hit the snooze
button and fall back asleep, you lose this alertness and wake up later, tired
and groggy. Worst of all, this grogginess can take hours to wear off. So no
matter how tired you think you are when your alarm clock goes off, force
yourself out of bed if you want to have a productive morning.
6. Multitasking.
Multitasking is a real
productivity killer. Research conducted at Stanford University confirms that
multitasking is less productive than doing a single thing at a time. The
researchers found that people who are regularly bombarded with several streams
of electronic information cannot pay attention, recall information or switch
from one job to another as well as those who complete one task at a time. When
you try to do two things at once, your brain lacks the capacity to perform both
tasks successfully.
But what if some people have a special gift for multitasking? The
Stanford researchers compared groups of people, based on their tendency to
multitask and their belief that it helps their performance. They found that
heavy multitaskers -- those who multitasked a lot and felt that it boosted
their performance -- were actually worse at multitasking than those who liked
to do a single thing at a time. The frequent multitaskers performed worse
because they had more trouble organizing their thoughts and filtering out
irrelevant information, and they were slower at switching from one task to
another. Ouch!
7.
Putting
off tough tasks.
We have a limited amount of
mental energy, and as we exhaust this energy, our decision-making and
productivity decline rapidly. This is called decision fatigue. When you put off
tough tasks till late in the day because they’re intimidating, you save them
for when you’re at your worst. To beat decision fatigue, you must tackle
complex tasks in the morning when your mind is fresh.
8.
Using
your phone, tablet or computer in bed.
This is a big one that most people don’t even realize harms their sleep
and productivity. Short-wavelength blue light plays an important role in your
mood, energy level and sleep quality. In the morning, sunlight contains high
concentrations of this blue light. When your eyes are exposed to it directly,
the blue light halts production of the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin and
makes you feel more alert. In the afternoon, the sun's rays lose their blue
light, which allows your body to produce melatonin and start making you sleepy.
By the evening, your brain doesn’t expect any blue light exposure and
is very sensitive to it. Most of our favorite evening devices -- laptops,
tablets, televisions, and mobile phones -- emit short-wavelength blue light,
and in the case of your laptop, tablet and phone, they do so brightly and right
in your face. This exposure impairs melatonin production and interferes with
your ability to fall asleep as well as with the quality of your sleep once you
do nod off. As we’ve all experienced, a poor night’s sleep has disastrous
effects upon productivity. The best thing you can do is to avoid these devices
after dinner (television is OK for most people as long as they sit far enough
away from the set).
9.
Eating
too much sugar.
Glucose functions as the “gas pedal” for energy in the brain. You need
glucose to concentrate on challenging tasks. With too little glucose, you feel
tired, unfocused and slow; too much glucose leaves you jittery and unable to
concentrate. Research has shown that the sweet spot is about 25 grams of
glucose. The tricky thing is that you can get these 25 grams of glucose any way
you want, and you’ll feel the same -- at least initially. The difference lies
in how long the productivity lasts. Donuts, soda and other forms of refined
sugar lead to an energy boost that lasts a mere 20 minutes, while oatmeal,
brown rice and other foods containing complex carbohydrates release their
energy slowly, which enables you to sustain your focus.
Bringing
It All Together
Some of these habits may seem minor, but
they add up. Most amount to a personal choice between immediate pleasures and
lasting ones. After all, the worst habit is losing track of what really matters
to you.
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