Embrace activities that don't look like work, it's where great ideas come from
hive-167922ยท@alex-rourkeยท
0.000 HBDEmbrace activities that don't look like work, it's where great ideas come from
https://i.imgur.com/YwHlKew.jpeg ### How much free time do you have? A few years back (almost a decade ago... wow how time flies!), I was a young project manager at a corporation. As a middle manager, I usually lead several projects at the same time. Some bigger, some smaller. I remember one time I was getting ready to assign resources to a new project, so I emailed my team and asked everybody to make one slide for the following week's team meeting with a chart that described what projects they are working on, in what percentage and what percentage of free time everybody had. I had already made the chart for myself and it looked something like this: https://i.imgur.com/IXroDv3.jpeg There where some projects that started at the beginning of the year and then started winding down. Some where shorter, so I'd be done with them by the end of Q1 and around mid Q2 I'd start to have more free time to pick up new projects. "Pretty straightforward" I thought. However, when I got my team's charts, guess what they looked like https://i.imgur.com/StPIT7f.jpeg That's right. Everybody reported being 100% busy every week, every month, every quarter for the rest of the year. Serves me right for not seeing it coming, right? ๐ I did learn something though. That people want to seem busy in the office space and having free time in your schedule is a big no-no. It's almost seen as a corporate capital sin or something. In fact, employees will do lots of activities that *seem* productive, but aren't, like: - WhatsApp - Calls - Sitting at your desk when you're not working (things that look like work) And will overlook a bunch of activities that ARE productive, but don't realize, like - Dinners with colleagues - Walks - Attending events - Travel - Reading - Listening to music - Working out - Meditation ( Things that don't look like work) Some of the most productive conversations for me have come out of having dinner and drinks with my smart friends, but what do you think my corporate boss's response would have been if I asked for a budget for "dinner and drinks with smart friends" so I can come up with ideas? Or what If you requested an hour of your day to lay on a beanbag and read a book? Would people look at you weird because you're wasting time not being busy? What about learning about other, unrelated industries? ### Is it because we focus too much on the metrics? Yes, businesses need metrics: unit sales, cost of serving, quarterly budgets, etc. But what if we're so caught up in the metrics that we don't allow ourselves to spend any time with innovation? We focus on results, KPIs, making things happen... What if we even start to develop our own individual metrics that signal how important or busy we are? Does it really matter if my email inbox is completely empty or worse, if my email inbox has 100 unread emails because I'm *Crazy busy*! Does it really matter if our calendar looks like this:  My anecdote in the opening paragraph goes to show that even if we're not busy, our productivity obsession often leads us to fill up our free time with distractions and compulsive behavior like checking our devices. ### I say: embrace unstructured time to come up with ideas Now that I get to call the shots on how I spend my day, I say "bah humbug" to the idea of needing to look busy in the office. You need unstructured time in your day to think and come up with ideas. You need to commit to reading time, walking time, workout time or simply time to gaze out the window and step away from complex here-and-now problem solving to step inward into your world of idea creation. There is always going to be an urgent invoice, a call, an instant message that will push aside your thinking time, your creative time, your idea time. Stephen Covey organizes our daily, weekly and monthly activities into four quadrants, and they look like this: https://i.imgur.com/5L9Ci2j.png #### Quadrant 1 - Important and urgent In business and in life, problems will occur. Things that need immediate attention (urgent) and are important too. But this is why we are leaders too, right? we can help find the solution to these problems by delegating them to the most appropriate teams or individuals. Sometimes we may need to hire some external help. But these types of activities need to be MANAGED. #### Quadrant 2 - Important but not urgent These activities are about planning and strategic and critical thinking. You should FOCUS on these kinds of activities and as I stated above, always make time for them. This is where I would put unstructured time to come up with ideas. #### Quadrant 3 - Urgent but not important There are a lot of these today. Activities that have a sense of urgency, like an incoming phone call, but are actually just interruptions. Busy work, like invoices that aren't due yet and WhatsApp group chat conversations. We should try to AVOID these types of activities. #### Quadrant 4 - Neither urgent nor important These are mostly just wasteful activities and one should try to LIMIT the amount of them that make it into your daily schedule. ____ We'll always have activities from every quadrant in our life, but I say we should make time in our schedule for quadrant 4 activities. They might now show up in the every day metrics, but it's where amazing ideas come from. I'd love to read your thoughts. https://images.hive.blog/0x0/https://files.peakd.com/file/peakd-hive/alex-rourke/23sxrJ1gSZ5s1WPDq5wKGJSSECzBX8KHMRAvwA3G9byaNDa3nfwDFxMxETHQLGkghK2Pi.gif Posted Using [InLeo Alpha](https://inleo.io/@alex-rourke/embrace-activities-that-dont-look-like-work-but-are-actually-very-productive)
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