Most Of What You Will Do At Work Today Is Meaningless
If you're a modern knowledge worker, odds are you're going to go to work, read some emails, reply to some emails, attend some meetings, grab a coffee, have lunch, attend another meeting or two, catch up on emails, and finally head home.
You'll be busy from the moment you get to work until the moment you go home. When you do find a nook of time, you'll likely be bombarded with beeping, dings, calls, and other people who only need a sliver of our time. After all, they too have something urgent to do. They too have a deadline.
We come home after a long day mentally and physically drained.
We get to work the next day vowing to change things. We start to think about how we can work more productively when, ding, a meeting invite pops up on our computer for an urgent meeting to decide the fate of a product.
It doesn't matter that you haven't done the work to have an informed opinion on the matter, it matters that you go and make some token contribution to the meeting.
Our plan to work better flies out the window; any hope of sanity along with it.
If we can't work smarter, we can work harder. So we end up redoubling our efforts, cutting out lunch and shortening meetings so we can fit more of them in.
Our response to finding ourselves stuck in the muck is to put our foot on the accelerator.
Part of the problem is that attending meetings has become some sort of corporate-machoism badge.
"Hey you want to grab a coffee to talk about that really cool project I'm working on? I'd love to pick your brain?"
"Sounds great. How's three Wednesday's from now sound? … Yea, I know, I'm so busy."
Sure we do more busy work, but we're doing less real work. To get any real work done we come in early, stay late, or both. That's the only way we can get some peace and quiet.
In an effort to do more, we end up doing less. I'm not sure who first said it, but when you find yourself in a hole the best thing to do is stop digging. By failing to think about how we're working, we only end up burning ourselves out.
There is another way to improve performance and it's a bit unconventional.
Eliminate the bullshit.
Stop doing the busy work and start spending your time adding value to yourself, your clients, your co-workers, and your friends. Focus on what's important and eliminate the rest.
Before doing anything, ask yourself, "Is this necessary?" And if it's not necessary, ask yourself why you're doing it.
Of course, like anything on Farnam Street, I haven't come up with this idea myself. I shamelessly stole it from one of my friends, Marcus Aurelius.
In Meditations, he writes:
Ok, that makes sense. So why don't more people do this?
That's a good question.
While there are many reasons, this one probably carries a lot of weight.
"Worldly wisdom," writes John Maynard Keynes in The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, "teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally."
No one wants to be unconventional. No one wants to be different.
More people should follow the advice of Aurelius - it's not that difficult, it's common sense. It just looks difficult because it's unconventional.