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Forming New Productivity Habits: Theory & Practice. Agenda. Challenge: Why new methods don’t “stick” and what keeps certain workers reluctant to change ? Solution: How to introduce new working habits and make them “stick ” - 5 practical recommendations
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Agenda Challenge: Why new methods don’t “stick” and what keeps certain workers reluctant to change? Solution: How to introduce new working habits and make them “stick” - 5 practical recommendations Examples: Building particular productivity habits - Granular workload management and Culture of sharing Q&A Takeaways
Example of a Habit “ Walking 8 to 10 miles a day improves your productivity… and calf muscles! “ Not really a quote by Nikola Tesla Scientist and Inventor
Why are habits important? "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.“ (Aristotle) About 45% of our everyday actions are habitual
Even simple habits take time to build “Rewiring” the brain for a new habit takes 66 days on average. Depending on the complexity, it might take up to 8 months.
Four stages of learning a new skill Unconscious competence Conscious competence Conscious incompetence Unconscious incompetence
Productivity habits in organizations… • …“program” your organizational culture for growth and success • …form your team’s “memory” • …contribute directly to your SMaC recipe (Sustainable, Methodical and Consistent)
Solution: Leading by example “Just by providing a good example makes it possible for other people to see better ways to do things.” (Scott Berkun)
Tell me and I’ll forget, show me and I may remember, involve me and I’ll understand
Solution: Sharing the power to change (peer pressure) “Social facilitation” concept: some competition might be motivating
Solution: Horizontal or vertical rollout Start withpart of the team and then plug in the rest of it Split the new habit into parts and adopt them one by one • Valuable benefit: small wins
Solution: Motivation triggers To drive change, you need to: • direct the Rider – rational side • motivate the Elephant – emotional side • shape the Path – external environment + instructions (Chip and Dan Heath)
Solution: Blending new habits into existing ones Leverage positive habits to write new ones on top of them. For example: Bring work data onto people’s favorite smartphones.
Example: Granular workload management Dangers of big assignments: • poor visibility into progress • insufficient control • psychological pressure on employees (“where do I start?”) • low-productivity performers can “hide” behind them
How can you make granular tasks work? • Use a sliding scale in planning • Let the team plan Bonus benefits: • People are motivated by sense of responsibility • Small wins in action • Fighting procrastination
Example: Culture of sharing The top quality of a good team member: “He shares info” (RW Wizard survey) Extra tips: • Encourage informal “social sharing” • Leverage cloud solutions
“Successful people are simply those with successful habits.” Brian Tracy Motivational Speaker