02 August 2010

When Do You THINK?

Most of us are relentlessly connected to business today, via email, text messages, IM, cell phones. With wireless coverage almost everywhere, now including many flights, we can be away - but rarely truly disconnected.

It's fantastic to be able to be so productive - to respond to a business associate's or client's inquiry immediately. But it has become very difficult to know when and how to draw the line between work and personal time. You can't help but glance at your Blackberry or iPhone when your boss causes it to buzz at 8:30pm. Do they expect a response tonight, or can it wait until morning? Won't you seem more efficient if you answer right away?

The danger is that responding to and fending off random communications fragments focus and results in poor prioritization of energy and efforts. When do you have time to THINK? Just think? When do you make task lists, document plans, research ideas, read work published by thought leaders, bounce concepts off a team, and/or brainstorm?

This week, try carving out some thinking time. Turn off your cell phone, shut down email for a while, and turn down some meeting invitations. Block out your calendar for 2 or 3 hours and clear your mind for some productive thinking. Wrestle a tough problem to the ground. Write a detailed, thoughtful report of which you can be proud. Document a plan. Birth a creative idea.

Take a deep breath. Disconnect. Think. Be really productive.

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