Are You Being Penalized for your Efficiency?
Is efficiency punishable? Are you being punished for your competence, or worse, are you a manager who scolds others for their extreme productivity?
If so, boy have I got a bone to pick with you. Being penalized for my rock star skills is quite infuriating. I don’t burn the midnight oil. I used to come in early, stay late and work weekends. I stopped that nonsense, not because I became lazy, but because I realized I was not being very efficient with my time and also because we live in a culture that promotes long hours over results and that really bothered me. The person that comes in early and stays late, is in general perceived as a “hard-worker.” Someone (a partner who is God awful with her time and who I have concluded only made partner because she started the firm!) once complained to me that ‘so and so’ never stays past 5:00 PM. She implied that one of her employees was not a valued worker because he didn’t burn the midnight oil. She didn’t critique his work, she criticized his time! Perhaps the man is just much more disciplined! We cannot assume that just because someone is in their chair for 10 hours straight that they are working away. And if they are working away, I personally am curious to know what exactly are they working on.
Being efficient means knowing how to delegate tasks to others who might have the skills to get things done faster and better than you can. Don’t take this as a bad thing. These are great leadership skills. Here’s an example. I love design and I enjoy working on my own projects. However, I’m still learning these skills, so I’m much slower; I wouldn’t pay me to do this work! I would never dream of charging our clients by the hour for my lack of skills! I also know what my hour is worth so I do my own personal designs on my free time because they are fun for me. But I would not attempt to spend 2 hours on a design task (or any task!) that could take someone with more skills 15 minutes to complete.
Being a great leader also means abandoning tasks that are no longer working. Being an awesome manager includes knowing how to prioritize and knowing how to rank those priorities (deciding between two good things). Being an efficient professional means focusing on results, not hours.
So I started paying attention. I noticed that the most successful people are also the most efficient with their time. They are professionals who get paid for the value they create through their knowledge. I worked with an exemplary executive–I’ve worked with many and trust me, they are not all created equal. In fact, I often wonder how some of them are still in business and then I remember that they inherited their position! But back to my story. This flawless model of a man always had his inbox empty, 2–3 short meetings per day–at the most, exercised daily during lunch and spent quality time with his family on the weekends. He is a top venture capitalist and clearly excellent at what he does, and no, he did not inherit shit.
In my line of business, we get paid on results, although most service firms promote billable hours. I find that this unreformed billing system can often create a conflict of interest between businesses and their clients. Professionals have an incentive to be less efficient with their time. As a client, I would worry about this! So what we have done, instead is created–no, adopted (this is not original) a system that rewards us for our efficiency. We set clear goals and metrics with our clients. We then trust our team to do great, quality work.
If you currently get paid by the hour and are efficient with your time, if you find that you are the type of superstar that grabs daunting tasks by the horns and completes them accurately and in record-time, then you may want to have a discussion with your manager. If she’s a good manager she will appreciate your awesomeness. If she’s not, you can always leave and go with a company that values your extreme productivity!
But, let’s say your desired goal is to become efficient, you’re not quite there yet, but you really, really want to be known for your great time-management skills. Start now; start right where you are. Improve your efficiency skills, make it a fun game (it really is!) and track your progress. After a few months you can then ask to meet with your manager about possibly increasing your hourly rate, promoting you to a higher position, allowed to leave early or come in late, or maybe make it a four-day workweek, instead. But you have to have solid evidence, examples and references you can use to support your fight. So keep a journal and track your progress.
I would also like to take this opportunity to remind you of the different ways you can help change this bias. Don’t be the guy that says, “hey, look who’s here, the girl with the banker’s hours” or don’t be the catty girl that says, “she has time to look the way she does because she has no freaking kids, and she gets here at 9:30 am!” Focus on the final product, not on the hours worked. Judge people by their work, not on the time spent. And if you’re a good manager, ask your clock-punching employees how they are prioritizing their work. This style of billing may have been appropriate in the industrial age and it may still work in some standardized work–although I’m having difficulty coming up with a good example–but it no longer works for professionals and for those of us who get paid for our knowledge. So help reform this antiquated system by implementing more productive ways to get work done. This is a win-win for everyone: your clients, your employees, their families and for you, as a leader.
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