你被过量的工作困扰吗?
In the information age, when almost everyone in every office is a knowledge worker, we're paid to process information. And since there's an infinite amount of information, there's an infinite amount of work. For everyone.
So your boss is probably giving you enough work every week to fill three weeks -- if you let it. If you work a certain way, it could also fill only three days.
My point is that people who feel overworked in some respects choose to be overworked. Here are five choices to make instead:
1. Force your boss to prioritize.
要老板优先化
Because processing information is not an objective task, you can do a good job or a bad job or any kind of job in between. Which is to say that you don't have to do a great job with everything. You can't, right? Because your boss is giving you too much work.
So you have some choices. First, you can try to force your boss to prioritize. Say to him or her, "If you want me to do project z perfectly, then you need to get projects w, x, and y off my plate."
Maybe your boss will think project z is so important that he or she will clear your plate. But most likely, your boss will say, "Forget it. You need to do everything." This is an open invitation to start experimenting with cutting corners.
2. If your boss won't prioritize, do it yourself.
如果老板不肯优先化,你自己来优先化
Please don't tell me you don't believe in cutting corners. It's the layman's term for prioritizing, and you probably perfected it as a way of life in college. In fact, cutting corners is what college teaches best.
Over the course of a semester, you were assigned sixteen 400-page books to read, plus you had to write papers about them. You also had to show up for classes to find out what was going to be on the tests. Of course, there was no way you could read all 6,400 pages you were assigned -- that would be impossible in the allotted time.
So you figured out what you could skip. You determined that the best way to get out of the reading was to go to the lectures, because professors lecture about what interests them, and their tests reflect their interests.
Now back to your workplace, where you have too much work to do. Here's how the losers handle it: They complain about being overworked. They keep accepting more work, and trying to do it perfectly, and complain. And their bosses keep dumping it on them and saying there's nothing they can do about the workload. Meanwhile, neither of them is prioritizing, neither of them is taking responsibility for the situation, and each is blaming the other.
If you boss insists on giving you more work than you can do, you should start cutting corners. Do everything very quickly, and ignore the idea that it needs to be done perfectly -- it can't all be done perfectly. Your boss refuses to prioritize for you, so you'll have to do everything as best as you can.
3. Get comfortable with ignoring some tasks.
心里踏实地去忽视某些任务
For some of you, even doing things less than perfectly will take too much time. In this case, you'll have to blow some stuff off. So experiment and see which things can fall through cracks without anyone noticing.
You already do this. Someone at work sends you an email demanding a response. But before you have time to reply, another recipient does so, so you just delete the original message. Try this approach with work you're not a central force on and see what happens.
4. Stop complaining before it ruins your life.
在过度的工作破坏你的生活之前,停止抱怨
I can already imagine the comments flying about this column. Some of you will say that you'd be fired for following the above advice. But what's your choice? You've already told your boss you have more work than you can get done in a day, and he or she didn't scale back. Do you want to continue to just complain about it every day? Probably not, because complaining is toxic.
Besides, do you really want to work 15 hour days to get extra work done for a company that doesn't respect its employees' time? Why should you give up your personal life because your boss can't prioritize?
Instead, take control of your life and create a situation where you stop complaining about having too much work. If you're fired for not doing all the work, you probably didn't want to work at the company anyway. And if you're not able to scale back, consider that you might over-identify with your job to the point that you're working harder than you need to because you can't imagine not being perfect.
5. Take responsibility for being overworked, then change it.
对工作过度负责,并改变它
OK, suppose you love your work and you're happy working 15-hour days. That's fine. Just don't complain about it.
What I'm saying is that if you complain about having too much work you should look in the mirror -- it's your own fault, and you can change the situation by drawing boundaries at work. Be an adult by taking responsibility for your time, and complain only when you have a solution.
Star performers don't talk about being overworked, they talk about time management. The best time managers excel at it because they're good at figuring out what they don't have to do. The best time managers have the confidence to say, "I'll still be a star even if I don't do that task."
This reminds me of Gina Trapani, who edits the Lifehacker blog. Gina and three other editors put out a publication that has more readers than just about every local newspaper in this country, and many national magazines. Surely she's a very busy person. But her productivity tips belie a Zen-like balance in which she isolates the most important things and lets other things languish if need be.
Want an example? In order for Gina to blog every day, she has to keep up with hundreds of other bloggers so she knows who to link to. These blogs come to her via direct feed. What does she do when she's falling behind and blog posts are piling up? She clears out her in-box and starts over. "If something's really important," she said at a panel I attended, "someone will email me about it."
This is great advice from someone who's succeeding in an area where most people would succumb to information overload. Clearly, the way to do good work is to know when it's time to not do it.
| 上班族专属英语经典教程! | ||
| 商务英语BEC初级春季班 | ||
| 商务英语BEC中级春季班 | ||
| 2010年9月英语口译高口春季班 | ||
| 2010年9月英语口译中口春季班 | ||
猜你喜欢内容
-
怎样提高阅读理解能力
首先,我们要对“阅读理解能力”及对四级阅读理解的具体要求作一定的了解。教学大纲要求 “较强的阅读能...
-
怎样使句子多样化
句子是由词或短语按语法规则组成,表达一个完整意思的语言单位。好的英语句子应该是结构意思正确完整,...
-
我是如何过六级的
不管四级还是六级,真题绝对重要!!!那些乱七八糟的模拟题或是其他的什么资料纯粹是浪费钱,我第一次...
-
如何充分利用好听力真题
根据听真题的不同层次,基本上,可以把听题分为以下五个阶段: 1. 初听 众所周知,听真题时的第一感觉...
-
如何进行判断和推理
在阅读中,人们首先理解的是语言的字面意义。然而,语言所表达的内容常常超过其字面意义。这就需要我们...
-
如何抓主题思想
主题思想(the Main Idea)。也称作中心思想,是作者在文章中要表达的核心内容,也是作者自始自终要说明的...
-
如何确定作者的观点或态度
一篇文章不可避免地反映了作者的观点、态度和情绪。能否正确把握作者的观点和态度也是体现阅读能力的重...
-
如何找主要事实特定细节
在文章中,作者总是要通过许多具体内容(Details)来说明、解释、证明或分析文章的主题思想。在通读全文、...
-
如何猜测词义
在阅读中,我们往往会遇到一些不认识的单词或短语,或者认识的单词在文章中有了新意义。如果这些词或短...
-
我的跨跨跨专业考研
这是本人第一次发贴。偶从hj上发掘资源供自己使用已久,今年又勉强获得读硕的机会,因此对hj上的xdjm心...





















