How to be a Productivity Ninja - Graham Allcott - E-Book

How to be a Productivity Ninja E-Book

Graham Allcott

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Beschreibung

'All the tips and techniques you need to stay calm, get through your tasks, make the most of your time and stop procrastinating. It's fun, easy to follow and practical - and may just be the kick up the bottom you need!' Closer World-leading productivity expert Graham Allcott's business bible is given a complete update. Do you waste too much time on your phone? Scroll through Twitter or Instagram when you should be getting down to your real tasks? Is your attention easily distracted? We've got the solution: The Way of the Productivity Ninja. In the age of information overload, traditional time management techniques simply don't cut it anymore. Using techniques including Ruthlessness, Mindfulness, Zen-like Calm and Stealth & Camouflage, this fully revised new edition of How to be a Productivity Ninja offers a fun and accessible guide to working smarter, getting more done and learning to love what you do again.

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Seitenzahl: 443

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019

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For Chaz, my Ninja partner-in-crime

CONTENTS

TITLE PAGEDEDICATIONAUTHOR’S NOTEPREFACE1.THE WAYOF THEPRODUCTIVITY NINJA2.WHYWE GET STRESSED3.ATTENTIONMANAGEMENT4.NINJAEMAIL5.NINJA PRODUCTIVITY:THECORDPRODUCTIVITY MODEL6.THECAPTUREANDCOLLECTHABIT7.THEORGANIZEHABIT8.THEREVIEWHABIT9.THEDOHABIT10.NINJAPROJECT AND MEETINGMANAGEMENT11.STOP MESSING ABOUTON YOUR PHONE12.MOMENTUMAPPENDIXABOUT THE AUTHOR COPYRIGHT

AUTHOR’S NOTE

This is a revised and rewritten edition, released to mark five years since the book’s original release with Icon Books in 2014. I think with these kinds of books, you have a choice as the author between being ‘abstract but timeless’ on the one hand, or ‘specific and practical’ on the other. The consequence of choosing the practical option is that it starts to go out of date almost as soon as it’s written. Hence, this revised edition brings it more up to date. I’m confident that this is a book for the 2020s. In these last five years, some things have indeed changed a lot – our addiction to our phones, for example, has led to a whole new chapter and a whole new way to think about modes of attention – and some things are remarkably still as true as they were in 2014, such as our need to make space for what matters. Whether you’ve never read How to be a Productivity Ninja before, or you’re returning to this revised edition to give it all another go, I know you’ll get loads of value here. The key is to take action. And don’t skip the exercises. As always, my email address is in the back if you have questions. Enjoy!

DEAR HUMAN BEING …

Do you want to do everything and change the world, yet also find yourself feeling quite lazy from time to time? Yes, me too. We humans are hunting animals that have evolved to such an extent that we no longer need to hunt, so we perhaps have a right and an excuse to be lazy. Yet that doesn’t stop us being ambitious and driven either.

I would define productivity as the ability to achieve what you want to achieve, for the least effort. Certainly I don’t want to burn myself out and I definitely like still having time for relationships, friendships, passions, hobbies, rest and whatever else floats my boat.

Just over a decade ago, while juggling a hundred and one things – some paid, some voluntary; some work-related, some not – I developed a new obsession in my quest to change the world: productivity. Creating the most change or impact – whatever that means for you – for the least effort is what this book is all about.

I want to thank you for buying this book. By choosing to read How to be a Productivity Ninja you’ve already shown a desire to make things happen, make an impact and find easier and better ways to do what you do. Since I founded Think Productive in 2009, we’ve been working with some of the world’s biggest companies, government organizations and charities to help them eliminate the information stress that seems so endemic in the modern workplace.

My approach to productivity is 100% human. Too often, we label those who achieve great things as being somehow separate from us mere mortals. The great figures of our history all undoubtedly had unique talents, charisma and vision. However, none of them were really any different from you or me in a whole host of ways: even the bravest get scared, even the strongest leaders occasionally lack direction and even the greatest human beings suffer from bouts of self-doubt or have other hidden character flaws. And yet there’s a common theme running through so many time management books and business books, through the wider personal growth industry and indeed through much of our society: it’s the cult of celebrity, the cult of personality.

As we go on to explore the characteristics of the Productivity Ninja in this book, we’ll look at how a Ninja creates a mindset of Zen-like Calm, Ruthlessness, Weapon-savviness, Stealth and Camouflage, Unorthodoxy, Agility, Mindfulness and Preparedness. But I hope one of the loudest messages is that in order to be a Productivity Ninja, you don’t have to magically become a superhero.

Too many people buy these kinds of books and never even make time to read them. Too many others just indulge in the cult of personality and get lost in the dream of perfection that is presented by the guru figure. They spend time fantasizing about being the person writing the book and buying into the often impossible dreams the guru presents, rather than planning and implementing changes for their own lives.

So just to be ultra-clear, there is no perfect guru specimen to worship here. For all my moments of productive genius there are moments of self-doubt, me screwing it up, procrastinating or doing things less than efficiently. The difference is that now I recognize these bad habits and work at changing them.

Part of what I hope makes my experiences and insights all the more valuable to you is precisely the fact that I don’t pretend not to know what failure looks like. Hopefully you’ll see that as an assurance of authenticity and an opportunity to learn from some of my mistakes – and not as a reason to ditch this book and go looking for some guru escapism instead. And of course I really hope you’re motivated by the idea of boosting your productivity and discovering the way of the Productivity Ninja. This book is in many ways a manual for your work and life. It’s also a celebration of achievement. And it’s a celebration of the fact that behind every extraordinary achievement lies an ordinary human being, just like you.

1. THE WAY OF THE PRODUCTIVITY NINJA

‘Being busy does not always mean real work. The object of all work is production or accomplishment and to either of these ends there must be forethought, system, planning, intelligence and honest purpose, as well as perspiration. Seeming to do is not doing.’

– Thomas Edison

Ever thought you should get better at managing your time? Have you spent ages wondering how some people seem to be able to get so much more done than you, or how you can learn to cope with the endlessly growing volume of emails and other things that need to be done? Do you wonder why there just never seem to be enough hours in the day?

It’s often thought that good ‘time management’ is the key to productivity, success and happiness. There are hundreds of books on time management, mostly written by ‘guru’ types who seem to have it all so perfectly and succinctly summarized: prioritize the right things, start the day with a list of what you need to do and then systematically tick them off, from the most important at the start of the day through to the least important at the end. File things away, make short-term, medium-term and long-term goals, organize the clutter around you and manage complex projects with long but perfectly written project plans. It all sounds so easy and so perfect, doesn’t it?

Well, let’s get one thing clear straight away. I am not writing this book because I’m some kind of time management guru. I’m not one of those naturally organized people. In fact, my natural style of work is quite the opposite: flaky, ideas-based, more comfortable at the strategic level than the ‘doing’ level, allergic to detail, instinctive, crazy-making and ridiculously unrealistic about what’s achievable in any given time period. All of these characteristics are, in their own way, among what you could call my strengths, and have made me successful in things I’ve done. They’re part of who I am. I play to these strengths and also recognize them as the crippling weaknesses that they are. Changing my own bad habits and developing strong, positive new ones gave me the ability to help others do the same. But in grappling with my own unproductive demons and working hard to become more productive and gain more control in my work and in my life, I’ve come to an important conclusion: time management is dead.

TIME MANAGEMENT IS DEAD

Somewhere along the line, the game changed. We now live in an age of constant connection and information overload. We are bombarded with new information inputs – and from several different sources at the same time – in a way that would have been staggering to comprehend even ten years ago. In the old time management books, dealing with new inputs was simple enough: they came in the form of paper letters, delivered to the office first thing every morning and perhaps again first thing in the afternoon if you were really popular. Dealing with and reacting to the new was a self-contained, limited activity that would take no more than an hour a day. According to the old time management principles, this left you free for the rest of the day to get on with the ‘real work’, which could be planned out early in the day via a simple daily to-do list and ‘ABC’ priority system.

Today, such systems seem archaic: it’s a big challenge to create the time and attention needed to get anywhere near our real work because we’re buried under 24–7 email, social media, voicemails, instant messenger, texts, intranets, conference calls, collaboration tools and the burden of staying connected. Ever got to 5pm and found you’re still staring at a full to-do list, wondering where the day went? Me too.

Quite apart from the ever-increasing volume of information in our work, there are so many other reasons why time management theories of old no longer cut it. Work is more complex now than it ever has been, and yet our roles are less defined and the work itself more free-flowing: the emphasis is less on rigid management hierarchies and more on each member of the team taking personal responsibility – the pace of communication has increased dramatically and we’re expected to reply or at least be ‘in the loop’ constantly. Not only that, but working hours are becoming longer and more flexible, catering to the needs of working parents as well as colleagues across continents. All of this means you have to come to terms with one important thing: you will never get everything finished.

YOU WILL NEVER GET EVERYTHING FINISHED

Ask yourself this: if you’ve ever made a to-do list with priorities on it (for example, ‘A’, ‘B’ and ‘C’ priorities), did you manage to get to the ‘C’ listed items before more ‘A’-grade opportunities or potential disasters presented themselves? Of course you didn’t. And if you did get to those ‘C’ listed items, chances are you got to them because they suddenly started to rise up the ranks, becoming the more urgent ‘A’ and ‘B’ items because they were previously left unattended.

Think back to a moment in your working life when there was nothing more to possibly do that day. It’s probably very hard to think of one in recent times; there’s always a bit more business development, a bit of clearing the decks, a bit of catching up on reading or housekeeping. You’re probably casting your mind back to one of your first jobs, where perhaps you worked in a bar and at the end of a long shift you could all mop down the floors, close down the bar and sit down with a beer, rejoicing in a good night’s work and the satisfaction of completion. Completion is a great feeling, isn’t it? The satisfaction that you’ve achieved something, and that it’s completely done and gone, is psychologically thrilling.

The other reason completion is satisfying is that it naturally gives way to clear space. Psychologically, clear space helps provide perspective, a brief recovery from the frenetic pace of life and time to re-evaluate our priorities.

The trouble is, the modern work paradigm gives us so little sense of completion or clear space that it feels like we’re constantly straining to see the light at the end of a long, long tunnel. And when the light at the end of the tunnel finally approaches, you realize it’s just some nasty bloke with a torch bringing you more work to do.

LONG LIVE ATTENTION MANAGEMENT

Don’t worry, though – there’s a new game now, with completely new rules. Put simply, skilful attention management is the new key to productivity, and how well you protect and use your attention determines your success. There are some mortal enemies standing in your way, though: stress, procrastination, interruptions, distractions, low-value commitments, annoying work practices – and you need to learn to overcome these obstacles to focus on what really matters. It’s time to think like a Ninja.

THE WAY OF THE PRODUCTIVITY NINJA

‘We must be willing to get rid of the life we’ve planned so as to have the life that is waiting for us.’

– Joseph Campbell

This book is about developing a Ninja mindset and then applying it to every area of your working life – and even beyond. It is about how we turn information from new inputs or vague distractions into completed and celebrated outcomes. It is about our relationship with information at work, and how we are ultimately in control and how we do ultimately have enough hours in the day to get the important stuff done. (You’ll notice I didn’t just say get ‘everything’ done.)

In this chapter, I’ll introduce you to the main behaviours – the way of the Ninja – that will boost your productivity, reduce your stress levels and change the way you think about your work. Necessarily, the way of the Productivity Ninja is about how we think about our work, not how we ‘do’ our work. Rather than being focused on specific skills, talents or tools, it is an approach to work, from which systems and frameworks can then be easily developed. I will show you how to develop those in the coming chapters, but first let’s talk about the underlying principles and mindset. In the later chapters, we will apply this mindset to your everyday situations at work: your email, to-do list, projects and meetings.

DECISION-MAKING IS OUR WORK

By 9.15am on an average day in the information age, we’ve received more information inputs than most old-school time management theorists would have received in a week! Our work has changed so much that, for most of us, how we deal with new opportunities and new threats is what makes the difference. We no longer think about our work: thinking is our work. Successful careers happen for those who make the best decisions. If you want to climb the ladder in your organization, realize that your abilities to react and be responsible are what you’ll be judged on. The higher you go within an organization or career, the truer this is. The art of decision-making, our ability to make space for the ‘quality thinking time’ we need, and how we act on our gut instincts (especially when such time for thinking isn’t available) define us at work.

RESPONSIBLE VS RESPONSE-ABLE

How quickly do you react to change? And I don’t mean just realizing that things are changing, but actually digesting, understanding and responding with an appropriate action? It’s long been thought that the more people get paid or achieve, the more responsible they are. If you’re climbing a corporate ladder, you take on more responsibility the higher you go.

But simply being ‘responsible’ these days isn’t enough. It’s become popular for footballers or managers to come out with statements like ‘I hold my hands up and say I’m responsible for my part in our embarrassing defeat’. While admitting responsibility is better than not doing so, honour in defeat still ultimately equals defeat. And in the information age, things move quickly. As a society we value those who are comfortable with positions of responsibility, but we rarely explore responsibility as something proactive and dynamic. ‘I don’t want the responsibility’, we say, as if it’s a term full only of burdens and without corresponding joys. Yet being in a position of responsibility usually also means influence. The nature of responsibility is that it should also bring reward – the ability to make an impact, create wealth and success for your organization, for society, for your family or for you. By viewing responsibility as inherently troublesome, we view it as the price to be paid for this success. We see it as a trade-off. It shouldn’t be this way.

To be response-able, therefore, means you have the ability to define in the moment the actions you need to take to overcome and enjoy any new challenge. This book will give you the tools to work on your response-ability and be more response-able in three important ways:

Response-able now

We often choose not to respond with definite actions. We procrastinate and we seek to delay things if we’re feeling lazy, tired, unsure or worried about the results. The way of the Ninja will help to challenge your thinking and develop new habits so that you’re proactively looking for ways to respond, rather than for ways to avoid and defer.

Response-able later

You don’t want to worry about what could go wrong on all the other projects that you’re not working on right now. We’ll set up systems so that you always know what your next move will be on any given project and so that you know that these systems will keep things under control for you.

Response-able if the crap hits the fan

When you have to drop everything to deal with a crisis, it’s much easier if you have a sure-fire way of knowing or remembering what you’ve dropped. The systems and techniques in this book will make it easier to respond when such moments come along, ensuring full focus on the job at hand.

THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PRODUCTIVITY NINJA

‘Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.’

– Leonardo da Vinci

What follows are the key characteristics that make up ‘the way of the Productivity Ninja’. As we look at each of these in turn, you may begin to picture some of the ways these approaches can influence how you currently operate. As we go through the later chapters, I’ll show you the specific tools and techniques to achieve Ninja-level productivity.

ZEN-LIKE CALM

ZEN-LIKE CALM

Great decision-making comes from the ability to create the time and space to think rationally and intelligently about the issue at hand. Decisions made during periods of panic are likely to be the ones we want to forget about. The Ninja realizes this, remains calm in the face of adversity, and equally calm under the pressure of information overload. You might not believe this, but it is entirely possible to have a hundred and one things to do and yet still remain absolutely calm. How do we beat stress and remain calm? I’ll answer this question more fully as we look at the practical skills needed for Ninja-mastery of email, tasks, projects and meetings, but here are a few basic principles:

USE YOUR HEAD, DON’T USE YOUR HEAD!

‘The mind is for having ideas, not for holding them.’

– David Allen

Be sure that you’re not forgetting important items by keeping all of your support information in a system, not in your head. Be sure that you’re not distracted and stressed by what you could be forgetting – by using a ‘second brain’ instead of your own head as the place where information and reminders live. This is certainly easier said than done, but once mastered, really works. I will introduce you to your very own ‘second brain’ and Ninja productivity habits later in this book.

TRUST YOUR SYSTEMS

You need to have trust that whatever systems you use will work. There is a danger that additional stress will be created by the uncertainty of not knowing whether your systems will help you deliver. Moving to a new computer or new software brings with it a few days of uncertainty, but many people live for years without ever really asking themselves if their systems work to the point that they really trust them to. Sticking to what you trust and trusting what you stick to are crucial. The way to foster this trust and promote the Zen-like calm you need is to regularly consider not just your work, but the process of your work too. Briefly but regularly reviewing how you work will help you to promote clearer thinking in the work itself. The more you think, the easier your work becomes.

LOWER YOUR EXPECTATIONS. SERIOUSLY.

Realize that you’ll never get everything done. That’s not the game any more. Be safe in the knowledge that you’re in control, selecting the right things to do, and that you’re doing as much as one human being possibly can, and you will find a way through it.

KEEP YOUR BODY IN GOOD PHYSICAL CONDITION

‘A healthy body means a healthy mind.’

– Anonymous

Keeping fit and healthy will not only reduce stress in its own right, but will also give your brain the focus and energy it needs to produce clearer thinking and decision-making that will enable you to stay on top of your work, too. And it means you’ll look hot. It’s a win-win-win!

BE PREPARED & ORGANIZED, READY FOR WHEN TIMES GET ROUGH

‘A tidy desk is a tidy mind.’

– Anonymous

Some of us look at being organized as being a bit too anal or obsessive. ‘I don’t have the time to be organized’ is a common objection I hear when coaching clients towards Productivity Ninja status. But the truth is that when we experience periods of ‘flow’ – the times in our day or week when we’re most productive – the last thing we want is to be thrown off track by being unable to find some crucial piece of information or by not having the tools we need readily available. We’re not aiming for perfection here, but training yourself to operate from a default position of organization means you’re more likely to experience regular periods of super-productive flow.

RUTHLESSNESS

RUTHLESSNESS

It’s not a paradox to follow Zen-like calm with ruthlessness. We have already talked about the need to make clear-headed decisions, objectively and calmly. As well as needing to make more and better decisions, we need to be choosier, too: processing information to sort the wheat from the chaff, see the timber from the trees and sort the big opportunities from the even bigger ones. Ruthlessness isn’t just about how we process information, though; it’s also about our ability to protect our time and attention, focusing only on the things that add the greatest impact, even at the expense of other things that are ‘worth doing’.

SAYING ‘NO’ TO OURSELVES

With so much information flying about, being choosy is the only way. It goes against the Western, Protestant work ethic that we’re so familiar with to decide not to do things, but that’s exactly what we must do. A lot. Being much choosier about what we say ‘Yes’ to is an important skill – and learning to say ‘No’ to ourselves means not biting off more than we can chew. If you do get into situations where you’ve taken on too much (and I do this regularly, by the way!), you need to realize that renegotiating your commitments to yourself and others is better than burning yourself out trying to meet them all.

SAYING ‘NO’ TO OTHERS

Picture this: you’re in a meeting that you thought you were attending purely to contribute to, and the meeting discussion begins to come around to some decisions and commitments about actions people could take at the end of the meeting. There’s a particular set of actions that you’re renowned for being good at, and just as it’s mentioned, several pairs of eyes turn and focus on you. It’s easy in this situation to over-commit. It’s harder to rein the conversation back from what you could deliver and move on to what you’re able to deliver. It’s harder still, when you know how valuable your contribution could be, to say ‘No’ to all of it, without feeling like you’re letting the side down or losing favour with someone who matters. Saying ‘No’ to others is tricky. It requires steely resolve, a ruthless streak and some great tactics so that you come out smelling of roses. We’ll look at this in more detail later, but make it your mission to perfect the art of saying ‘No’ to yourself and to others. It goes a long way.

INTERRUPTIONS

Our attention – particularly that proactive attention when we’re most alert, in flow and on top of our game – is arguably our most precious resource. It needs to be nurtured and valued. At the same time, there are a million interruptions out there: emails, phone calls, thoughts, stress, colleagues, social media, the next big crisis, the next big thing. All of them need to be stopped dead in their quest to distract and derail you. We deal with this in more detail in Chapter 3, but needless to say, we need to use our Ninja Ruthlessness to thwart a whole lot of temptation too. We often like to be distracted because it’s the perfect excuse for procrastination and thinking less, and Instagram or Twitter win over the report we’re supposed to be finishing simply because it’s easier to be scrolling through those places, having conversations, than it is to get into the difficult thinking we’re supposed to be engaged in. Learning to deal with such interruptions is as much about our self‑discipline as it is about our ability to say ‘No’ to the interruptions of others.

80–20 AND THE POWER OF IMPACT THINKING

‘Begin with the end in mind.’

– Stephen Covey

Being ruthless also means being selective about how we achieve our goals. Using the 80–20 rule, we can start to recognize that not all of what we do creates an equal amount of impact. Twenty per cent of what we do accounts for 80% of the impact. Often, there’s a temptation to aim for perfection. In some areas of our work, this perfection is healthy and even necessary, but in other cases it can be avoided and the impact on the final result is hardly even noticed. So we need to be ruthless in our planning. What are we trying to achieve? Has someone else solved this problem before? Could we beg, borrow or steal a solution? What’s the quickest way we can get this item off our plate and move on? These questions lead us towards thinking about innovation and a contempt for the orthodox (which we’ll come to very shortly!), but with a steely focus only on the end and not on the means, we’ll give ourselves a better chance of saving some time, considerably reducing the energy expended and reducing the final result only by a fraction.

WEAPON-SAVVY

WEAPON-SAVVY

The Ninja is skilful on their own, but knows that using the right tools makes them even more effective.

CHOOSE YOUR WEAPON, KNOW YOUR TOOLS

There are a range of tools out there to help keep us on top of our game. There are two broad types of tools that the Productivity Ninja needs to have in their armoury: thinking tools and organizing tools.

Choosing what to use and when, and being aware of the capabilities of each are key to success. Tools need to give us confidence and ensure that through their productive use, we’re rarely interrupted by our own ineptitude.

THINKING TOOLS

As our decisions get more complex, our need for tools to assist our thinking becomes more apparent. Strategic planning processes or line management feedback situations are often where we first encounter such tools, but their value is still underestimated. Certain tools and their explicit use can also give clients, line managers and other stakeholders additional confidence in your processes and can stimulate your thinking. For example, SWOT analysis (looking at strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) is a common business thinking tool that provides a simple structure for thinking about the present and future in a way that people can easily understand. There is a broad range of such thinking tools and frameworks that have been created to help make our lives easier and our decision-making better.

ORGANIZING TOOLS

From Microsoft Outlook and iPhone apps to the humble stapler, there are so many ways to be organized. The trick is to get to a very good level of organization rather than an excellent or mediocre level; this ensures that the time spent on getting organized receives the optimum payoff in increased productivity, rather than becoming a drain on our time and an unwelcome and unnecessary distraction.

DON’T GET SEDUCED BY ‘PRODUCTIVITY PORN’

‘Joining a Facebook group about productivity is like buying a chair about jogging.’

– Merlin Mann

Tools are there to help us get things done, but our obsession with them can occasionally become a distraction. The internet is full of productivity advice these days, but while we do need to keep up with technology and innovation and even occasionally feed our motivation with an inspirational quote, we also need to be hyper-conscious that this is in itself ‘dead time’, away from the completion of our priority tasks and projects. I worry when I hear someone talk about their productivity purely and exclusively in the context of which new app they’ve just downloaded. These tools assist our thinking and organizing: they don’t replace the need for it. Worse still, it’s not uncommon for people to retype all their projects and actions from one piece of software to another under the oft-mistaken premise that they’re increasing their productivity by 5% by doing this. No, that’s just a day of procrastination.

MODELLING DECISION-MAKING

At the heart of the way of the Productivity Ninja is improving our ability to make decisions. By challenging ourselves to continually improve and innovate, the quality, quantity and speed of our decisions will increase. Remember that informed and clear decision-making is our aim. Thinking tools help boost our mental agility, but so does the right information.

It’s often said that there are only eight stories in the world. Any challenge you’re undertaking probably has a precedent, so getting out there and finding someone who is familiar with the territory of your decision-making can help provide shortcuts to decisions that you thought would take you forever to master. Asking others for advice and investigating how others have tackled similar questions is a great way to come to more informed conclusions on tight timescales. Be equally free to share what you have learned with others and you’ll find you are rewarded tenfold with the information and advice you get back. Learn from those willing to share, share with those willing to learn. I think we’re moving towards a new age of collaboration, as our connectedness opens up new technologies that make this possible – and as I write this, I truly believe we’re still hanging around on the starting blocks.

LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook are fantastic tools for throwing out questions or issues to a group of trusted friends and colleagues: it’s so valuable getting a second, third, fourth and fifth opinion on something. It’s amazing how much time and mental energy you’ll save. But equally, don’t be afraid to think independently and draw your own conclusions when your instinct tells you to.

STEALTH & CAMOUFLAGE

STEALTH & CAMOUFLAGE

We talked earlier about protecting your attention spans and keeping focused. It’s hard to do. This is where the Ninja needs to employ a bit of old-fashioned stealth and camouflage.

IF YOU’RE IN THE LIMELIGHT, YOU MIGHT GET CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE

One of the worst things you can do is always make yourself available. It’s an invitation to some of your biggest enemies: distraction and interruption. Keep out of the limelight until you’ve got something you need others to hear. Avoid too much of the social chit chat and time-wasting that goes on in so many offices. Be a little bit elusive, a bit mysterious and even, if you have to, aloof. Protect your attention to ensure it’s spent on what you decide to spend it on, not what others hijack it for. Here are a few examples:

Spend as much time as you can away from your desk – work from home, in cafés, in meeting rooms, and outside. Even if you work in an open plan office where this feels impossible, you can still try to negotiate some ‘thinking time’ away from your desk with your line manager. And of course you can use the more ruthless and stealth-like approach of just booking vague-sounding appointments in your calendar so that people just assume, ‘Oh, looks like they’re out of the office …’

Get a gatekeeper who can help you say ‘No’ to appointments or meetings just not worth your while. (If you can get someone else to say ‘No’, it’s often easier for you, and nicer for the person you’re turning down!)

Screen your calls and don’t answer your phone unless you decide the call is likely to be more important than what you’re currently working on.

Book time in your calendar for creative thinking, reviewing, forward planning and other important activities. Have a personal code word for this if you work in an office where other people can book your calendar and are unlikely to respect your autonomy if they see ‘personal thinking time’ or ‘reading’ as a calendar entry. Use ‘private’ or ‘meeting outside of the office’ instead.

Set clear boundaries around things like email, Skype and Instant Messenger tools. Get into the habit of being very conscious of when each of these is to be turned on and off. The default setting in almost every organization I’ve ever worked in is that Outlook (or another email client) is turned on 100% of the time. This same intrusion is true for many other tools. It’s time to wriggle away from the pressures of connectivity and ‘go dark’.

GOING DARK

As well as protecting our attention from others, we must recognize the need to protect our attention from ourselves. We can be our very own worst enemy. There’s a phrase in software development called ‘Going Dark’ which refers to the time when a developer is ‘in the zone’ with their programming and has subsequently stopped answering emails or responding to other communications. They can be extremely difficult to find. Those that manage software developers get frustrated by this, but also know that there’s probably some amazing productivity happening … somewhere.

If your attention and focus is likely to be impeded by unlimited access to the internet and you’re likely to be tempted by its millions of distraction possibilities (and who isn’t?!), disconnect once in a while. Yes, a productivity book is telling you to turn off the internet! If I turn off my Wi-Fi connection for two hours, I know there will be no new email arriving during that time, and that it will be annoying enough having to fiddle around with turning the connection back on to keep me from doing so. If you can’t turn off the internet at source, you can use the ‘Work Offline’ feature in Microsoft Outlook, add blockers to Google Chrome, turn your phone onto ‘airplane mode’ or better still use an app to lock yourself out of the most tempting apps (more of which in Chapter 11).

STEALTH DELEGATION

Finding other people to do your work for you is a great way to get more done. The problem is that the world is pretty short of people who actually want to do your work for you! Hence, a bit of stealth delegation is in order. This is unorthodox for a number of reasons, but consider first that you are unlikely to be able to claim credit for your actions and also that things may turn out differently to how you had imagined. If you’re prepared to tolerate that, it’s a great tactic. Better still, work out from your project list which of your projects you could afford to have others work on in different ways, or that you care least about. These are the ones to consider stealth delegating. Here are three common forms of stealth delegation. As a Ninja, you might well discover your own techniques, too.

1. Piggy backing: advertising your offer through someone else’s mail-out, launching your new product at someone else’s event or ‘borrowing’ their contact list to launch something jointly. If momentum exists elsewhere in the world, jump on board.

2. Cultivating ‘partners-in-crime’: looking for the ‘win-win’ opportunities to work with equally savvy, equally useful and equally inspiring people.

3. Short-cutting: find people who’ve done the research, got a recommendation, learned the hard way and are eager to give their advice so that you don’t make the same mistakes. A five-minute phone call to get a personal recommendation is much easier than an hour Googling the best solution. Find people whose opinions you trust – and trust them!

UNORTHODOXY

UNORTHODOXY

What’s important is the end result. It doesn’t matter if you use the conventional route to get there or find an easier path. Just because a seasoned professional tells you something needs to take sixteen hours, doesn’t make it true. Be willing to question everything. It’s important to be on constant lookout for every opportunity to take advantage of progress and innovation and do things more easily because the chances are, a lot of the people around you stopped doing that long ago. They just do things the old way and they’re happy not to change it too much. We must avoid getting stuck in a rut and doing things less efficiently than we could, at all costs.

DON’T BE AFRAID TO STAND OUT WHEN THE TIME IS RIGHT

Doing things differently is risky, even when we’ve got a good hunch that we’ve got a better way of doing things. Managers generally prefer the status quo as it gives them an easy life, so doing the thing that challenges the status quo can often tread a fine line between glory and failure. But this isn’t about chasing glory (although we’ll reluctantly and graciously accept it when it comes along); it’s about doing things in a better way and the satisfaction that comes from pushing boundaries to improve the process and increase productivity.

PUSHING BOUNDARIES IS EASIER WHEN YOU’RE NOT REALLY PUSHING BOUNDARIES

This is one of the Ninja secrets. The exact problem you face at work today is a problem that someone in another industry faced yesterday and that someone else will face tomorrow. So just as we can model decision-making, we can also model innovation from elsewhere. Injecting some fresh thinking into a situation and trying to see the problem through the lens of someone in a completely different area of work can be a useful technique. If, for example, you’re looking to communicate more creatively, why not ask yourself, ‘How would an advertising agency do this?’ or, ‘How would Nelson Mandela tackle this?’, or if you need more method in among the madness, ask how a surgeon or engineer would approach the task. And, if you know people who do those kinds of jobs, call them up and ask for their perspective. You’ll be surprised how effective this kind of modelling can be. Genuinely pushing boundaries is exciting, but can be a lot more time-consuming and takes a lot more effort than simple modelling. Innovation in one industry or job role can be the status quo somewhere else and vice versa.

MODELLING & PARTNERS-IN-CRIME

An obsession with unorthodoxy and innovation also means ditching some of the foolish creations of the ego: never be afraid or embarrassed or too proud to ask for advice, even if that means needing to show weakness. And never resist an opportunity to learn something new from a trusted source. Modelling the success of others is crucial. Mentoring is a great way to do this: take advice from those who have travelled the road you’re setting out on, avoid making the mistakes they themselves made, and find the shortcut to success. Along with mentors, think about your ‘partners-in-crime’. Who are the people travelling a similar road at the same time as you? Chances are, they all have mentors too and are learning equally important things. Never be afraid to share your learning with others as you’ll be amazed at the priceless lessons you get in return. Sometimes we resist such collaborative approaches because we believe, like some kind of superhero, that there is some added virtue in achieving things on our own or in being competitive. Remember, the only thing that matters is whether you get there; no one cares how.

BREAK RULES AND DISRESPECT BUREAUCRACY

While certain rules are worth upholding – and there are certain rules that would get you fired if you broke them – a Productivity Ninja approaches work with the mindset to focus on the end result first and work back from there. Questioning of rules, especially in relation to bureaucracy, is a great skill. Remember that if the risk of serious repercussions is limited, it’s usually easier to apologize than to ask permission. There are times when we just need to show some leadership and crack on. Don’t be afraid to rip up the rulebook, especially if you can trash some tired old bureaucracy along the way.

AGILITY

AGILITY

A Ninja needs to be light on their feet, able to respond with deftness to new opportunities or threats. Anything that requires a lot of shifting of thinking, quick reactions and decisions will of course need our proactive attention. And as we know, this is a finite resource. Our ability to react quickly and appropriately to new challenges really comes down to two things:

1. Our own mental ‘reserves’ or capacity to spend more of our days in proactive attention mode without getting tired. People do this temporarily through the use of caffeine or other stimulants, which is fine to an extent and in the short term, but we need to think more sustainably than that.

2. Our ability to bring in other resources to aid this process – other people, more time and better technology.

KEEPING LIGHT ON OUR FEET

It’s important to use the ‘fallow periods’ when things are less crazy to think ahead, so that when the going gets tough, we’ve got great ‘response-ability’. There are some important steps we can take on a day-to-day basis to do this:

Keep organized: if we need to react, we need to be ready.

Under-commit, don’t over-commit your diary: it’s always very tempting to bite off more than we can chew and it’s even easier to find your day committed to other people’s meetings. At the start of the week or month, keep space and time in your calendar, ready and able to be filled by stuff you don’t know exists yet.

Grow into, don’t grow out of: with any organizing system you use, think one step ahead and develop systems far in advance of the capacity you need. For example, if you’re going to have an upsurge in business and new clients coming on board, managing client contact information on a scruffy Excel spreadsheet that’s bursting at the seams will slow you down at the crucial point. Investing the time before you need to into developing a super-hot database will seem unproductive at the time, but is actually the smarter move. In London, the Victorians built the sewers and Tube lines to have ten times the required capacity. People complain about the Tube system now, forgetting how ahead of its time it really was and how wise they were to think so far ahead in terms of the additional capacity requirements. All I can say is, thank goodness they did that for the sewers!

SPOTTING AN OPPORTUNITY OR THREAT, WHEREVER IT ARRIVES FROM

‘Opportunity is missed by most people, because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.’

– Thomas A. Edison

In order to react and respond well, we need strategic vision. We need to spot opportunity even when it knocks very softly at the door and see threats coming while they’re still in the distance. Again, this takes some preparation and research and there are some useful shortcuts to use. Networking, for example, is a great way to keep your ear to the ground. Different people will have a different policy on networking, but broadly I set out to tick off these criteria, in this order:

1. Am I likely to meet interesting and useful people?

2. Is this person remarkable? Do they have something to say, or a good track record, or enthusiasm? (If not, move on – there’s nothing to see here!)

3. Can this person tell me something that informs my work and broadens my strategic sense?

4. Can we work together on something?

5. Is there an obvious win-win here that takes half the effort of the conversation itself?

Only when I get to number five do I commit. Often we get carried away with possibility, but delivery is another matter, so only pursue those connections that in conversation appear to be the ‘no-brainers’.

MINDFULNESS

MINDFULNESS

MANAGING OUR MINDS

Our minds are our most important tool. Being emotionally intelligent and self-aware are important for so many reasons, not least because they equip you to take action. For instance, a lot of the things that make up the Ninja mindset, such as remaining calm, being ruthless and pushing the boundaries by being unorthodox, aren’t easy. In fact, in many ways they go against our evolutionary design.

LISTENING TO THE ‘LIZARD BRAIN’ & OUR OWN RESISTANCE

Our brains have evolved a lot since we were monkeys, but one thing has hardly changed: the lizard brain. A term popularized by Seth Godin in his brilliant book Linchpin, this part of our brain still remembers what it was like to need to survive, to blend in, to not make a fuss. In fact, the worst thing for the lizard brain to think would be that whatever we’re doing makes us stand out. Standing out from the crowd in evolutionary terms meant you’d get picked off by a predator, and this is exactly how the lizard brain still thinks!

Steven Pressfield’s book The War of Art is a revealing and personal account of his battles as a writer against what he calls ‘the resistance’. The resistance is a mindset, usually developed by the lizard brain, characterized by stress, anxiety, fear of failure, fear of success and a whole host of other emotions that whir around our brains and tell us to stand still. ‘Stop. Don’t do it. It’s risky. Do it how others do it because that’s what we know is already accepted behaviour. Innovation and unorthodoxy are crazy ideas. Creativity is just wrong.’ Your job as a Ninja is to silence those thought processes as much as possible.

This sounds easy, but it’s not – mainly because these thoughts are often so quiet that you don’t even realize they need silencing at all. Pay close attention to yourself and your gut instincts, but also objectively observe your productivity, noticing which tasks you’re drawn to and repelled by.

EMOTIONS & MEDITATION

Many people will tell you that allowing time and space to listen to your emotions, listen to your heart and just be mindful is either a waste of time or somehow ‘hippy psychobabble’. The Ninja knows differently – it’s all about perception. A bad day can be as much about what’s going on in your head as what’s going on in the office. Those that regularly practise some form of meditation will know of its benefits. In fact, meditation can help sharpen all of the other aspects of the Ninja mindset we’ve just discussed. I take a wide definition of meditation here that includes sitting quietly staring at a beautiful view, praying, free writing and other creative pursuits, yoga, walking (if the purpose is to walk, not to arrive!) and many other things. Again, the aim is to promote Zen-like calm and be focused and fully present in your work.

LISTENING TO OTHERS

As well as taking the time to listen to our own thoughts and emotions, active and effective listening is at the heart of great meetings and collaborative work. Listening to objections and hearing only feedback and connection rather than criticism and opposition is a crucial skill, too. We will come back to these themes in Chapter 10.

PREPAREDNESS

PREPAREDNESS

Last in our list of the characteristics to aspire to is one that underpins and strengthens so many of the others we’ve just talked about: preparedness. Zen-like calm in the heat of the battle is only possible if you’re well prepared. Agility is only possible if you’re starting from a position of being prepared and ready to react immediately, producing the right response. And you’re only ready to be ruthless if you’ve got the energy. Being prepared is about practical preparation as well as mental preparation.

PRACTICAL PREPAREDNESS

A weapon-savvy Ninja knows the added sense of control they feel when tackling a problem or project with the right tools. There used to be a time when being organized, focusing on the stationery or the geeky apps was considered nerdy or uncool. Well, the time has come to unleash your inner geek. It’s time to maintain practical systems that will mean you’re always prepared to tackle whatever comes your way. It may seem less cool than just ‘going with the flow’, but there is power in stocking up on stationery, power in investing time in the right systems and power in attacking your work from the position of being well prepared.

MENTAL PREPAREDNESS

As well as being physically well prepared, we need to be mentally well prepared too. This of course means mindfulness, but it also means looking after our most precious resource: our own attention and energy. As such, we need time to be off duty too. Perhaps being off duty involves a long Instagram scrolling binge or surfing rubbish on the internet. Perhaps it involves going out with friends or taking time to focus your attention on something completely different (or on nothing at all). Many people are pressured by their bosses to stay late in the office. I have talked to a lot of people who say that even though no one feels like there’s anything to do, let alone feels ready to do anything, they still stay – for about five minutes after the boss has gone home. If you’re in a job where you’re under this kind of peer pressure, it needs to change. We’ll work on that together. As for your boss, well, perhaps buying them a copy of this book would be a start!

LUNCH IS NOT FOR WIMPS

‘Crunching’ is a term that means buckling down, eyes on the deadline or conscious of the busy period ahead. It means not looking after yourself and not coming up for air. Crunching is a great short-term tactic when the going gets tough. But studies show that sustained periods of ‘crunch’ only lead to diminishing returns. In the film Wall Street, Gordon Gekko, played brilliantly by Michael Douglas, uttered the now legendary phrase, ‘Lunch is for wimps’. It stuck in the collective consciousness and you’ll still hear it used to this day. Well, lunch is not for wimps. But preparedness is for Ninjas.

PREPAREDNESS LEADS TO MAGIC

It’s difficult to say why taking lunch or short breaks during the working day always brings you so quickly back to ruthless focus and your ‘A’ game. It just happens that way. Periods of rest are vital for preparedness. Next time you spend any meaningful length of time during the hours of nine to five not working and moving your attention on to something completely different, just watch what happens; I’ll bet that on that day, you’ll get more done, not less. It’s like a magical little secret. Different shifts in gear seem to work for different people, but it’s as much in the body as in the mind. A five-minute blast of fresh air is infinitely more effective than ten minutes messing about on the internet with your work still open in the background. The trick is to find the thing that works for you. As we look more at managing your attention and momentum later in the book, we will revisit this very unusual but startlingly effective secret.

EXERCISE: PREPAREDNESS

You’ve read through the key characteristics that make up The Way of the Productivity Ninja – Zen-like Calm, Ruthlessness, Weapon-savvy, Stealth and Camouflage, Unorthodoxy, Agility, Mindfulness, Preparedness – so take a moment to decide which ones are already quite well developed in you, and which three you think you need to focus on throughout the book.

Make a note of them here and refer back to them as you work through the book.

NEARLY A NINJA …A BIT OF NINJA PRACTICE NEEDED …........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
NINJAS ARE NOT SUPERHUMAN …

… BUT THEY SOMETIMES APPEAR TO BE SO

NINJAS ARE NOT SUPERHUMAN …… BUT THEY SOMETIMES APPEAR TO BE SO

‘Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.’

– Confucius

Working in this way is liberating, fun and super-productive. Sometimes as a Productivity Ninja you will seem to others like you have special powers. Sometimes it will even seem that way to you.

However, a Ninja is very different from a superhero. A Ninja is just a regular guy or girl, but with tools and skills and a very special mindset. There are no superpowers and no kryptonite.

As a Ninja, you’ll develop a reputation as someone who delivers, someone who is reliable, makes good decisions and takes their work seriously. Apart from when you wear your Ninja mask. Keep that private.

Ninjas are passionate, indispensable and calm under pressure. Ninjas get things done in a way that seems, well, magical.