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The Challenge
of "Challenge"
How to Find Just
the Right Work Balance
by Tom Terez
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Talk about irony. It's Labor Day, and
while my neighbors gather around their grills, I'm huddled over my keyboard laboring
over this column. There's a deadline to meet, and though my editor is kind and understanding
and possibly responsive to subtle buttering up from a tardy columnist, I need to
finish this up before tomorrow.
Really, I'm in something of a panic
because my schedule for the rest of the week is so jam-packed. If I don't finish
this column now, it's going to be another late night. But wait, is that the smell
of bratwurst wafting up from a grill? Wow, that smells good. (Long pause while every
fiber of my being focuses its attention on an imaginary brat.) Forget the bratwurst,
get back to the column! You have to get it done or your appointment book will never
forgive you. What was the topic again? Oh yeah, challenge.
My monthly Workforce Online column
provides insights into the twenty-two key ingredients of a meaningful workplace --
what I call the "meaning keys." These keys emerged from my extensive interviews
and focus groups with people from all walks of life. Each column is devoted to a
separate key.
Challenge is one of them, and it
just so happens to be one of the most, well, challenging. So many people find deep
fulfillment in situations that stretch their skills, talents, know-how, and deep
interests. Yet so many workplaces go too far in either direction -- either they wear
people out with impossibly demanding work, or they keep hands busy but leave minds
unengaged.
Despite excessive bratwurst fumes,
I have developed a detailed assessment tool that will help you determine where you
fall on this challenge continuum. While I run outside and visit with my neighbors,
review the following items carefully, and place a checkmark in front of each statement
that accurately describes your current situation.
_____ You're famous around the office
for your Post-It Note origami.
_____ People occasionally snap their fingers in your face and call out: "Hello,
is anyone home?"
_____ A big decision consists of "cheese on wheat" or "fig bar."
_____ Out of the blue, you get a call from a casting director who wants you as an
extra in the upcoming movie "The Stepford Employee."
_____ You follow with some anticipation the results of Howard's Tuesday evening bowling
league.
_____ You feel genuine pride after sorting your paper clips by size.
_____ A colleague asks you how long you've been practicing self-hypnosis.
If you've checked any of the above items, or if any of them seem even remotely true
to life, you're seriously under-challenged. I strongly recommend that you fire up
your grill, cook yourself a tasty meal, and worry about things later on in this column.
If you didn't check any boxes, you're
not in the clear just yet. Review this second set of assessment items:
_____ You look up at the clock and
it's already 5 p.m. -- the next day.
_____ To replace those time-draining coffee breaks, you opt for a caffeine patch.
_____ As another time-saving measure, you stop using all commas, colons and semicolons.
_____ After a late-night work session, you're pretty sure you see religious icons
in your screen saver.
_____ You've operated a pager, a cell phone, and a laptop ... at the same time ...
while eating dinner ... at your child's recital.
_____ You come up with a neat idea: the waterproof laptop, perfect for achieving
high productivity in the shower.
_____ The evening cleaning crew offers to put aside its own chores and help you finish
whatever it is you've been working on for the past several months.
If any of these seven items seem
to apply, you face a major case of overwork. In your case, I'd bypass the grill entirely
and have the food delivered.
Seriously, there are certain actions you can take whatever your situation:
- Gather your immediate colleagues for an ongoing conversation about
the current situation. Perhaps you can team up and help each other. Collective effort
is more likely to produce a long-term solution that benefits everyone.
- If you're seriously under-challenged, take a process that's all
your own and make it faster, better, and more cost effective. You'll end up saving
some time in your schedule, so direct it to stuff that will engage your brain and
stir your deep interests.
- If you think you're not in a position to re-create how your work
is done, search for one sliver of opportunity -- something you can do differently
to get your brain back in gear, or something you can stop doing so you can use the
saved time for more challenging activities, or at least someone you can talk to who
can help you start turning things around.
- Establish a demanding stretch goal just for yourself. It should
be aligned with all the other goals around you -- in your work unit, for instance,
or the organization as a whole -- but it's yours and yours alone.
- Consider making this personal goal setting process a group endeavor.
If these goals are big enough -- and they should be -- you'll need help to turn them
into reality.
- If you're totally over-challenged, put your schedule under a microscope.
Which of your work activities adds little or no value? This can be a painful process
as you realize that those monthly reports you've been laboring over for the past
several years are read by a grand total of one person: you. Sort out what's really
important and what only seems to be important. Then start trimming away.
- Watch out for perfectionism. If you're doing something over and
over and over to get it just right, get in touch with your customers and find out
what they think. You want to thrill them, to be sure, but it won't do anyone any
good if you burn yourself out in the process.
- Recognize the sharp distinction between being conscientious and
being a control freak. Ironically, your excessive workload just might be an opportunity
to widen responsibility and boost empowerment.
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ABOUT THE
AUTHOR:
Tom Terez (TomTerez.com) is an international consultant and frequent
speaker on organizational performance (BetterWorkplaceNow.com) and personal excellence (InnerBest.com)
Copyright 2002
Tom Terez. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2008 Tom
Terez Workplace Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
P.O. Box 21444, Columbus, Ohio USA 43221-0444. Tel.
614-488-9721. Online Contact Form
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