Showing posts with label time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label time. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 September 2018

Time should wait for all men

Occasionally, I am asked what I consider the most important part of being a leader. There are lots of good answers for this - vision, transparency, pragmatism, empathy, competence, spreadsheets, blah, blah.

The answer I always give is "making time for people".

I've written before and at length about how as a leader the people around you are your most important resource, asset, capability, etc. Find good people, set a clear direction, give them space to be good at what they do, trust them and the results follow. But there is always more to do than can be done, so when you've been in the office for ten hours a day for a week or longer and just want to cut it all back what is the last thing to drop?

Over the years some of the most negative feedback I've received is from colleagues questioning why I spend so much time talking to people. Why spend the time face to face? You're wasting your and their time with something that could be sorted out via email.

This is very true - email refines communication down to the words only and that can be very short and to the point. However, much like boiling vegetables can remove most of the benefit of eating them, it removes most of what matters when talking to someone - the opportunity to create a connection. It might be noticing that someone has a problem that can be solved, asking about their new child, hearing something that frustrates them in the office and gives a better appreciation of the environment in which they are working or one of a million other cues. As a manager you can spot the signs of stress or anxiety and help alleviate them. If I were to think in purely mercenary terms, I can't think of many times I've invested time in a relationship and not seen an extremely favourable rate of return.

My director is very good at this - I know he is very busy, but on the occasions when I need to talk to him in urgency he always makes time for me. Our unspoken pact is that I don't bother him unless it's very important and he respects my judgement for when that is. This is built on the back of a strong relationship of (I believe) mutual respect which comes from - yes - making time to talk and drink coffee together.

Simply giving people time can improve their confidence and effectiveness. By making time for me, my director has learnt he can trust me on a long leash and as a result he's getting a significant return in his investment in terms of my effort. In turn, I feel confident that he respects my ability to make decisions - so I feel empowered to keep making them, which makes me more effective.

Moving away from the cold mathematics of relationship building, the welcoming and humanising effects of making time for people can't be underestimated. Everyone has a story to tell and most rarely get to tell it - especially to someone who is in a position of authority. It's extremely empowering to think that the person in charge knows who you are and cares that you're getting on. If that person is you, it's on you to share the love.

There is a danger, of course. A leader needs to be able to control their time so they can still deliver things and there is too much of a good thing. Far more significantly, if too much time is spent with others and the pressure of individual delivery is mounting it is all too easy to spend time talking while also answering email or doing other work. This is utter poison - if you're going to make time for someone, do it properly. If you're not going to be present then don't bother - it's more demeaning to watch someone write email and not listen than it is to just not meet at all.

There is a lot that can be written about the cold logic of this but it devalues the humanity to define relationship building by what one can get out of the deal. We spent a frightening amount of our waking adult life in work and in my opinion it does a huge disservice to everyone involved if that time is just about raw output - we're not just in work to work. For most of us, it's the source of most of our human contact and community throughout our adult life so it's worth putting in the effort.

Tuesday, 30 May 2017

Motivation

Every year I write a post about the various non-work creative things I've done to fill my time making stuff and learning new skills. I started doing this because I needed to remind myself I actually do this, and I have a tendency to forget quite how much. However, there are definitely times when the opposite is true and I spend a week or longer fixing broken things and watching videos on YouTube and after a stint of that it can get quite hard to motivate myself back into some kind of creative action.

It doesn't help that, according to the Belbin personality tests, I'm a "completer-finisher" which means I like to fix errors, polish products and - most significantly - actually finish things. I have noticed a tendency both at home and at work to leave a package of work unstarted in favour of completing something in progress which, while often a good thing, sometimes means something which is easy to put off is left alone for quite some time before I feel I've got the time to "do it properly". At work this is usually broken by some kind of deadline. At home, where there are very few deadlines, this is a great way of saying that I can be really bad at starting things. This has all been exacerbated in the last six months or so due to being generally exhausted because of moving jobs and cities.

This very post is a great example. I've been putting off writing it all weekend and here I find myself writing on a train - something I usually avoid like the plague as I jealously guard this time for reading. Yet, I have promised myself that I will write at least one blog post per month and I've very aware that if I don't get this one done today I will likely miss May.

So, some kind of deadline (even a self-imposed one) clearly works for me so I'm going to state some projects with deadlines in the hope it will kick my motivation back to life. I generally need something technology-based and something writing-based on the go at once so I can pick and choose as the mood takes me. Here we go:

University RPG

This is a comedy RPG, being written from the ground up and full of HE in-jokes. I'd like to have something ready for playtesting by the end of June and ideally have run a first session by the end of July.

Players Without Number RPG

A solution to the impossibility of organising five players to a regular game when two have children, one lives in another city and another has an international sword-fighting career to juggle. Have lots of players and swap them in as needed. I'm going to write a post about this my other blog (which is also a good excuse to kick it off again). I'd like a session and a post done by the end of August.

Year in Pictures on AWS

Every month I have to mark up fifteen blocks of YAML and crop their corresponding pictures for my Year in Pictures site. It would be nice if I could automate as much of this as possible and I may as well gain some hands-on AWS experience along the way. I'm going to aim to collect the July pictures using the first version of the new thing.

I think that'll do for the moment. One thing I've learnt about time management is to make sure there aren't too many things in progress at once else nothing gets done. Let's see if making a proper decision to do these things to a deadline makes me get on with them. Now I'm going to read for the rest of this train journey and not think about giving myself SMART objectives for my spare time...