Books

Today, I went shopping for toiletries, and ended up spending most of my time at the lonely bookshelf in the store.

An uncle always used to tell me you can tell a lot about a people from the state of their libraries, bookshops and bookshelves.

The books were drooping over like they were ready to jump to their end from abandonment. Interestingly, they were mostly motivational books, loaded with quotes from the kind of people that would never go near such books.

I kept stealing glances at the bookshelf as I went ahead to fill my basket with why I was at the store, but I could not go back to it, as it held no promise for a late night read.

I am thankful for books and the worlds they open.

Overtime

As a leader, when you replace the word overtime with overwork, you get a better perspective of what is really going on.

The measure of overtime in your team is the measure of overwork.

I smile when I hear leaders speak about the cost savings from trading-off recruiting personnel, and instead paying overtime. They don’t get it.

In my life, I have been more productive when I have worked less, not worked more.

Working long hours seems like a bragging right, but it is actually a beginner’s plight. As mastery is gained, your biggest leverage is doing more in less time.

It is a misnomer to be improving productivity and working longer hours.

If you design your team with the option of overtime, there will always be reason for it, following parkinson’s law (work expands to fill the time available for it).

The most gruelling work is not time-bound. Which is why I love the project approach in many aspects of my life-work.

Overtime goes beyond the price (short-term tradeoff). It is a cost (long-term tradeoff). Every time you justify overtime, you justify overwork. Overwork is a limitation to output.

If you understand the game of productivity, you will see that output improves with less available time, not more.

– Osasu Oviawe