The goal is not to do more with less. You should strive to do less and get more.
My first real job was working for a large computer manufacturer in them production control department.
After two months there, the department head called me into his office and told me I was the laziest person he'd ever met. And he meant this as a compliment.
When I first started this job, I worked 50 hours a week and my direct supervisor worked 60 hours a week.
Then, after a month, I was notified that my supervisor was laid off and I was to inherit all of his work. Faced with having to work 110 hours a week, I decided to take a hard look at what we were doing. In the past, I just did what I was told to do.
Over the course of a weekend, I analyzed all of the activities I now needed to perform. I discovered that only 20 percent of my work was high value add. This was the only work I really needed to do. The remaining 80 percent of my work fell into a few categories:
After only two days of analysis and work, I managed to get my workload from 110 hours to 20 hours.
This drastic reduction in work is the reason my boss called me lazy. In fact, he designated me as the department's Chief Laziness Officer. My role was to go around and find inefficiencies in the work being done and help others become more efficient.
How can you become your company's Chief Laziness Officer?
Look at your work activities.
Focus your energies on the items that truly add value and differentiate you from the competition. Eliminate, automate, or delegate the rest.
The goal is not to do more with less. You should strive to do less and get more.
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