January 28, 2020
How often have you heardsomeone say, ‘I am so stressed – because I just don’t have enough time?’
When it comes to growing your social impact, we couldn’t agree more. For the busy 4th Sector Entrepreneur, time is usually the crucial thing that’s in short supply. Too many things to do, and never enough time to do them.
Result? Pressure,opportunities lost, corners cut (maybe). And stress (definitely).
So, if time really isyour most valuable commodity, it makes sense to reflect on how you might goabout using it in the most productive ways possible. Specifically, this meansreviewing the time you spend working on your business rather than in it;working on the systems that guide and enable growth, rather than onfire-fighting.
Isn’t the obvioussolution simply to manage your time better? No. Alistair Lobo – aspecialist in helping leaders increase their productivity – recommends anotherapproach, developed from a best-selling book called The Power of FullEngagement by Tony Schwartz.
“While Jules Verne andMarty and Doc in Back to the Future could manage time, the reality isthat we mere humans can’t,” says Lobo.
“Being personally productive is not about managing time but about managing the energy that comes from stress. Key to this is being able to differentiate between healthy or eustress and unhealthy distress.’’
As we discussed in our last blog – Commitment: The Secret Ingredient of a Successful 4th Sector Entrepreneur – stress is vital for the creative process. But it’s also vital to avoid over-stress, as that’s when your energy disappears and you stop getting things done. Lobo used the metaphor of a bodybuilder to illustrate his point.
“No-one walks into a gymand immediately bench-presses twice their bodyweight. If they try, at best theywill not even move the bar and at worst they will do themselves some damage.Once they commit to a goal, they start with a much smaller weight that putstheir muscles under stress but which they can lift and then every few days addanother 5lbs.
In between sessions in the gym they rejuvenate, they sleep, they consider their nutrition and then, when their body has healed, come back. After many cycles the weight they couldn’t move can now be lifted with ease.
The same principle holds true when it comes to being more productive in managing your life. You can’t expect to juggle everything without a plan to manage the stress.”
And so, give up even thinking about trying to manage time. The key to personal productivity is to embrace that old enemy stress as a friend, celebrating its benefits but also managing it systematically and incrementally, in a positive way, to ensure you maximise your energy.
In the 20 years we have been working with leaders in the 4th Sector, it has become clear that without exception they have been driven to make a sustainable social impact. So what stops them from achieving their goals? We consistently hear about three connected problems...