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Establishing a Work Cadence

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Manage episode 295848922 series 1341557
Contenu fourni par James Laws. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par James Laws ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
Show Notes

  • [0:00:55] Episode Summary | Intro

  • Why Every Podcast NEEDS Intro Music
  • Last Episode Communication Recap

  • [0:03:13] Kicking off a New Topic

  • Making Progress
    • Helping our teams make progress.
    • Establishing a work cadence.
    • Promoting progress and not business.
  • The Necessity of Work Cadence
    • We’ve lost seasonality.
      • The modern world lacks cadence and sets your team up for failure and unfair expectations.
      • Black Friday in recent years is a perfect example of this.
    • We don’t recognize how people’s creativity and work output is seasonal.
      • You can’t be “at an 11” all the time.
    • Don’t let anyone feel guilty for taking time off.
      • Not just vacation, but allow your people to switch up what they are working on.

  • [0:08:36] Creating Seasons to Break-up the Work

  • This even applies to a given day’s worth of work.

  • [0:10:00] Learning From Past Mistakes

  • The work shouldn’t inherently dictate the season.
  • Your “fires” shouldn’t determine and set the standard and expectations for the season.
  • Consider checking email ONCE a day.
  • Your team can’t work at the same speed 365 days a year.
    • We’re literally evolved, as a species, around seasons.

  • [0:12:10] What We’ve Done to Establish Cadence Within Our Company

  • Ask yourself, “What is the pulse of the team?”
    • Where are the hills and valleys?
  • Breaking up work into cycles.
    • Then establishing a down time in-between cycles.
    • Try to ensure your cycles match or work around the cadence of common holiday and vacation times.
      • It’ll never be perfect or match the needs of each and every team member, but it will make a difference as a whole.
      • Allow PTO/vacation during a cycle, and take that into account when considering expected cycle output.
        • Don’t punish the team for PTO being utilized.
    • Cycles allow you to pause and celebrate wins with intention.
      • We STILL do a poor job of celebrating wins...and you probably will too, but don’t settle for it.
    • Regular stopping points allow you to more easily course correct.
  • We create a very loose plan for the year as a whole.
    • We also reevaluate that plan after every cycle concludes (but before the next begins).
  • Our calendar can be scary to the average business owner…
    • ...but here’s why it shouldn’t be.
      • On putting people over profits.
        • Happy people do better work.
        • How do we create sustainability AND keep people with the company?

  • Problems are solved in the silence.
    • In the quiet between the work is generally when problems are solved in more creative ways.
    • Margins (pauses) make doing the work more productive.
  • Looking back at the dreadful state of our work lives without cycles and natural stopping points.

  • [0:27:13] What’s Next?

  • Planning definitely for the whole year is overwhelming and loses clarity over time.
    • Asking “what’s next?” after each cycle is liberating and creates so much more shared understanding in the end.
      • Additionally, it works wonders in the ability to pivot, which is vital in your organizational toolkit.

  • [0:29:45] Saying You’re Not Working During Downtime is Very MIsleading

    • Downtime is a time for reflection, pivoting, preparation, and learning.
  • [0:30:49] Cycles Are Iterative
    • You’ll have to dial it in with what works best for your organization.
      • What works best for your company can/will change year to year.
        • Maybe you need more downtime, or longer cycles.
          • But keep your focus as one that is people first.

  • [0:31:34] Parting Words

  • Stop and think.
    • Analyze if you could have accomplished more, had the team been given more thoughtfulness, freedom, and room to pivot.
  • Next Episode
    • The Difference Between Progress and Productivity, or Activity
  continue reading

97 episodes

Artwork
iconPartager
 
Manage episode 295848922 series 1341557
Contenu fourni par James Laws. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par James Laws ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
Show Notes

  • [0:00:55] Episode Summary | Intro

  • Why Every Podcast NEEDS Intro Music
  • Last Episode Communication Recap

  • [0:03:13] Kicking off a New Topic

  • Making Progress
    • Helping our teams make progress.
    • Establishing a work cadence.
    • Promoting progress and not business.
  • The Necessity of Work Cadence
    • We’ve lost seasonality.
      • The modern world lacks cadence and sets your team up for failure and unfair expectations.
      • Black Friday in recent years is a perfect example of this.
    • We don’t recognize how people’s creativity and work output is seasonal.
      • You can’t be “at an 11” all the time.
    • Don’t let anyone feel guilty for taking time off.
      • Not just vacation, but allow your people to switch up what they are working on.

  • [0:08:36] Creating Seasons to Break-up the Work

  • This even applies to a given day’s worth of work.

  • [0:10:00] Learning From Past Mistakes

  • The work shouldn’t inherently dictate the season.
  • Your “fires” shouldn’t determine and set the standard and expectations for the season.
  • Consider checking email ONCE a day.
  • Your team can’t work at the same speed 365 days a year.
    • We’re literally evolved, as a species, around seasons.

  • [0:12:10] What We’ve Done to Establish Cadence Within Our Company

  • Ask yourself, “What is the pulse of the team?”
    • Where are the hills and valleys?
  • Breaking up work into cycles.
    • Then establishing a down time in-between cycles.
    • Try to ensure your cycles match or work around the cadence of common holiday and vacation times.
      • It’ll never be perfect or match the needs of each and every team member, but it will make a difference as a whole.
      • Allow PTO/vacation during a cycle, and take that into account when considering expected cycle output.
        • Don’t punish the team for PTO being utilized.
    • Cycles allow you to pause and celebrate wins with intention.
      • We STILL do a poor job of celebrating wins...and you probably will too, but don’t settle for it.
    • Regular stopping points allow you to more easily course correct.
  • We create a very loose plan for the year as a whole.
    • We also reevaluate that plan after every cycle concludes (but before the next begins).
  • Our calendar can be scary to the average business owner…
    • ...but here’s why it shouldn’t be.
      • On putting people over profits.
        • Happy people do better work.
        • How do we create sustainability AND keep people with the company?

  • Problems are solved in the silence.
    • In the quiet between the work is generally when problems are solved in more creative ways.
    • Margins (pauses) make doing the work more productive.
  • Looking back at the dreadful state of our work lives without cycles and natural stopping points.

  • [0:27:13] What’s Next?

  • Planning definitely for the whole year is overwhelming and loses clarity over time.
    • Asking “what’s next?” after each cycle is liberating and creates so much more shared understanding in the end.
      • Additionally, it works wonders in the ability to pivot, which is vital in your organizational toolkit.

  • [0:29:45] Saying You’re Not Working During Downtime is Very MIsleading

    • Downtime is a time for reflection, pivoting, preparation, and learning.
  • [0:30:49] Cycles Are Iterative
    • You’ll have to dial it in with what works best for your organization.
      • What works best for your company can/will change year to year.
        • Maybe you need more downtime, or longer cycles.
          • But keep your focus as one that is people first.

  • [0:31:34] Parting Words

  • Stop and think.
    • Analyze if you could have accomplished more, had the team been given more thoughtfulness, freedom, and room to pivot.
  • Next Episode
    • The Difference Between Progress and Productivity, or Activity
  continue reading

97 episodes

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