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work life balance

Personal Kanban and Working from Home

Modus Institute videos about dealing with Covid are free.

A Personal Response to Covid-19 from Jim

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Hey everyone, this blog post is going to be more like a personal letter. We don’t need to be lectured to right now, but conversation is crucial.

I’ve written a few posts about Covid and the global shutdown on What’s Your Modus?, but right now I thought I’d send this letter and make a quick video.

Let me start with this.

It’s okay to be on edge.

You don’t get much more uncertainty than where we are at right now.  We are restricted in movement and action for an indefinite period of time.  Lack of certainty is threatening.

You, your family members, your co-workers are all going through this in their own way.

Give them, and yourself, a little latitude for moodiness, lack of motivation, and confusion about what the right actions are right now.

In this post, I just want to talk about two things: certainty and triggers.  They are some basic building blocks in successful work and right now they are in short supply.

Certainty

One thing that gives us certainty is … structure.  Even if the structure we have changes, understanding the rules of “right now” are important. 

I grew up in Nebraska and experienced more than a few tornadoes.  Sometimes they were cavalier nuisances, but other times they were devastating.

During a tornado warning, there is fear and uncertainty. You don’t know what the storm will do, exactly.  You don’t know where the tornado is, if it has touched down, what is in its path. You just know your expected actions.  Crack windows to normalize pressure, get to lowest point in the house, get you’re your most reinforced room, get away from windows, and wait while listening to the radio.

Not the most fun structure, but certainly a lot better than running around screaming “What do I do? What do I do?”

You and your team need to sit down, talk about what work still needs to be done, what you do and don’t know about work, what you can and cannot learn quickly, and how you can all keep each other involved and informed as you each work and learn more. 

You need to build your working structure, even though there is more uncertainty now than ever before.

Triggers

At Modus right now, we are all uncertain about what’s going to happen next. We are used to traveling and having travel equal income and stability. It was kind of a strange reassurance. If I’m in an airport things must be okay. That’s a trigger. A reassurance that things are proceeding.

When I’m on site with a client, there are always things to observe and conversations to have. When I see people overloaded without understanding the work of their peers, we generally talk about that and find ways to visualize that overload that results from lack of understanding and devise fixes. The overload, that kind of observation, is a trigger for action.

We all have those triggers and many others.  When we are remote, those triggers are likely to be absent.  We need to find some new ones. Triggers are the mechanisms we use to know when the status quo is working and when we need to react to change.

Without these triggers, we don’t know what to do next and become demoralized.

The trigger of a reassuring trip to the office or the classroom or the jobsite has been replaced with sitting in a room usually reserved for relaxation. The space isn’t designed for work, isn’t ergonomic, and is filled with non-work people.  There’s a lot of cognitive dissonance that goes along with that.

Your Next Acts

Please, now more than ever, take care of each other. Focus on the people and their ability to work…the work will proceed apace, but only if your professionals are cared for and respected.

  1. Get your team together in a video call.

  2. Make sure the tech works (Do it once in a dedicated meeting).

  3. Using something like Miro or Stormboard, brainstorm on what your team needs to establish their “right environment”. What does everyone need, right now, to work comfortably?

  4. Focus on how people are feeling, the work hasn’t changed much, but the people have.  This is people time.

  5. Visualize the work, of course.

  6. Limit the WIP more than usual.  One thing per person or one thing collaboratively for every two people… do very little at first and just finish a few things so you can build and quickly refine a system.

  7. Have huddles every day.

  8. Talk as much as possible.

  9. Don’t let anyone flap.

There are other recommendations on What’s Your Modus and certainly more in the classes on Modus Institute (70% off for this Covid situation).

Stay healthy, stay safe, take care of each other,

Jim 

HOW TO: Limit Your Work-in-Progress #1–Calm Down and Finish

We had a long series, which is soon to become a mini-book, on why you should limit your work-in-progress (WIP). In it we focused on the dangerous side effects of being overworked, of which there are many. Those articles show how an organization might begin to limit WIP, but not really the individual.

And, since this is the Personal Kanban site after all, we should probably talk about how we, as individuals, can limit our WIP.

For this first post, we’re going to start with the simplest answer. The sports shoe answer – just do it.

2010-12-21 11.09.08

The key to just doing anything is not doing everything else. David Allen promotes a “stop doing” list to compliment a “to do” list. In that vein, here we don’t want to prematurely end tasks you are working on an never revisit them, but we do want to postpone some tasks so that other can be completed. In the beginning, a large part of our READY column will be populated with tasks we know we already started, but are setting aside to focus on the few tasks in WIP.

Calm Down

The first thing to do here is to recognize that the work you are setting aside will get done. In fact, by setting it aside and waiting to complete the tasks in Doing, you will likely get it done sooner than if you didn’t defer it in the first place.  So, calm down, your current fears of delayed completion are due to how long its taken you to finish things in the past – in a non-WIP limited world.

Why was it so hard before?

We covered this in the Why Limit WIP Series:

When we limit our WIP, we are able to focus, complete faster (much faster), and likely have an end product of higher quality.

We’ve been told over the years that productivity is a good thing. However, true productivity means completing things of quality – not simply doing lots of things at the same time and completing very little.

It should be common sense that if we focus on one thing, we will complete it faster.

We need to lose our irrational fear of not being productive, and replace that with embracing being effective.

So calm down, take a look at the task at hand, focus on it, and finish.

A Note

This will work most of the time. However, there are some complexities. We want to know:

  • What is the right thing to work on?

  • What is standing in my way of completion?

  • How large of tasks should I be taking on?

  • I have so many people counting on me, how do I tell some of them to wait?

  • I’m interrupted so many times a day, how can I focus?

We will cover these in upcoming posts.

Work / Life Balance

I've been surprised lately by the number of people asking me about work/life balance. We feel we are undervaluing our family ties, our personal goals, our community involvement, our hobbies and our art. Oftentimes our work makes us feel isolated - we feel alone and seek meaning in our lives. Amusingly, we feel like we've invented this feeling.When people tell me that their generation is somehow unique in this feeling, I ask them to talk to their parents and their grandparents. Soon they discover it is merely a myth that takes just a few minutes to dispel. When your parents laugh at your hubris for an hour or so, it's quite a gut-check.Nonetheless, we can posit that we've managed to give ourselves a lot more controllable distractions than were there before. We just don't control them very well.So for this third post on Task Types, we'll do some work/life balance tasks and, like we did with work tasks, we'll establish some rules around them. Again, let's use colors.Let's say that purple represents family time. Use purple stickies and note real family time - not that trip to Costco but rather, those things that your kids will look back on and remember with a smile.Next, let's have blue represent those things that need to be done for the family. These are tasks like, "Fix the leak in the downstairs bathroom" or "Mow the Lawn."Finally, let's use green for aspirations. These are tasks like "Read the complete works of Vonnegut" or "Learn Personal Kanban" or "Get CPR Certificate."Sound good? Great! So what happens next?These colored tasks can appear on your Personal Kanban as task types. You can then set up your balance - literally. Every day you can pull one purple. Every week you can pull two blue and two green. And in your DONE column, you can see where you are with your goals.Work/life balance now has a shape and a color palette.Having said this, I consider my work and my life as indiscrete parts of a continuum. I love what I'm doing at Modus and the people I'm doing it with. So for me, the balance comes from not becoming so enamored with Modus work that I forsake all other activities.  And, yes, I do need to work on this.But, I will venture a guess that if you actively dislike what you do professionally, work/life balance will be unapproachable. You simply cannot dislike that much of your life and expect to achieve a healthy balance.Photo by Robotography

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