Junesix

  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS

Hidden Habits of Ineffective People

No one sets out to be ineffective, but it’s easy to pick up the habits. Too easy.

Consuming more than you create
Effective people tend to create a lot of content. Content can mean a lot of things - but the rule is always the same, create more than you consume. Ineffective people, on the other hand, spend the majority of their time consuming the fruits of others’ labor. They are consummate lurkers.

Watching your own vanity metrics
Everyone suffers from some level of vanity. A need to be liked. The Internet feeds that need, keeping popularity at the forefront of any online identity with lists of ‘Friends,’ ‘Followers,’ ‘Connections,’ ‘Re-Pins’ and even the ‘Like’ itself. Ineffective people tend to feed on these popularity metrics, whereas effective people recognize that these are shallow indicators. Effective people focus more on engagement and strength of relationships; they create quality content to solicit engagement from others, or seek out interesting people and proactively engage them on their own terms.

Starting the day responding to others
Ineffective people allow others to set the agenda for their day. They start their morning reading or responding to others’ requests. Effective people approach each day with an agenda for what they want to accomplish, start their day tackling a task crucial for accomplishing their goal, and respond to others when (or if) it works with their agenda.

Prioritizing the wrong activities
Busy work. It’s quite literally work that keeps you busy; it saps your time, but gets you no closer to your end goal. Ineffective people tend not to recognize busy work, and therefore, they prioritize tasks that will not move them any closer to their goals. Effective people recognize busy work for what it is and waste little to no time trying to appear busy when they know there are more important tasks to be completed.

Relying on multi-tasking to “save time”
Multi-tasking is a scam. Being able to walk and chew gum at the same time may be the only true form of multi-tasking worth doing. Ineffective people use multi-tasking to appear busy, or to fool themselves into believing they can reach their goal faster by making minor progress on a lot of things at once. Effective people have a secret weapon to saving time. Focus. Effective people know which tasks are important for reaching their goal, and they focus on each one after another.

Originally posted on Quora by Chris Wake.

Source: gtmcknight

  • 3 months ago > gtmcknight
  • 28
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

28 Notes/ Hide

  1. luxuriousvulgarity liked this
  2. buchino liked this
  3. charlestheirishman reblogged this from junesix
  4. junesix reblogged this from gtmcknight
  5. my-own-melt reblogged this from gtmcknight
  6. my-own-melt liked this
  7. gangingup-onthesun reblogged this from gtmcknight
  8. stacylaughs liked this
  9. shaunline liked this
  10. misternorman liked this
  11. mjvla liked this
  12. david liked this
  13. aguistyle reblogged this from gtmcknight
  14. ramsha liked this
  15. explorology reblogged this from gtmcknight
  16. jeffgiddens liked this
  17. mlee525 liked this
  18. banterability liked this
  19. slomoyall liked this
  20. dynamicdata liked this
  21. jedsundwall liked this
  22. gangingup-onthesun liked this
  23. headunderwater liked this
  24. davidporter reblogged this from gtmcknight
  25. jeremymmm liked this
  26. aleciamonteiro liked this
  27. lauterthanbombs liked this
  28. gtmcknight posted this

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

Logo

Thoughts and curations by Patrick Wang.

You can email me at

IDENTITIES

  • @junesix on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • junesix on Foursquare
  • Linkedin Profile
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Mobile

Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr