Have you ever wondered why some employees always accomplish their goals?
How about those who do so way ahead of schedule?
And then there are team members who not only beat the clock on those deadlines; they take on additional tasks making you look like a mere mortal.
It turns out those types of incredibly focused and high-energy people are the minority. But they are they ever loathed by us mere mortals.
In a 2002 study based on ten years of research in a dozen large-sized companies, Heike Bruch and Sumantra Ghoshal proposed โThe Focus-Energy Matrix.โ The study identified four types of employee behaviors found in our organizations:
disengagement;
procrastination;
distraction; and
purposefulness.
The behaviors were plotted on a 2x2 matrix using Focus and Energy on the axis:
[caption id="attachment_1065" align="alignnone" width="646"] Focus-Energy Matrix[/caption]
Individuals with low focus and low energy were deemed procrastinators, a group of people that made up 30% of the organization. These are the people who claim theyโre going to write a book but never do.
Disengaged employeesโthose with high focus but low energyโcomprised 20% of the organization. I suppose theyโre focused on being lifeless at work.
Those considered to be distracted made up a whopping 40% of the population. They were employees who demonstrated a high level of energy but very little ability to focus. They are the people in meetings doing seven things at once pretending they are expert multi-taskers.
Bruch and Ghoshal discovered that only 10% of the employees demonstrated purposefulness in their actions. These types of individuals, although small, were unique.
They were the folks who were in control of their executive functions.
According to WebMD, executive functions are a set of mental skills that help you get things done. An area of the brain called the frontal lobe control these skills.
If we are not governing our executive functions, ultimately we wind up as part of the 90% in Bruch and Ghoshalโs study that lack focus, energy and so on.
Your executive functions are critically important. They help you in several key areas including:
attention span;
time management;
planning;
memory;
focus; and
remembering.
Executive functions also prevent you from saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. (Hint: think about that guy at work who is always putting his foot in his mouth at your bi-weekly team meeting.)
Why is it only 10% of the population is effective, registering high levels of energy and focus?
They are in control, positive and they are disciplined.
โAware of the value of time, they manage it carefully. Some refuse to respond to e-mails, phone calls, or visitors outside certain periods of the day,โ wrote the researchers. โPurposeful managers are also skilled at finding ways to reduce stress and refuel.โ
But in addition to energy, they possess an ability to push through rhetoric, bureaucracy, and roadblocks. In other words, they can concentrate, block out the distractions, and get things done.
They do not let the vibration of a newly liked Tweet to break their focus.
โThey decide first what they must achieve and then work to manage the external environmentโtapping into resources, building networks, honing skills, broadening their influenceโso that, in the end, they meet their goals. A sense of personal volitionโthe refusal to let other people or organizational constraints set the agendaโis perhaps the subtlest and most important distinction between this group of managers and all the rest.โ
The research published in 2002, but in 2018 I believe things have worsened. If we were to analyze employees today, I believe the 10% classified as demonstrating โpurposefulnessโ in 2002 has dropped.
I reckon those who properly balance their focus and energy now sits at approximately 5%.
What terrifies me is our level of distraction. Our ability to focus has crashed to the earth. Our inability to concentrate is profound.
The โalways onโ mindset that has gripped societyโbe it with the near-pervasive and constant use of mobile devices and laptops or the inability to switch off from work when at home, etc.โis forcing our energy levels to rise.
But as those energy levels have shot upโlooking for the next dopamine hit from a text, email, DM or red check mark found on a laptopโs web browserโso too I have witnessed a collapse in our focus. And when our focus wanes, our attention span plummets, and we become detrimentally distracted.
This is a new plague afflicting our organizations.
As a father of three, I have spent the past decade and a bit watching (and re-watching) films produced by Disney Pixar. One that has been viewed several times in our home is Up.
Regardless of the plot, I am always reminded of the dogs who were outfitted with high-tech collar contraptions that allowed them to speak English. The writers were having a go at the human race.
When the dogs got distractedโas they often did in the filmโwe witnessed them freezing in mid-sentence, looking left, only to scream, โSquirrel!!โ (because they lost their focus after seeing a squirrel.)
The humor, of course, is that the dogs in Up are as distracted as we humans.
This is what we have become.
We now constantly scream โSquirrel!!โ in our new world of distractedness and low levels of focus.
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We are so proud to have had you at our event. Your talk was a big hit. It moved us. We canโt thank you enough.
Malin Bjรถrnell, Salesforce
Dan challenged us to have clarity of purpose, both as individuals and as an organization. He related inspiring stories drawing on his experience in business, technology and academia. As he said, โThere is no ownership without belonging.โ
Christian Pantel, D2L
Fantastic engaging talk for our global partner summit. Thank you so much, Dan!
Barb Kinnard, CEO Response Biomedical Corp
Dan not only brought his presentation to life with his charisma, but also content, style and presentation finesse. Our members were especially interested in his thought provoking and top of mind topic on the future of work and how weโre going to be leading the next generation of leaders.
Cheryl Goodwin, CPA
Dan is a conference organizerโs ideal speaker. Not only did he inspire and energize our group, but he also masterfully adapted his content so it resonated with the audience and our conference theme. As a bonus, Dan is able to nimbly navigate to adjust to a reduced time slot when other speakers went over time without sacrificing the impact of his session.
Director and General Counsel
Dan accomplished what we set out to do, which was not only to be inspirational, but also to leave everyone with tools and food for thought / self-reflection to improve their personal and professional lives.