If you do that in business, you're begging for trouble.
In a recent blog post, event-design guru Jeff Hurt laments the fact that most workers sacrifice impact for busyness.
In a recent blog post, event-design guru Jeff Hurt laments the fact that most workers sacrifice impact for busyness.
"I’ve seen way too many professionals addicted to cleaning out all the emails or making progress on their list of tasks instead of spending time doing the right thing," Hurt says.
"We’ve got to retrain our brains that strategic thinking first is more important than a check mark. We’ve got to rewire our brains to realize that strategy leads to more success than our busyness."
I've witnessed another, equally toxic habit that plagues many professionals, particularly senior executives, marketers and sales managers.
That habit is chasing butterflies, the mindless pursuit of fugitive opportunities; an addiction to chasing every papery grail of growth that happens to flutter by (usually far off the path of the core business or audience).
Like busyness, chasing butterflies feels good.
Focus, its opposite, doesn't—especially when there are so many lovely distractions about.
Focus isn't easy.
Focus isn't fun.
Focus isn't fun.