A man who dares to waste an hour of time
has not discovered the value of life.
has not discovered the value of life.
— Charles Darwin
I recently heard the owner of a meeting planning firm say that her agency has started billing clients specifically for the time devoted to answering "half-baked" emails.
So she took steps to profit from the clients' lack of professionalism.
Workplace communication isn't easy. It takes a bit of care.
The careless communicator—too hurried to compose his thoughts, look up the answers to basic questions, or question whether an idea has the slightest merit—never seems to realize that he's squandering others' time (and his own, in the bargain).
He doesn't see that his imprecision, incaution, and indifference to others' time bear a cost, and that by robbing himself and others of time he destroys value.
I like the meeting planner's new practice. She's making lemonade from lemons, and boosting her bottom line.
As the Stoic philosopher Seneca said, "the life we receive is not short, but we make it so."
We have but a few grains of sand in the hourglass.
Can we afford to let others waste them with impunity?