Worklife
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
Monday, December 8, 2025

WORKLIFE

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Remote Control
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Worklife 101
  • More
    • Psychology
    • Productivity
    • Technology
    • Japan
    • Time Hackers
No Result
View All Result
WORKLIFE
No Result
View All Result
Home Time Hackers

How to be more efficient: stop ‘precrastinating’

May 17, 2020
in Time Hackers
2 min read
287 22
0
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Whether or not we care to admit it, we’re all familiar with procrastination: waiting until the last minute to catch up with pressing tasks, often leading to subpar or incomplete work. The antidote – while easier said than done – is simply to start on your assignments sooner, long before the cut-off time so that your work reflects your full potential. But in your quest to beat procrastination, is it possible to go too far?

David Rosenbaum, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Riverside, certainly thinks so. His research focuses on the perils of “precrastination”, the tendency to rush too quickly into tasks. It can result in an expenditure of unnecessary effort that could be avoided with a bit of planning – in other words, haste makes waste.

As opposed to a procrastinator, who might leave an inbox full of emails untouched until the next day, a precrastinator would read and respond to each of them first thing in the morning. Even if they know most of the emails are unimportant, they would choose to clear them off as soon as possible. In some cases, this can mean depleting the precious energy they might need for a more urgent task later on.

So why do people precrastinate? Rosenbaum says that for most, it’s tough to resist reaching for low-hanging fruit.If something is immediately available to you, you’re instinctively wired to go for it. Think about the sweet allure of free food samples at the market. Similarly, when you complete simple short-term tasks, you have one fewer thing to think about – “I can wrap this up in five minutes. Why not take care of it now?” Personality traits such as conscientiousness, eagerness to please and high energy can predict precrastination behaviours, Rosenbaum says, but the evolutionary impulse behind them is universal.

The real downside of precrastination comes when, in your rush to finish, you encounter the naturally higher chance of doing your work incompletely or inaccurately. In the case of emails, sometimes waiting to respond can show respect for careful thought over expediency, especially if the content of the message is emotional.

Of course, precrastination is not without its benefits, but it’s critical to do so only when it makes sense. Chronic precrastinators must also realise that it’s OK to set trivial things aside, because they will not require huge mental energy later in the day, Rosenbaum says.

He argues that the managers of today would be wise to acknowledge that it’s not always best to do everything as quickly as possible. “It should be agreed in our society that it’s okay to smell the flowers,” he says. “To be deliberate, mindful and to be allowed to slow down.”

Watch the video above to learn more from David Rosenbaum, and to experience the ugly sides of precrastination.

Interview by Maddy Savage. Animation by Ginevra Boni. Additional contributions from Peter Rubinstein.



Source link

Related articles

Should Spain replace the siesta with flexible work?

Worklife

Tags: efficientprecrastinatingstop
admin

admin

Related Posts

Should Spain replace the siesta with flexible work?

by admin
May 22, 2020
0

Gone is the culture of presenteeism that keeps people at their desks late into the evening to make up for long lunches. Now, teams decide...

Worklife

by admin
May 21, 2020
0

Worklife Source link

How ‘flow’ brings out your full potential

by admin
May 17, 2020
0

For many busy people, leisure time is a more precious resource than money – so what should you do in those few prized hours that...

The mental hacks that level up your self-control

by admin
May 17, 2020
0

By definition, self-control is the ability to do something that benefits your long-term goals, instead of something that might satisfy your immediate desires. But for...

Next Post

The mental hacks that level up your self-control

How ‘flow’ brings out your full potential

Why we've been saying 'sorry' all wrong

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CATEGORIES

  • About us
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Japan
  • Productivity
  • Psychology
  • Remote Control
  • Technology
  • Time Hackers
  • Worklife 101

RECOMMENDED

Psychology

How boredom can be a force for good or bad

February 17, 2021
Productivity

The benefits of note-taking by hand

September 11, 2020

TAGS

avoid bad BBC Biometric calls changing Collective Control Coronavirus CVs decisions digital elite home Intelligence Japan Japans job lockdown mindset news office pandemic people procrastination Productivity Remote rise selfcontrol space stop success team tech time tips uncertainty video Virtual work workers working Worklife world Zoom
Worklife

© 2020 JBC Reel - Powered byJOOJ.us.

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More

Follow Us

  • About us
  • Beyond the 9-to-5
  • Collective Intelligence
  • Japan
  • Productivity
  • Psychology
  • Remote Control
  • Technology
  • Time Hackers
  • Worklife
  • Worklife 101

© 2020 JBC Reel - Powered byJOOJ.us.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Worklife
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
  • Worklife

    Worklife JBC