The productivity hack that really works - FT中文網
登錄×
電子郵件/用戶名
密碼
記住我
請輸入郵箱和密碼進行綁定操作:
請輸入手機號碼,透過簡訊驗證(目前僅支援中國大陸地區的手機號):
請您閱讀我們的用戶註冊協議私隱權保護政策,點擊下方按鈕即視爲您接受。
FT商學院

The productivity hack that really works

Physical stamina is an oddly overlooked superpower in modern working life

In less than one week’s time, Britain may be led by a man with a capacity for work that his friends say is phenomenal, ferocious and slightly exhausting to watch.

I discovered this last week after reading one of the many biographies of Keir Starmer, or as I have come to think of him, Keir Starmina.

The Labour leader, who polls suggest will be the British prime minister after the July 4 election, can work and work with “ridiculously small amounts of sleep”, according to one of his ex-girlfriends, the barrister Phillippa Kaufmann.

“Keir’s ability to work is absolutely phenomenal,” she told biographer Tom Baldwin. “I’ve never known anyone like him.” 

Starmer’s Stakhanovite tendencies were evident early on. “I’ve never seen anyone be able to study like him,” reported a school friend who remembered him being “at his desk for hour, after hour, after hour”.

A person who knew him at university was quoted saying that, when everyone else was lying around shattered after a big night out, “Keir would always be up at six the next morning, getting on with his studies”.

And one of his oldest friends said Starmer’s discipline and drive were so vast that “sometimes, it makes me feel weary just thinking about the life he leads”.

Reading all this reminded me of an uncomfortable truth about modern working life and the profusion of goal-setting, time-managing, email-batching productivity “hacks” we are constantly told will speed us to career success. None are any match for the inbuilt stamina of a Starmer.

This ought to be obvious. But I don’t think it is in a world where publishers are churning out as many as three books a day on how to be more productive at work, and sites such as TikTok burst with advice on how to do more faster.

The upshot of this industrial-strength guidance is the belief that productivity soars once one latches on to the right habits and work practices. Alas, it is not quite that simple.

I first began to grasp the importance of physical durability in my twenties when I bowled up to a famous older female reporter and asked her for the secret to success in journalism.

I had expected to hear her talk about the art of extracting information from sources; or being well-informed, or writing well. Instead, she gave an abrupt one-word answer: “stamina”.

I thought this odd but as time went on I kept seeing evidence of her point. A lot of persistently successful people keep working when lesser physical beings wilt with exhaustion, the flu or a general failure to function. That journalist herself is, at the time of writing, still a prolific commentator, researcher and writer — just days away from her 80th birthday.

Mental stamina, like physical staying power, is a gift, although it does have downsides.

Starmer was once so engrossed at his desk in a London flat he was sharing that he failed to notice two burglars were inside knocking off the TV and video recorder.

Life with a remorseless worker can also take its toll on family and work colleagues.

“Bed, woman!” Denis Thatcher would sometimes tell his wife Margaret, the late former British prime minister, who was said to get by on just four hours sleep a night.

Opinions differ about how well Baroness Thatcher functioned on this much sleep, which is comforting to those of us who prefer at least seven good hours of shuteye. 

Thankfully, being in the sleep elite is far less fashionable now that work-life balance is treated seriously. It is also worth remembering that stamina does not guarantee success. 

The business world has long been full of executives bragging about how little sleep they need but very few reach the heights of a chief executive such as Apple’s Tim Cook, who has said he likes to wake up before 4am and do an hour of emailing and a workout before heading to work. 

Then there is the current British prime minister, Rishi Sunak. He reportedly works around the clock — and on weekends. His generally diligent approach to work has never been in doubt. Yet the polls suggest he is about to lead his party to a defeat of dire proportions.

Ultimately, he is a reminder that a capacity for hard yards will take you a long way in life, but it won’t always be enough to achieve enduring success.

pilita.clark@ft.com

版權聲明:本文版權歸FT中文網所有,未經允許任何單位或個人不得轉載,複製或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵權必究。

生成式AI將焦點轉向合同管理

隨著越來越多人看好利用人工智慧優化合同管理軟體的前景,該領域出現一系列整合併購。

Lex專欄:亞馬遜不應加入Shein和Temu的逐底競賽

這家美國集團在大西洋兩岸都面臨反壟斷訴訟,最好是讓挑戰者在爭奪市場份額的過程中自己熄火。

AI在篩選投資方面能勝過理財經理嗎?

人工智慧演算法在穩定的環境中表現出色,但可能難以迅速適應突如其來的經濟變化。

法國政局動盪使投資者擔憂其債務脆弱性

分析師警告說,擁有半數國債的海外投資者可能會要求提高借貸成本。

黑石搶購「循環」私募股權信用風險

這家美國收購集團已成爲一種快速成長的風險轉移產品的最大買家之一。

荷蘭折衷主義右翼政府上臺

新首相肖克是毫無政治經驗的前情報官員,大選中得票第一的極右翼政黨掌握了五個大臣職位,包括貿易與移民。
設置字型大小×
最小
較小
默認
較大
最大
分享×