In the past, I have blogged about research by experimental psychologists
into multi-tasking and how people tend to think they are
better at it than they actually are. A major driver of multi-tasking in the
workplace is often e-mail, and this was
recently highlighted in an article entitled
“E-mail is making you stupid.”
Most of us work in environments where we receive scores if
not hundreds of e-mails and instant messages each day. While much of the information they
contain is often of marginal relevance and almost never critical to what we are trying to accomplish
at the moment, the frequent re-direction of attention (and attendant loss of focus
on the task at hand ) is quite costly in terms of productivity. Some large
organizations estimate that they lose up to $1 billion annually in productivity because of this. There is also a tendency for some workers to become
so accustomed to checking their e-mail and instant messages very frequently
that they become anxious when they try to cut back.
Some remedies include eliminating alerts that announce new
messages, only checking e-mail a handful of times each day at regular
intervals, and using either face-to-face communications or phone calls more
frequently. The latter also frequently has the benefit of building closer
relationships with colleagues and clients which often brings additional value
to the organization.
Reid Klion