Friday, August 2, 2013

Faster than a Speeding Bullet or, #ProductivityProbz

At my internship this summer, one of the biggest "complaints" I've received regarding my work from my supervisors is that I work too quickly. This is a problem for them because they can't always come up with stuff for me to do (that isn't just busy work or has no actual meaning) quickly enough. To be fair, I'm working for a government agency and we all know the government is notorious for their sluggish pace.
I accomplish more in an hour than Congress accomplishes
in a whole year.

It's funny because, in the dozen or so interviews I've ever been questioned in, I'm frequently asked
how I work under pressure. As someone whose first job was at McDonald's (with a double drive-through which I frequently manned independently, even during rush hours when we'd serve up to a hundred or so cars within an hour), working under pressure is one of my fortes.

Additionally, I've always just been someone who works quickly. I was often the first person in class from elementary school on to finish an assignment. Teachers chided me and reminded me that it wasn't a race. But I wasn't working fast to finish first or even just to "get it over with." I am just naturally a fast worker. I type fast (typically I type around ninety words a minute, but I can do more without much strain or effort), I eat relatively fast (maybe because lunches were twenty-three minutes in high school), I get ready to go out quickly (no, you don't understand -- in high school, I woke up at 6:25 and be outside for the bus by 6:32), and I talk fast (maybe this is a New England thing, because it's certainly not this way in the South).

My current supervisors say to me, "Slow down. It's fine."

But why would I slow down if I can comfortably (perhaps more comfortably than if I slowed down) complete a task that takes someone else an hour in half-an-hour? Productivity, in my mind, is a good thing. And I don't believe my work suffers for my speed. I make just as many (or as few) mistakes as anyone else, sometimes even less. Believe me, if my speed was hurting the quality of my work, I would force myself to slow down. I have a thing for doing the best I can at everything -- it's how I enjoy work; even if I don't enjoy the work itself, I like to do things well. But that's another topic for another day.

So I can slow down by taking five minutes here and there to check Facebook or pick a new Pandora station or take a walk around the office to stretch my legs. And I do, but I still work too quickly. Maybe if I'm accomplishing twice as much work as anyone else is, then I should get paid twice as much. (Hint, hint, future employers -- just kidding, of course. Kind of.)

I spoke with my mother about this and put it this way: I work as quickly as my brain allows me to. But my brain thinks as fast as it thinks -- I can't go all meta on it and make it slow down. If there's a way to do this, then I am not aware of it. I don't think meditation qualifies. In fact, meditation, like defragging a computer, probably frees up those jammed neuron paths to make your thought processes outside of meditation even faster. I'm typically not hopped up on caffeine (although I had more coffee yesterday than I've ever had in one day before -- I was desperate and even put a note up facing out on my cubicle that said I was now accepting coffee donations).

I don't have a solution for this problem with the speed at which I work. I don't know that I want to "fix" it. I'm not sure it's really a problem. It's only a problem for me in that I don't always have something to do because I eat up all of the assignments before anyone can make any more for me. I'm not even entirely sure of the source of my fast-moving work style. Maybe it's my fear of death and mortality. Maybe I want to accomplish as much as I can before I die (which I recognize at a conscious level, but perhaps it effects my working style at a more subconscious level). It's not that I can't concentrate on one thing for extended periods of time. I definitely can, but if I don't have to, why would I?

Even this blog post, now at 760 words according to 750words.com, took me approximately ten minutes to write. I began with no plan except for the general topic of how quickly I work. No outline, no phrases in mind, just a topic. And here it is.

Did the quality suffer for the speed?  You tell me.


Congress image courtesy of thinkprogress.org.
Speedometer image courtesy of wallgc.com

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