Continuing our theme of communications overload and continuous partial attention in matrix (and other) organization, one of my colleagues in the UK Phil Stockbridge, found an article in today’s Daily Mail on Email Time Bandits The research claims that people spend 4 hours per day on unnecessary emails, calls and gossip, that this costs UK industry alone some £140Bn and that 3/4 of the 1,000 respondents claimed continuous interruptions are causing them “stress” (unquantified).
One finding was that 39% of emails were sent to colleagues less than 100 yards away.
Its hard to know the accuracy of these kind of stats, if we added up all the stories about time wasted on meetings, emails, Internet surfing, breaks, smoking, gossip etc… (we seem to see these surveys each week) I am sure we would be spending more than 100% of our time not working - yet still we seem to get things done.
Having said that this kind of unnecessary work (our research suggests it is is between 25 & 50% of all work - take our speed test and find out how you compare) is a massive drain on individuals and organizations. It is potentially a win:win to get rid of these as people don’t like doing unnecessary work and organizations don’t need it doing.
Our view is that unnecessary work in matrix organizations is often caused by old fashioned people management techniques that were developed for much simper times and no longer work in today’s much more complex companies.
We are working with several clients in campaigns with a systematic process to save a day per week- by cutting out this unnecessary work. Check out our speed lead process or contact us to find out more.
Have you seen our matrix cartoon on lack of communication?
Have you tried any specific methods to cut out this unnecessary workload?


3 responses so far ↓
1 Communications overload - save a day per week | Smoking // Apr 17, 2008 at 10:01 am
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2 Marsha Egan // May 1, 2008 at 11:04 pm
Another interesting statistic is that it takes the average person an average of 4 minutes to recover from an interruption. In other words, no matter how long or short the interruption, the average time it take to get back in the zone of what you were doing prior to the interruption is 4 minutes.
Email is one of the biggest interrupters we’ve seen, with some workers getting more than 100 emails daily.
If a worker “looks up” when that ding or flash occurs ONLY 15 times a day, the interruption recovery time is 4 minutes x 15 or 60 minutes. And you wonder where all the time is going???
One solution is to turn off automatic send/receive or shut down email when you are working on something. And for heaven’s sake, turn off the flash and the ding! Go in and grab your email when YOU want to, not when it wants you to…
3 Kevan Hall // May 5, 2008 at 9:45 am
I agree completely. I have even seen people in one to one conversations turning in response to a ding from an arrived email and forgetting the person they were talking too.
We should control the technology not the other way around
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