It was only fairly recently that I cracked the myth of multitasking,
and found an attitude toward it that I am comfortable with.
These days, I see it this way. A housewife
(if you’ll forgive the 1950s stereotype that follows – but the idea of the
multitasking superwoman is perfect for this purpose) needs to cook dinner,
tidy up the lounge of toys and change a nappy. She leaves some sauce simmering
on the stove, picks up a couple of soft toys and throws them in the toy chest,
then takes care of the baby’s nappy. She returns child to crib, washes her
hands, picks up the books that were on the floor and slides them back into the bookshelf.
She returns to the stove, adds some basil, reduces the heat and goes to answer
the doorbell. This is the classic stereotype of multitasking. That skill, much
maligned by the stereotype useless male – unable to sit upright and breath in
and out at the same time – that results in incredible productivity.
But this is not really multitasking.
At no stage was the housewife
engaged in two tasks at once, nor should she have been. True multitasking would
have involved changing the nappy, while using the baby’s legs to stir the
sauce and kicking the toys and books one by one toward the place they were
supposed to go. The result? Burned feet, nappies on the stove, books nowhere
near the bookshelf and a lot of mess to clean up.
Thus stands the multitasking
myth. Because what you’re really talking about is not the ability to complete multiple
tasks at once, but the ability to switch between tasks effectively, without
hindering the effectiveness of your contribution to any of them. This is what you should focus on improving if you want to be a multitasker. How can you flip between jobs productively? Your working routine is bound to require it; nobody's working day ever allows them to focus on one thing only, but they are seldom required to actually do two things at once.
So multitasking remains one of
the biggest myths in the modern workplace, whether that work place is an
office, a construction site or a household.
That’s not to say it doesn’t
exist, or that it can’t be done. There are number of ways that you can
multitask effectively, and putting some thought into structuring your day to
allow for these real examples of multitasking is what will help to make you
more efficient.
Here are a few things you can do
that constitute real multitasking.
Schedule phone conversations when you’re driving (hands free please.)
My car has some clever green tooth
or blue eye thing that means I receive calls from a button on my steering
wheel. But a $10 earpiece has much the same effect.If you have an hour long commute
involving traffic (and if you’re working on engineering jobs in Houston for
example, I know you do) you can make it work for you. It doesn’t have to be
business; it can be anything that will save you time earlier or later in the
day. Sit on hold with whichever bank is currently abusing your custom. Call
Mom. If it’s something you would have to find other time to do otherwise, it’s
saving you time. (Make sure you are complying with all legal responsibilities for safety reasons.)
Combine Audiobooks with basic physical tasks
Again, the car is good. But so is
the bath, the kitchen while you’re cooking dinner (one of my responsibilities
at our place – who’s 1950’s now?) or the treadmill at the gym. You don’t have to
read, to get that book read. It was a
big day for me when I realized that iPods weren’t just for music. Audiobooks
(that you pay for) or podcasts (that you don’t) offer a vast range of
opportunities to learn and develop during dead time, like when you’re on the
stationary bike, or boiling the water for the pasta.
Combine Conference Calls with almost anything
Be honest. A good number of
conference calls require less than active participation. If I find myself on
one of those calls, I look for the mute button and for something else to do. If
I’m in my office at home, I’ll do a wash load or clean the kitchen. The
combination of mindless physical task and passive mental task is a good one. You
should be careful not to try anything too engaging. It’s difficult to build a PowerPoint
presentation or write a detailed e-mail and stay on top of the subject matter
of a conference call, even if you’re not talking very often. You need to pay
attention, but a physical task that requires no thought should allow that.
Multitasking can only be
effectively achieved with the right balance of mindless physical tasks and
stationary mental ones. As soon as anything blurs the lines on that
distinction, you’re in trouble. Beware overreaching. I suggest you take my word
for the fact that stationary bikes and food preparation are not a good match.
Weddings and audiobooks can also result in injuries of a different kind. Throughout
this process, one must pay attention to what is potentially dangerous, or just
plain inappropriate. It’s easy to offend people if they should get the
impression they don’t have your full attention.
At the end of the day, which task
you are neglecting, and which you are diligently carrying out is all a matter of
perception. As my school chaplain once told me – “You can’t smoke while you
pray. But you can pray, while you smoke.”
Multitasking suggestions and party fouls welcome in your
comments…
Richard Spragg writes on various subjects including business practice, global engineering jobs, global engineering staffing and marketing in the technical sector.
Richard Spragg writes on various subjects including business practice, global engineering jobs, global engineering staffing and marketing in the technical sector.