Multi-Tasking: Doing many
things to achieve nothing
Friends who stopped texting me every
time they eat Indian food + Teresa,
If you find yourself home on Friday
night because you have Ebola, are still recovering from the fallout of
globalization, or you realize you’re
not 22, you can treat yourself to an hour of Shark Tank. The premise of this
show revolves around decent and hard-working individuals who present their
start-up ideas and then proceed to get mercilessly bitch slapped by five
billionaires who use the show as a replacement for therapy (i.e. Adam Smith’s wet dream).
The one common theme you hear from all
five investors is the creed of multitasking. Marc Cuban, a judge on the show
and owner of the Dallas Mavericks, claims, “I work 20 hours a day and I’m usually doing three things at
the same time.” The head Grinch on the show, Mr. Wonderful, proudly stated in
one episode, “You have to work very fast, give up every other hobby you have,
juggle thirty things at once, and then maybe you might make it.” The notion
that multi-tasking is the key ingredient in success isn’t confined merely to
the egalitarian class. In a survey by the Washington Post in July 2014,
over 78% of Americans believe that if they aren’t taking on multiple tasks at once they will lose their job.
Another report put out by the Harvard Business Review last summer noted that
out of 300,000 job postings put up in 2015, an astonishing 82% demanded
prospective employees excel at
multi-tasking.
Even with the new push for mindfulness
(our main subject for my next blog), Americans are more enamored with
multi-tasking. Speed evangelicals argue that a swifter and more hands-full
approach to life leads to more time, better productivity, and greater
prosperity. However, evidence shows that all three of these notions couldn’t be
further from the truth. There are two prime examples that prove meticulous
planning over multi-tasking proves to be a superior method.
Even in today’s digital and app-service age, working
professionals are finding it harder to allocate time to all the endeavors they
value. In a CNBC Europe survey taken in March 2015, only 4% of millennials, in
the world, felt they have experienced a day where they accomplished completing
all the tasks they wanted (tasks included beanie shopping, beach selfie
Instagramming, and wearing one’s
Amnesty International sweatshirt they bought at Whole Foods).
Correspondents on the financial network suggested
the quick fix solution is juggling more things at once. But wellness researchers
disagree. MIT neuroscientist Earl Miller argues “our brains are not wired to
multitask well…when people think they’re multitasking, they’re
actually just switching from one task to another very rapidly. And every time
they do, there’s a cognitive cost.”
Ariana Huffington, the first deportee
under a Donald Trump administration, believes that trying to work on multiple
projects at once increases error and leads to a counter-psychological effect
that elevates a human’s
desire to achieve more in the current time period.
In her books, “Thrive” and “Sleep Revolution” the former Greek blogger chronicles numerous
examples in the investment banking industry where young professionals are
pushed to take on more tasks, adopt “volunteer” initiatives, and handle requests from multiple managers.
After the 2008 financial crisis, numerous reports highlighted many investment
bankers missing simple mathematical errors, forgetting to place risk-averse trades,
missing client meetings, and being too tired to provide employer feedback.
Since the Reagan “greed is good”
era in the early 80’s, the number of suicides in high pressure jobs (banking,
hospital care, police work) has skyrocketed by 256%.
The perils of multi-tasking are not
simply confined to the finance industry. Recent reports out of Silicon Valley
are proving even the smartest IT professionals are getting crushed by an
over-load of work. TechCrunch reports more than 38% of support services at start-ups
are hiring more workers and eliminating the on-call component of one’s job. Zenefits, a once promising
start-up in SF, folded after poor management decisions. For starters, Zenefitis
boasted that their managers were skilled professionals who were jacks-of-all
trades (except for the skill of running a profitable business #boomroasted) and
oversaw a number of departments.
In 2014, I had the opportunity to
interview with this company. Back then Zenefits had a staff of over 200 people,
but there was no receptionist to meet me and show me to my interview. After 30
minutes, two people rushed in to ask me questions and apologized because they
had just learned they were on the interviewing committee.
The common pushback from those who
defend a busier lifestyle argue it leads to a more productive society. But does
it?
Now there many methods and metrics to
measure productivity. However, there is only one word to call someone who
mentions the word productivity in a conversation and that word is “douchebag”.
Every year, Forbes magazine ranks the productivity levels of 180 countries. In
the past ten years, America has never been ranked as the most productive nation in the world.
But this shouldn’t’t be a surprise. Behavioral psychologist
Daniel Kahneman notes that the human brain shuts down if they are in same arena
for more than seven hours. Despite the illusion of our workforce duties being
more dynamic, we know this to be false. It should be no surprise that the
monotony of an average blue AND white collar job leads to an eventual decline
in cognitive thinking.
While many multi-tasker enthusiasts
acknowledge the mental trade-offs of juggling a number of projects, they
forcefully argue that this burden bears its fruit in economic gains. This is
another unfounded myth. Again, there are a number of metrics to measure
economic success. For this blog we will focus on the quantitative calculation
of a worker in the developed world and the lead sectors that lubricate the
global economy.
The OECD (Organization for Economic
Co-Operation Development), ranks the financial output of the standard worker in
the developed world. If you’re
gotten this far in the blog, it will come as no surprise that the OECD’s statistical ranking places the United
States at 18th. Despite US laborers working more hours than any
other industrialized nation, we still are less economically productive than
four nations who cap their work weeks at 35 hours.
Even if you qualify that as an objective
measure we can still point to the two aforementioned sectors, finance and
technology, as an economic reason NOT to engage in excessive multi-tasking.
Since 2008, finance and technology have been the only industries in America
that have grown in number of employees and capital allocation. Both of these
industries have been developed by former McKinsey and Bain consultants who
pride themselves in engaging in the multi-tasking arena. However, both of these
have succumbed to the short-sighted thinking of corporate strategic consulting.
While these two industries were the
growth darlings in the early 10’s,
gains in tech and finance are starting to slowly erode. In the past five years,
The Economist points out that the number of hedge funds have dropped by nearly
54% and the number of tech companies have swindled from 7,200 to 4,500.
Twitter, once considered to be a tech giant, has yet to make a profit and is in
the process of down-sizing. Financial gurus tab this as smart fiscal
consolidation, but this statement contains more bullshit than a Donald Trump
African-American outreach speech. From the laymen’s perspective you probably couldn’t name a
successful merger in the past five years and you would be right. A staggering
82% of mergers in the finance and technology field have been deemed fiscal
failures.
So this begs the question, why should we
adopt a mindset that has dulled our creative ability, tarnished our overall
mental state, and provided us with no fiscal gain? The answer is that we
shouldn’t.
Many of you would argue that a society
with a systematic way of life in the corporate world is a hipster’s heaven that would not be possible.
However, there are many moments in history that would prove you wrong. In the
course of researching for this blog, I found hundreds of large scale projects
from the earliest construction of temples in Asia to Portugal’s policy for decriminalization as evidence
that meticulous planning trumps multi-tasking. Still, I will only focus on two
projects that are near to my heart.
When tracing the roots of the tech
industry one looks back to a top-notch institution in Silicon Valley. Known as
the birthplace of Google, Tesla, and Yahoo!, Stanford University has been
deemed the prime incubator for technological innovation. You’d think that the founders of this
institution would be proud of the multi-tasking of the tech sector, but you
would be wrong.
In honor of his son who passed from
typhoid, railroad tycoon and former California governor, Leland Stanford sought
out to build one of California’s
first non-denominational and co-ed universities. In 1891 Stanford opened its
doors to its first students and in 1893 Leland Stanford died. The school
struggled financially for several decades after Mr. Stanford’s death. Local papers decried this
university as “academic boondoggle” and an “educational nightmare that couldn’t
teach Japanese immigrants how to use chopsticks.”
But, Leland’s model was different in one
key way. The former Governor purposely built an institution where roles and
responsibilities were more segmented than any other college at that time. The
Silicon Valley-based campus aspired to build programs where teachers
would solely teach. Leland and his predecessors prohibited professors taking on
side projects. Stanford University was the first academic institution to carve
out programs that focused on endowments, creating public-private partnerships,
and student mentorship programs.
When many academic institutions folded
or increased tuition during the Great Depression and in the financial crisis of
2008, Stanford did neither. Admittedly, the university’s current core goals and student body
deserve a fair amount of criticism, but no one can deny that Stanford has built
the foundation to be a long lasting elite institution.
While this blog has focused on sectors
shaping our current society, we humans are also affected by the places we
visit. For me that would be the Taj Mahal.
On May 15th, 1632, during
John McCain’s sweet 16
birthday party, Shah Jahan, a Moghul emperor in Northern India, commissioned
the construction of a monument in honor of his
wife. Architects of the romantic shrine estimated it would be completed
in five years. The Taj Mahal’s
final complex was built in 1652 and Mr. Jahan deemed the shrine to be finally
finished in 1665. What was the hold up?
During the initial stage of development,
two architects were tasked with developing the budgets, gathering workers, and
developing blue prints for each corridor of the Taj Mahal. But in 1637, Shah Jahan halted construction and hired five more
individuals to oversee the project. Unknown to him at the time, Mr. Jahan not
only created what would be one of the Seven Wonders of the World but also a new
job, the project manager.
Mr. Jahan’s
meticulous and methodical approach paid off. Despite India’s rampant government corruption, fiscal
imprudence, and horrendous environmental record that would make Leonardo
Dicaprio weep organically filtered tears, the Taj Mahal has largely been immune
to all these problems (for nearly 400 years!).
Mr. Jahan was such a forward thinker
that in the mid 1600’s, he purchased
more land for public transportation. The Taj Mahal has never been attacked nor
has it been the center of property debate. The commission has always funneled donations back to maintain the
building and no government official in Agra, where the Taj Mahal is located,
has EVER been implicated in a money laundering scheme.
With technology, constant public
criticism, and shareholders having a greater stake in how businesses run I will
admit society may no longer produce a new elite institution or a historic
monument. But that doesn’t mean we can’t recalibrate our lifestyle. As someone who recently turned 30, I
understand that even daily activities once deemed effortless have become ever
more arduous (i.e. stretching). However, nothing is stopping us from slowing
down and prioritizing one task at a time. If anything, take your cue from the
hosts of Shark Tank. In Season 3, all five “Sharks” demand to cut down on pitch
meetings and restructure the show where they analyze one investment at a time.
When asked about the change in format,
Mr. Cuban replied, “When you look at one thing at a time, you’re more focused, you learn quicker, and
you just make better decisions.”
Multi-tasking IS my job, and it's why I'm bad at my job. In a heated rage, I stopped keeping a running tab of my to-do list and wrote each task on an individual post-it. I then littered my desk with these post-its. Why? To dare anyone to come and ask to add another thing to my plate. And it works. People look at my desk and balk. They're afraid. They should be. It's terrifying.
ReplyDeleteIn a perfect world that I have not yet been able to live in, I would take just one of these post-its, place it in front of me, and focus until it was done.
And then I would go eat Indian food and tell all my friends + Shounak about it.
T, no need to hide behind the "Unknown" Label
ReplyDelete