Tuesday, 2 May 2017

The Management Tip of the Day from Harvard Business Review

 


THE MANAGEMENT TIP OF THE DAY: Harvard Business Review

May 02, 2017

If You Want to Be More Mindful, Practice


Research shows that mindfulness has all sorts of benefits. Yet most of us struggle to find the time to do any sort of mindfulness exercise. Get over the hurdle by running an experiment. Commit to practicing 10 minutes of mindfulness training each day for four weeks. You can listen to a guided meditation or use an app to help you. During the four weeks, try to maintain your focus on a single task at a time and notice when you find your mind drifting — a sign that your brain wishes to multitask. When this happens, mentally shut down all the superfluous tasks entering your thoughts, while maintaining focus on the task at hand. Multitasking keeps your mind full, busy, and under pressure — the opposite of what you want. And be sure to avoid the distraction of checking your inbox first thing in the morning. If you read your email as soon as you wake up, your mind will get sidetracked, and you’ll begin to slide toward being reactive. Schedule a check-in with yourself after two weeks to assess how the experiment is going.

Adapted from "Spending 10 Minutes a Day on Mindfulness Subtly Changes the Way You React to Everything," by Rasmus Hougaard, Jacqueline Carter, and Gitte Dybkjaer


FEATURED PRODUCT

The Power of Little Ideas

by David Robertson with Kent Lineback

“Disrupt yourself or be disrupted!” is the relentless message business leaders hear. Conventional wisdom today says that to survive, companies must move beyond incremental innovation and invest in some form of radical innovation. “The Power of Little Ideas” argues there’s a “third way” that is neither sustaining nor disruptive. This low-risk, high-reward strategy has three key elements: Creating a family of complementary innovations around a product or service; The complementary innovations work together to carry out a single strategy or purpose; Crucially, innovation around the key product does not change the central product in any fundamental way. Aimed at leaders seeking strategies for sustained innovation “The Power of Little Ideas” provides a logical, organic, and enduring third way to innovate.

Buy Now




FEATURED PRODUCT

HBR Guide to Leading Teams Ebook + Tools

Harvard Business Review

Great teams don’t just happen. The HBR Guide to Leading Teams Ebook + Tools, written by team expert Mary Shapiro, offers step-by-step advice, time-tested principles, and practical exercises plus downloadable tools and customizable worksheets to help you get your team working together and producing results. You’ll gain the knowledge you need to pick the right team members and cultivate their skills, set clear, smart goals, facilitate important discussions, foster camaraderie and cooperation, hold people accountable, and address and correct bad behavior.

Buy Now



ADVERTISEMENT


 

No comments:

Post a Comment