Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Long v/s Hard work - Azara Feroz Sayed

This article secernates my ideas about hard work.
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2007/09/labor-day.html
It disturbs the secure world of work alcholic me. Read on...

The meaning of hard work in a manual economy, without the leverage of machines and organizations, meant producing more. In the old days, we could measure how much grain someone harvested or how many pieces of steel he made. Hard work in manual economy, meant more work, more production.

Now we work "long", even a workaholic, doesn't works very "hard" at all. "long" and "hard" are now two different things. The future is about work that's really and truly hard, not time-consuming. Hard work is about the kind of work that requires us to push ourselves, not just punch the clock.

It's hard work to make difficult emotional decisions, such as quitting a job and setting out on your own. It's hard work to invent a new system, service, or process that's remarkable. It's hard work to tell your boss that he's being intellectually and emotionally lazy. It's easier to stand by and watch the company fade into oblivion. It's hard work to tell senior management to abandon something that it has been doing for a long time in favor of a new and apparently risky alternative. It's hard work to make good decisions with less than all of the data.

Today, working hard is about taking apparent risk. Not a crazy risk like betting the entire company on an untested product. No, an apparent risk: something that the competition (and your coworkers) believe is unsafe but that you realize is far more conservative than sticking with the status quo.

None of the people who are racking up amazing success stories and creating cool stuff are doing it just by working more hours than you are. And I hate to say it, but they're not smarter than you either. They're succeeding by doing hard work.

Some people (a precious few, so far) are realizing that this temporary recession is the best opportunity that they've ever had. They're working harder than ever -- mentally -- and taking all sorts of emotional and personal risks that are bound to pay off. Hard work is about risk. It begins when you deal with the things that you'd rather not deal with: fear of failure, fear of standing out, fear of rejection. Hard work is about training yourself to leap over this barrier, tunnel under that barrier, drive through the other barrier. And, after you've done that, to do it again the next day.

The big insight: The riskier your (smart) coworker's hard work appears to be, the safer it really is. It's the people having difficult conversations, inventing remarkable products, and pushing the envelope (and, perhaps, still going home at 5 PM) who are building a recession-proof future for themselves.

So tomorrow, when you go to work, really sweat. Your time is worth the effort

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