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Never Check E-Mail In the Morning: And Other Unexpected Strategies for Making Your Work Life Work

Never Check E-Mail In the Morning: And Other Unexpected Strategies for Making Your Work Life Work
By Julie Morgenstern

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Product Description

Named one of the five best business books by Cathie Black, president of Hearst Magazines, in The Wall Street Journal

The New York Times bestselling author, Oprah's favorite organizing expert, and America's number one problem solver presents a revolutionary book. It will help readers achieve the seemingly impossible: boost value and job security without sacrificing personal life. Morgenstern teaches innovative "grab and go" solutions that can be processed in as few as fifteen minutes to dramatically improve performance and efficiency, including:

  • Beware of multitasking. Scattering your efforts makes for a longer day.
  • Dance near the revenue line. Making or saving money is where your greatest
  • value lies.
  • Crunch your container. Shorten your workday by thirty minutes and you will
  • get more done.
  • Trust your truth. Never undervalue your unique self, skills, and point of view.
  • If you've ever wondered, Is it me or is it them? Julie Morgenstern's practical "inside out" approach will help you diagnose the source of each workplace problem and solve it quickly.


    Product Details

    • Amazon Sales Rank: #62172 in Books
    • Published on: 2005-09-27
    • Original language: English
    • Number of items: 1
    • Binding: Paperback
    • 272 pages

    Features


    Editorial Reviews

    Review
    "Until you change the way you work at things, the things you work at will never change. Julie teaches how to change those things and become more energetic and efficient at work. This book is a must for anyone who loves to work."-- Pat Riley, president, the Miami Heat

    "Written in the same to-the-point approach as her Organizing from the Inside Out, this volume...makes a whole lot of sense [and] is practical and applicable to the real world." -- Publishers Weekly

    Ken Blanchard, coauthor of The One Minute Manager® and The On-Time, On-Target ManagerThis book is brimming with great ideas for making our working lives better. And when work is working for us, that's when we can serve ourselves and others best.

    Brian Tracy, Author of Time PowerWow! What a great book. Here in one place you learn how to get organized and get more done faster than you ever thought possible. This is a handbook for personal success.

    About the Author
    Julie Morgenstern, founder and owner of Task Masters, is the author of the New York Times bestseller Organizing from the Inside Out and Time Management from the Inside Out. Her column, "Getting Organized," appears monthly in O, The Oprah Magazine. A speaker, media expert, and corporate spokesperson, she lives in New York City.

    Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
    Introduction

    Welcome to the New World of Work

    Rita

    Rita is hearty and tenacious, with a powerful presence and an air of resolve. A brilliant strategic thinker with years of experience and an eye for details, she takes tremendous pride in her work. Upon starting her job as vice president of strategic marketing at a premier ad agency, she was exuberant. Her fresh perspective helped her make a visible contribution right away: within six months of her coming on board, the agency broke into a whole new market, landed four huge accounts, and created major buzz in the industry. By the end of her first year, the company had won two prestigious awards and was beginning to attract the brightest designers and salespeople in the business.

    Rita loved her job and was great at it. Her coworkers and boss appreciated her efforts, and Rita felt confident and in control. Her daily activities provided an outlet to showcase her talents -- and getting the work done left her with feelings of satisfaction, fulfillment, and accomplishment. In a phrase: Work was working. Sounds great, doesn't it?

    At some point, she can't remember when, Rita began to drown. Her to-do list got longer and longer, as did her days. Her family would call, sometimes at ten at night, to find her still toiling at her desk. Rita was snared in all breeds of daily details and drudgery -- solving tedious production problems and assembling complicated advertising reports. Meetings devoured her day. Sorting through her in-box required a Herculean effort. Her office became a Hoover Dam -- piles of work so literally congested her space that what went in might never come out.

    No matter how long or how hard Rita worked, she could never get to the bottom of her mile-long to-do list. Rita felt sidetracked by work that didn't draw on her talents and strengths. By the time she called me in for help, her confidence had waned, her performance had plummeted, her brain was fried. Overwhelmed and pulled in a million directions at once, she asked, what more could she possibly do? In the hustle and bustle of the modern-day workplace, she felt stuck, unproductive, and hopeless. Frustrated and discouraged, Rita quietly wondered, "Is it me, or is it them?"

    I am in the business of untangling messes. When a client calls me in to help sort out his work life, his head is usually swimming; he feels wound in a big knot. Like Rita, he feels a sense of responsibility but is unsure where he leaves off and where his company or coworkers come in. When work isn't working, the perplexing and commanding puzzle we are all faced with is, Is it me or is it them? Who, or what, is causing the meltdown? We wonder whether we're the ones who've somehow changed and are slipping, or if the work itself really has become impossible. Is there something we can do to correct the situation, or is it truly beyond our control?

    It's not easy to succeed, much less thrive, in today's world of work. That's everyone's challenge. Change and speed are the orders of the day. The workplace is leaner, more competitive, and less secure. You may feel lucky just to have a job, let alone have time for a personal life. Workloads inflate to absurd proportions, a situation that is neither rewarding nor enjoyable nor puts you in your best light. It's easy to be gradually pulled into tasks that don't match your job description, make use of your particular expertise, or coincide with your goals. You long for the days when you could spend quality time with your family, get to the gym, feel relaxed during your time off. Like Rita, you may feel downtrodden and burned out. Work has become anything but fulfilling.

    When Work Is Working

    No matter what the industry or economic climate, there is a universal definition of when work is working.

    Happiness at work involves liking what you're doing and being good at it -- feeling appreciated, in control, successful, and in balance. When you get your work done, or at least conquer your most important tasks, you finish your day with a victorious sense of accomplishment. When you leave the office on time, and not three hours into your family's evening, or after breaking plans to go out with friends, you feel in control.

    Does that seem like an impossibility?

    It's not.

    There are new skills and techniques needed to excel in the new world of work, and this book is dedicated to teaching them to you. My goal is to help you learn these techniques from the inside out -- so that they become a part of you and the way you approach your work.

    The Nine Competencies

    During my fifteen years as a professional organizer, I've helped clients take control of their work lives in every industry and environment imaginable: publishing, law, government agencies, manufacturing, newsrooms, sports teams, and hospitals. I've consulted with executives and their assistants, salespeople and their managers, professors, librarians, graphic designers, and financial planners.

    What I've found through my work with clients, and through careful observation of people on the job, is that the ability to thrive in the new world of work encompasses a very consistent set of skills. Together, mastering these "competencies" offer the key to surviving -- and thriving -- in the new work environment:

    These skills will enable you to achieve the seemingly impossible -- to boost your value and increase your job security, while still having time to have a personal life.

    Recognizing the importance of these aptitudes, understanding their implications, and mastering the strategies behind each one will help you to excel in the tough new world of work, whether it's "you" or "them."

    In unstable times, these competencies will ensure that you are, at the very least, the last man (or woman) standing. In flush times, they will help you seek, capture, and retain the perfect opportunity.

    Competency 1 Embrace Your Work/Life Balance

    Competency 2 Develop an Entrepreneurial Mindset

    Competency 3 Choose the Most Important Tasks

    Competency 4 Create the Time to Get Things Done

    Competency 5 Control the Nibblers

    Competency 6 Organize at the Speed of Change

    Competency 7 Master Delegation

    Competency 8 Work Well with Others

    Competency 9 Leverage Your Value

    The skills seem straightforward, but can be hard to implement. There are many obstacles -- some are internal (you) and some are external (them). But whether the problem is you or them, you'll come to learn that the solution always lies within you.

    At its core, this book is about your relationship to your work, combining psychology and practical techniques to help you take control, accomplish more, and be happy. People at every stage of their career can benefit from every one of the competencies, not just a few. It's a book that can be read, learned from, and then referred back to every time you get thrown off balance. This is a book that should be carried with you for the rest of your working life -- no matter what position, industry, or circumstance you find yourself in.

    How to Use This Book

    Self-Assessment

    This brief quiz and diagnostic tool is essential reading for everyone. In less than thirty minutes, you'll get a benchmark score for measuring your progress as you work your way through the book. In addition, you'll begin to diagnose the obstacles to your performance (Is it you, or is it them?), zero in on problem areas, and identify which chapters in the book you may want to start with, or focus on.

    Competencies

    Each competency is a world unto itself -- meant to be studied, mulled over, and plucked from. Each time you read a chapter, you are likely to find something new and practical, and in many cases life-changing. Mastering the competencies is an inside-out process. Small changes in your thinking or behavior can drastically alter the timbre of any situation. The adoption of even one technique, within any one competency, will make a huge impact on your work life.

    The order of the competencies mirrors the individual consulting services I provide, starting on the inside, at the most basic, personal level, and moving on to more complex issues of working relationships and the job itself. Organizing yourself is always the starting point, because by boosting your own productivity and abilities first, you gain the confidence and leverage to tackle more difficult issues.

    You can choose to march through the competencies in the order I've presented them, or skip around, zeroing in on what you need at any given moment. But once you have read a competency, give yourself ample time to sit with, practice, and integrate the lessons.

    Real-life Anecdotes

    Rita is the first of several characters we're going to follow as they wind their way through the sticky wicket of the modern workplace. Each character represents a client I've worked with (although the details have been fictionalized to spare their identities), and illustrates the real challenges we've faced and triumphed over together. As you read each competency, think about which characters you identify with and how their breakthroughs may inspire you.

    Yes, But...Boxes

    Scattered throughout the book are classic obstacles to implementing the skills -- individual situations, or ways of thinking, that will make it difficult for you to take action. I've included the most common points of resistance, and a diagnosis of whether the barrier is internal (it's you) or external (it's them). Practical solutions are provided to overcoming the hurdles in both cases.

    Sidebars to Managers

    Though the focus of this book is on what the individual can do to improve his own work situation, many of the techniques can be adopted to become departmental policies and practices. Managers are in a position to change systems. Scattered throughout the book are sidebars with ideas on how to convert these individual principles into departmental or company-wide policies to help your entire staff work more efficiently.

    Unraveling the Knots


    Customer Reviews

    The Best Book on Work Place Productivity on the Market5
    The last reviewer must have woken up on the wrong side of the bed the morning he decided to review this book, because even the cover of Never Check Email in the Morning states that it was "Originally Published as Making Work Work"...and does it really matter anyway?!

    I can honestly say that Ms. Morgensterns' book has had a huge impact on my life...at work AND on my time off. First and foremost, her advice about never checking email the first hour of the day is genius. My first thought...wishful thinking. Being in sales I was initally hesitant to believe that this was possible in my position, and that I would lose out on client opportunities if I didn't check email immediately. But when I actually understood what my email addiction was keeping me from, was when I finally decided to give it a try. And I was AMAZED at the results. Because I am now able to use my first hour on strategic planning, my sales and client retention have actually increased!

    But don't get me wrong, this book has much more to offer than email advice. In fact, any one of her "grab and go" strategies will directly increase your productivity and improve your relationship to your job. More than anything, her simple strategies allow you to take back control of your workday, which in this fast paced world seems to have slipped away. And possibly more importantly, she recognizes the need for a work-life balance, giving us permission to leave work at work and use our time off to refuel ourselves with what's most important to us.

    I thoroughly recommend this book! It will not disappoint.

    A different approach to organizing for efficiency5
    I read this book with some trepidation since I've read lots of organizing and efficiency books over the years. However, I was pleasantly surprised by this one, since it offers nine "competencies" that all should master, and number one is "Embracing your work/life balance". With this as the foundation, she builds all other competencies on this one. So, when discussing competency three (Choose the Most Important Tasks) or competency five (Control the Nibblers), they aren't described as in typical efficiency/organization books. Typically, these types of tasks are encouraged to allow us to 'get more done', but in this book, taking control of these types of issues is encouraged to allow us to achieve the ultimate goal of work/life balance, instead of making us more efficient cogs in the corporate wheel.

    A nice approach, and well done.

    do what works best2
    Lets start with the bad. The book is mostly stuff you've already heard or is completely obvious to you. Morgenstern's advice for organizing information is to 'do what works best for you'. Gee, thanks for the hot tip.

    The book starts with an address to those who work far too many hours. I work an average number of hours but if I can be more efficient I'd like to see if I can make that number smaller. So I read the first part and didn't really get anything from it. As the book progresses she gets into how time is wasted and how to avoid the things and people that waste your time. This is the heart of the book's message because time is our most precious commodity. That's why I found it counterintuitive that the author's language was... far from concise; I was surprised by the amount of text devoted to the biographies of her clients. When you say something like, "meetings can be a large waste of time," we understand what you mean. You don't need to illustrate that point by telling us about someone who worked a lot of hours and attended many pointless meetings. Remember, our time is precious and this isn't exactly Literature; you would think Morgenstern would be more conscious of how much of our time she's taking.

    Toward the latter half of the book Morgenstern meanders into a topic that begins to contradict her earlier ideas. When she was describing situations that waste your time she hit on the idea of other employees wasting your time. But towards the end she gives us examples of people who don't make enough time for other employees and so one can only conclude that the unifying message is don't give too much time but also not too little. This is in all capacities the same advice for how to organize your data: 'do what works best'. So in the end Morgenstern hasn't really come up with solutions. She addresses a variety of different problems people have but her advice in the end is always the same: pick your head up, figure out what's important and do it without wasting your time. Again, not a very profound message and not one that should take 272 pages to explain.

    Now on to the slightly more positive. The title of the book is quite provocative and an excellent advertising scheme. Sorry to those of you who didn't realize it's the same book and now own two. The title can be explained as follows: If the first thing you do in the morning is check your email then there are any number of ways that you'll be diverted from your critical tasks to deal with all the little things your inbox has for you. Email creates a false sense of accomplishment for people because in the span of an hour or so you're likely to deal with a large number of different issues (likely half of them are personal) and so you feel like you've accomplished quite a bit but now that it's almost time for lunch you really haven't done much at all (including writing a review for this book on amazon). You've been in the office but you probably haven't done anything that makes money for your company - anything worth telling your boss about.

    Lets face it. For a number of jobs not checking your email in the morning is absurd. The underlying idea, however, is that at work you spend too much time multitasking and not enough time getting that really important job done. Multitasking slows total productivity and it hurts the quality of each individual piece of work. The real skill to learn is to avoid clicking that forwarded link for a youtube video.

    So Morgenstern recommends that you do one thing at a time and that you plan when to do these things based on when you have energy during the day. She also tells you to let others know your schedule so they'll be more accommodating. This again, depending on the job may be totally unrealistic but I guess if you're in charge you can set whatever rules you like.

    If anything in this review is unclear to you then perhaps you should buy the book but if it all makes sense to you then you're better off looking elsewhere. You're welcome.