What do you do when an em-ployee always does tomorrow what could
be done today? Dan Gould learned the hard way with one early
project manager: "He'd take his laptop home, saying
he'd work," says Gould, 34, "but never get anything
done."
Gould is founder and CEO of Synergy Investment, a Westborough,
Massachusetts-based company that retrofits energy-efficient
lighting. He ran out of energy dealing with the employee and
eventually let him go. "It was frustrating," he says.
One thing is for sure, nagging isn't the answer.
"Putting pressure on procrastinators only backfires,"
says Neil Fiore, president of Self-Leadership Seminars in Berkeley,
California, and author of The Now Habit: A Strategic Plan for
Overcoming Procrastination While Enjoying Guilt-Free Play
(Putnam-Tarcher). "You need a strategic plan."
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Just Do It
We all procrastinate sometimes, and for different reasons. That
procrastinator in the corner cubicle may be a poor time manager.
But procrastination can also be a mind game some employees play to
literally psych themselves out until an assignment looks too
intimidating. Then there are employees who feel burned out or
frustrated and do busy work-cleaning their desks, surfing the Web
and so on-for immediate gratification and a feeling of
competency.
No matter the cause, procrastination is a big productivity drain
that you have to deal with. Habitual procrastinators "have a
planning disability," says Saul E. Rosenberg, a
psychotherapist and executive coach in Corte Madera, California.
"Entrepreneurs have to do a lot of organizing, structuring and
planning [for them], much more than they would do with an ordinary
employee."
So how do you get a procrastinator moving? The first step is to
focus on starting. After all, a procrastinator can't finish
what he or she hasn't started yet.
"A lot of type-A management types tend to focus on the end
point, and that tends to overwhelm people," says Fiore, who
has worked with hundreds of procrastinators, from graduate students
struggling to finish dissertations to people facing five years in
back taxes. "Ask, 'How can I help you get started?'
"
Fiore suggests finding a start time based on the employee's
schedule that offers 30 uninterrupted minutes to build momentum.
Ask the employee to send you an e-mail afterward, just to let you
know he or she got the ball rolling.
Prodding procrastinators, however, doesn't stop with getting
them started. Today, Synergy's employees meet with managers in
weekly one-on-one sessions where they offer progress updates and
list five things they want to achieve in the coming week. "You
can coach at this point," he says. "Everyone can use a
carrot or a stick, or just some advice." In fact, coaching is
critical to getting the procrastinator to the finish line, because
they desperately need a sense of direction, a series of short,
easily attainable deadlines and lots of feedback.
Don't underestimate the power of input. "[Their] own
way is going to give [them] a lot more initiative," Fiore
says. "Give them as many choices as you can."
Dive Right In
Help as much as you can with the performance issues, Rosenberg
says, but don't play psychologist. If the procrastinator's
habits don't improve in a month or two, it's time to see a
work performance specialist or let the person go.
Gould says if he finds himself in another procrastination
situation, he'll deal with it "lightning fast."
"In retrospect I should have set some firm goals and then
gotten rid of him," he says. "You can't motivate the
unmotivated." That attitude has energized Synergy's sales
to more than $5 million in 2001.
Before you lower the hatchet, however, take a look at your own
management style. What you see as an employee procrastination
problem could be your own failure to set realistic goals and
deadlines. Are you overburdening employees with too many
"urgent priority" projects? Not giving them enough time
to finish, given everything else they have to do? If so, cut some
slack and figure out a new system for assigning work.
Finally, it never hurts to learn which tasks employees enjoy and
which ones make them procrastinate. You'll learn who your go-to
people are for certain tasks, and this will help employees see
assignments as a reward rather than a punishment. With some
strategic thinking, you'll find that your employees will be
doing today what could have been put off until tomorrow.
Chris Penttila is a freelance journalist in the Chapel Hill,
North Carolina, area. Contact her at chris@sitting-duck.com.