Iโm looking forward to the day that my boss will say to me, โGood job slacking off today!โ Donโt believe that day will come? Mark my words, itโs possible. Companies are starting to see an idleness as more than just wasting time. It helps solve problems, foster creativity and reduce stress, among other things.
But Iโm getting ahead of myself. First, letโs talk about how weโve come to over glorify overworking.
The Primary Motivation to Work More
I wonโt sugarcoat it: we work because weโre scared. The recent shake-up in the economy has rattled us up a bit. When you see people getting fired and downsized left and right, it puts the fear of God in you so you work more. After all, a hard worker wonโt get fired, right?
Tech has also been an enabler of sorts towards our compulsion to work. Itโs blurred the lines between personal time and work time. I used to think that all these new innovations would lead to more fooling around at work but to my surprise, itโs work thatโs actually invaded our pleasure time. I guess itโs driven by another fear: the fear of missing out. You donโt want to miss out on promotions, on attention, on praise for a job well done.
A Case for Slacking Off
Iโll ask you one thing though: is doing more work equal to more success in your current line of work? If it is, then youโre welcome to skip all of this nonsense and get back to work. But Iโm thinking itโs not. Youโre not working right now because youโre on a clock, youโre working to produce results for the company. Slacking off produces results, believe it or not. How? Well, for starters:
1) Slacking off leads to creativity
The biggest ideas come from people who have the most free-time. Take our biggest thinker/slacker of them all: Albert Einstein. He got his big idea while slacking off in the patent office, the perfect occupation that let his mind wander (cushy government job often lets you do that). One thing led to another and bam! Theory of Special Relativity.
When youโre lazing around, your mind is not focused and so it jumps around from idea to idea. Itโs less like a basketball being passed around and more like TP-ing an apartment, connecting each thought with a 2-ply neural network. With each connection is the possibility of a new idea, a new theory or a new painting. No wonder great slackers like Picasso and Dali were able to produce amazing art.
So we know slacking off makes you more creative, which also means thatโฆ
2) Slacking off helps solve big problems
Every business has problems and youโll always feel that you need to be in the thick of things to squelch these problems to keep the business running. But all of these are small problems and while fixing them is great and all, it doesnโt move the needle much in terms of your career or your business.
What you need is to solve big problems which mean taking time to process the big picture. Youโll need to do some serious slacking off for that to happen. Suddenly, an executive retreat doesnโt seem such a waste of time, after all.
3) Slacking off reduces stress and depression
To paraphrase a great rapper: moโ work, moโ problems. The more problems you face, the more stressed you get. Stress leads to all sorts of other illnesses like high blood pressure, depression, and anxiety attacks.
One six-year study found that among 2,000 UK workers, those who worked more than 11 hours a day had double the risk of depression versus those who worked the normal 8 hours and less. A strong case as any to slack off more often.
4) Slacking makes you more a better performer
Nope, I didnโt get that backward. I have data to back it up. Ernst & Young did some research and they found that for every 10 hours people were away from the office, their employee reviews bumped up 8% the following year.
If I were to hazard a guess, itโs probably because, in the long run, slacking off makes you a more well-rounded worker. A career is like a marathon, you canโt win it by sprinting towards every short-term goal you see. Itโs steady work that creates progress and you can only have that if you pace yourself and slack off once in a while.
How to Slack Off
Itโs a bit weird that I need to write this part, but I guess some of us need to know how to slack off. Slacking off is an art. Too much and you drop off into the cliff of laziness, never to return. Too little and you end up being extremely productive, but in the wrong direction.
1) Take 1-2 days off and often
Some of us collect vacation days like Pokemon. Donโt do this! Youโll never have enough time to use all of those vacation days in one go. Itโs not just that youโll miss out a lot from work with a two-week vacation spree. The guilt of not working during that time will probably ruin your vacation as well.
Taking two days off seems about right. Itโs probably why weekends are precisely that long. And like weekends, you also need to take your days off often, not just to prevent it from piling up but also to maximize youโre slacking off potential.
2) Donโt be a work miser during vacay
Itโs okay to work a bit during your vacation but donโt overdo it. Itโs a vacation primarily because youโre not working. Might as well just plop into your office chair if youโre going to spend 2 hours on your laptop anyway.
I know youโll be anxious away from the office so you can check in twice a day. No more than that though. Donโt worry, itโs highly unlikely that anything company-shattering will happen when youโre gone. Of course, it goes without saying that you have to turn off work notifications too. Canโt have that constant buzzing ruining your slacker buzz.
3) Donโt do things that overwork your brain
The point of the vacation is to ponder about of your goals, dreams, and career. That canโt happen if you spend all your time off in brainy things like making business plans or reading training manuals.
Relax, take a stroll. Or take a literal hike. If you want to stay productive, fix some stuff in the house. Go to a bed and breakfast. Or maybe you shouldโฆ
4) Do things with other people
When youโre on vacation, take this time to bond with people you love as well as share your ideas. The free flow of ideas is great for expanding your perspective, especially with people who arenโt in the same line of work as you.
Their ideas will be fresh and a bit contrarian but donโt discard them just yet. Think about their responses and who knows, it might lead to a new breakthrough.
5) Bring a notebook
Or whatever you are comfortable with for taking down notes. Ideas can spring up anywhere: at the beach, on the trail, during dinner. Donโt try to clog up your brain and remember it, jot it down.
That way, you make room for more thoughts. Donโt worry, your brain still has that idea at the back. You just need to have a backup just in case the front part forgets.
Slacking Off: the Ultimate Productivity Tool
At the end of the day, you do work not to fill time but to produce results. To produce results, your mind needs to be in the right mode to provide solutions. Slacking off gets you in the right mode and so yeah, slacking off does actually produce results.