Food Service Businesses Doing Well in 2021

The COVID-19 pandemic wreaked havoc on the restaurant industry in general. Still, some businesses are coming out stronger than before. Whether because they found their niche with a new customer base…

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Getting More Done Means Understanding the Habit Loop

If you had to make a list of all of the major pain points that product managers around the world deal with every day, efficiency would undoubtedly be right at the top. When a job pulls your attention in so many different directions, it can often seem like there just aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything accomplished.

In truth, that perspective is irrelevant. It’s not about figuring out how to find more hours in a day — it’s about being more efficient with the 24 that you have.

…you also need to address all of the habits and behaviors that you’ve developed that may have lead you down an inefficient path in the first place.

To put it simply, once you’ve acknowledged which habits you want to change you can only do so by returning to the habit framework or “habit loop” that gave birth to them in the first place.

For product managers, the key to getting more done and increasing efficiency doesn’t necessarily involve breaking this habit loop. It involves understanding as much as possible about it so that you can make positive, proactive changes as necessary.

So once you’ve decided that the “routine” part of the habit loop is “checking emails far too often,” you can then begin to figure out what triggers that habit in the first place. What, exactly, is your own unique reminder? Do you have a fear of not being up-to-date on all the various moving parts of a project? Are you afraid you’re going to miss an important development? Do you have a few seconds of free time and you’ve just fallen into the routine of filling that space by checking your email, which itself snowballs into distraction after distraction?

If the reminder for this particular habit involves a fear of missing out on something important, the reward then becomes clear: you’ve confirmed that you are, in fact, up-to-date. But to change the habit, consider changing the routine itself. Instead of checking your email to see if you got an important update from Bob on Project X, get up and walk down to Bob’s office instead. Poke your head through the door and ask “is there anything I need to know?” If there is, you’ll find out about it. If there’s not, you can get back to work — all without checking your email.

The more you understand the routine itself, the easier it will be to identify both the reminder and the reward. At that point, recognizing WHY you’ve developed inefficient habits puts you in a much better position to change them moving forward.

Once you begin to examine things from this perspective, it’s clear that you can change a habit — you just have to understand as much about the habit framework or habit loop as possible.

If you need to get more done in a day, first make a list of all the habits you’ve developed that lead to inefficiency in the first place, then examine them through the structure of the habit loop. Once you know A) what it is you need to change, B) what caused that habit to form in the first place and C) what you’re getting out of it, if anything, it’s easy to take a clinical approach to change in your daily life.

At that point, all you have to do is eliminate the “wheel spinning” habits and double down on the ones that drive your productivity forward. For product managers, this creates an environment where you don’t have to focus on finding new ways to create efficiency every day — efficiency more or less creates itself.

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