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Establishing a Work Cadence

Adventures in Businessing

Release Date: 06/24/2021

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Show Notes

 

  • [0:00:55] Episode Summary | Intro

 

  • Why Every Podcast NEEDS Intro Music
  • Last Episode Communication Recap

 

  • [0:03:13] Kicking off a New Topic

 

  • Making Progress
    • Helping our teams make progress.
    • Establishing a work cadence. 
    • Promoting progress and not business. 
  • The Necessity of Work Cadence
    • We’ve lost seasonality.
      • The modern world lacks cadence and sets your team up for failure and unfair expectations.
      • Black Friday in recent years is a perfect example of this. 
    • We don’t recognize how people’s creativity and work output is seasonal.
      • You can’t be “at an 11” all the time. 
    • Don’t let anyone feel guilty for taking time off. 
      • Not just vacation, but allow your people to switch up what they are working on. 

 

  • [0:08:36] Creating Seasons to Break-up the Work

 

  • This even applies to a given day’s worth of work.

 

  • [0:10:00] Learning From Past Mistakes

 

  • The work shouldn’t inherently dictate the season. 
  • Your “fires” shouldn’t determine and set the standard and expectations for the season. 
  • Consider checking email ONCE a day. 
  • Your team can’t work at the same speed 365 days a year. 
    • We’re literally evolved, as a species, around seasons.

 

  •  [0:12:10] What We’ve Done to Establish Cadence Within Our Company

 

  • Ask yourself, “What is the pulse of the team?”
    • Where are the hills and valleys?
  • Breaking up work into cycles.
    • Then establishing a down time in-between cycles. 
    • Try to ensure your cycles match or work around the cadence of common holiday and vacation times.
      • It’ll never be perfect or match the needs of each and every team member, but it will make a difference as a whole. 
      • Allow PTO/vacation during a cycle, and take that into account when considering expected cycle output. 
        • Don’t punish the team for PTO being utilized.
    • Cycles allow you to pause and celebrate wins with intention. 
      • We STILL do a poor job of celebrating wins...and you probably will too, but don’t settle for it. 
    • Regular stopping points allow you to more easily course correct. 
  • We create a very loose plan for the year as a whole. 
    • We also reevaluate that plan after every cycle concludes (but before the next begins). 
  • Our calendar can be scary to the average business owner…
    • ...but here’s why it shouldn’t be. 
      • On putting people over profits. 
        • Happy people do better work. 
        • How do we create sustainability AND keep people with the company?

 

 

  • Problems are solved in the silence. 
    • In the quiet between the work is generally when problems are solved in more creative ways. 
    • Margins (pauses) make doing the work more productive. 
  • Looking back at the dreadful state of our work lives without cycles and natural stopping points. 

 

  • [0:27:13] What’s Next?

 

  • Planning definitely for the whole year is overwhelming and loses clarity over time. 
    • Asking “what’s next?” after each cycle is liberating and creates so much more shared understanding in the end. 
      • Additionally, it works wonders in the ability to pivot, which is vital in your organizational toolkit.

 

  • [0:29:45] Saying You’re Not Working During Downtime is Very MIsleading

 

    • Downtime is a time for reflection, pivoting, preparation, and learning.
  • [0:30:49] Cycles Are Iterative
    • You’ll have to dial it in with what works best for your organization. 
      • What works best for your company can/will change year to year.
        • Maybe you need more downtime, or longer cycles. 
          • But keep your focus as one that is people first. 

 

  • [0:31:34] Parting Words

 

  • Stop and think. 
    • Analyze if you could have accomplished more, had the team been given more thoughtfulness, freedom, and room to pivot. 
  • Next Episode
    • The Difference Between Progress and Productivity, or Activity