Turning “Life Hacks” Into Habits
Devs @ 7pace
Posted on October 4, 2020
It’s hard to believe that the term “life hack” has only existed since 2004.
During the O’Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in San Diego, a technology journalist used the term to describe the shortcuts IT workers use to be more productive at their jobs, and the rest is history. Today, a Google or YouTube search for “life hack” returns hundreds of millions of results.
So it’s pretty clear that people love life hacks. But are they really the best way to up your productivity at work?
If a hack works really well, wouldn’t you want to use it every day?
Well, that’s called a habit.
While “life hack” is a fun buzzword, the better way to be a more productive developer is to build and maintain good habits. It takes more effort and more work, but it pays off in the long haul.
Ultimately, it’s time to leave life hacks behind and do the real work to create better habits in their place. Ready to get started? Read on.
What’s So Bad About “Life Hacks?”
Life hacks are well intentioned. But they’ve had their moment and now it’s over. These are a few of the reasons we feel that way.
Hacking Devalues Your Effort
It’s hard to be productive at work all the time. That’s just a fact.
But with life hacks, the goal is for work to become easier — for you to exert less effort while achieving the same results while doing your job. Sounds great in theory, right?
But the reality is that when less effort is the goal, putting in a lot of hard work is technically a failure. And when it comes to knowledge work like what software teams do, sometimes the only way to deliver on a project or problem is to roll up your sleeves and do some good old fashioned hard work.
It’s time to stop acting like hard work is wrong. It’s actually necessary.
Hacking Distorts How We Look at Time
Similarly, life hacks change the way we view the amount of time we invest in our work. They make it seem like the most important thing we can do is shave seconds off every task — to get things done faster and faster so we can fit more of them into our day.
But is the programming that gets done first always the best quality? Nope. Engineers know that knowledge work isn’t about speed, and faster coding is very rarely better quality coding. Our goal should be to do the best work possible — not to get it done in less and less time.
Hacking Prioritizes New and Ineffectual Strategies Over Time-Proven Ones
Life hacks are designed to be flashy, so that amid the absolutely sea of YouTube videos promising hacks that will completely change your life, you click the right ones. The hackiest hacks.
But in their effort to stand out from the crowd, life hacks tend to prioritize “groundbreaking,” new tips and tricks. Occasionally, someone comes up with a new method of working that is groundbreaking and does change your life. But most of the time, it’s the older, less sexy tips that will really make you better at your job.
Hacking Encourages Aimless Optimization
When you’re scrolling through life hacks, what’s your actual goal? Yes, you want to be more productive or more efficient at work — but what does that actually mean?
That’s another part of the problem with life hacks — they don’t encourage time-tested methods of improving yourself, like setting goals and then figuring out how to achieve them. They just offer low-value, quick ways to optimize your work time — but to what end?
If you’re aimlessly hacking your way toward productivity, we’re willing to be you’re not actually making yourself more productive. Hacks just aren’t designed to be steps toward quantifiable improvement.
Hacking Can Actually Create More Work
Then there’s this idea: it is possible to devote so much time to organizing your work that you never actually do any of it. That applies well to life hacks. If you spend so much time seeking out and trying new hacks to get your projects done, when will you actually do the projects themselves?
It’s yet another reminder that life hacks aren’t necessarily a solution, and there’s sometimes no replacement for some hard work.
And that’s where habits come in. It takes hard work to build and maintain a habit, but the benefits can pay off continuously for a much longer time.
That’s why you should be replacing your life hacks with habits.
7pace Timetracker is the only integrated, professional time management solution for teams using Azure DevOps.
Posted on October 4, 2020
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