ycliper

Популярное

Музыка Кино и Анимация Автомобили Животные Спорт Путешествия Игры Юмор

Интересные видео

2025 Сериалы Трейлеры Новости Как сделать Видеоуроки Diy своими руками

Топ запросов

смотреть а4 schoolboy runaway турецкий сериал смотреть мультфильмы эдисон
Скачать

Perfectionism wastes everyone’s time. Here’s how. | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

Автор: Big Think

Загружено: 2020-03-14

Просмотров: 17338

Описание: Perfectionism wastes everyone’s time. Here’s how.
Watch the newest video from Big Think: https://bigth.ink/NewVideo
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to business psychologist and consultant Melanie Katzman, being a maximizer, or someone who seeks and over works in pursuit of perfection, is a waste of time, energy, and resources.

Completion and perfection are often not synonymous, and it is possible to continue tweaking something long after it is done.

A desire to demonstrate expertise can overcomplicate the work and muddle the message. To avoid this pitfall, Katzman encourages clients to stop in the middle of a project and reassess.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MELANIE KATZMAN:

Dr. Melanie Katzman is the author of the #1 WSJ bestseller Connect First: 52 Simple Ways to Ignite Success, Meaning, and Joy at Work. She is a business psychologist, advisor, and consultant to the world’s top public and private companies, government agencies and nonprofits.

Read Melanie Katzman's latest book Connect First: 52 Simple Ways to Ignite Success, Meaning, and Joy at Work at https://bigthink.com/videos/perfectio...
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:

MELANIE KATZMAN: We often work to the point of exhaustion depleting ourselves, resources, taking up time that people don't have in the quest for this elusive perfect. The reality is that in most instances good enough is good enough. Research shows us that people who are satisfiers tend to be happier and just as effective as people who are maximizers. Maximizers are the people who are always looking for the absolute ultimate perfect solution. But it's not necessarily the best for the individuals or for the organization. I've also seen that groups will continue to work on something long beyond the point in which they're completed. Sometimes because they want it to be perfect. Other times they're just enjoying one another's company. We fall into a certain rhythm. Working on what we know is often easier than what we don't know. It takes courage to say completed. So I coach people to have the courage to say we're done. You can always recontract about the next set of goals, but scope creep is really debilitating for the individual who's delivering the work and sometimes for the person who's receiving it because they're waiting and you're taking longer in an effort to get something to a level of perfection that isn't needed.

Oftentimes in an effort to assert our value within an organization we seek to be more complicated than is necessary. The most beautiful answer is often the simplest, the clearest, the most parsimonious. But in an effort to demonstrate that we are expert, that we have knowledge, that we are in tune with the jargon we could create complex plans, flowcharts, PowerPoints that are not only exhausting to create but are exhausting for the audience to receive them. So I always encourage people to just stop for a minute and ask: am I asking the clearest, simplest question? Can other people tell you what the goal is in one sentence? If the group you're working with doesn't know where you're heading then you've got a problem. So can you put it onto one piece of paper, one sentence. That's a good sign.

People will sometimes hold back their work and refine it and refine it because they're not really sure what it is that they're meant to do. So take the time, clarify what the expectations are, don't get lost in your own thoughts, check it out with people and, if necessary, actually have a midpoint check-in and say am I on the right path. Is this the kind of information you need. Is this the quality and depth of work that is expected. And then you can make the adjustments. Don't wait until the last minute when you're right before the deadline to see whether or not it's good enough or perfect enough.

Не удается загрузить Youtube-плеер. Проверьте блокировку Youtube в вашей сети.
Повторяем попытку...
Perfectionism wastes everyone’s time. Here’s how. | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

Поделиться в:

Доступные форматы для скачивания:

Скачать видео

  • Информация по загрузке:

Скачать аудио

Похожие видео

How to make a smoother entrance into any room or conversation | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

How to make a smoother entrance into any room or conversation | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

How Perfectionism Makes Us Ill

How Perfectionism Makes Us Ill

This is Why You Are a Perfectionist | Mr. Elon Kline | TEDxUniversityofDelaware

This is Why You Are a Perfectionist | Mr. Elon Kline | TEDxUniversityofDelaware

What stops people from changing their minds? | Jonah Berger | Big Think

What stops people from changing their minds? | Jonah Berger | Big Think

Why Perfectionism Will Crush Your Productivity — And How To Stop It

Why Perfectionism Will Crush Your Productivity — And How To Stop It

Are You a Maximizer or Satisficer? | Dr. Meghana Dikshit

Are You a Maximizer or Satisficer? | Dr. Meghana Dikshit

Is perfectionism an illness? | LSE Research

Is perfectionism an illness? | LSE Research

Why you procrastinate even when it feels bad

Why you procrastinate even when it feels bad

Дороничев: ИИ — пузырь, который скоро ЛОПНЕТ. Какие перемены ждут мир?

Дороничев: ИИ — пузырь, который скоро ЛОПНЕТ. Какие перемены ждут мир?

Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think

Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think

Is Perfectionism Just Procrastination in Disguise? | Jon Youshaei | TED

Is Perfectionism Just Procrastination in Disguise? | Jon Youshaei | TED

Ученая-иммунолог: Как мы сами ломаем иммунитет и как его восстановить по науке

Ученая-иммунолог: Как мы сами ломаем иммунитет и как его восстановить по науке

8 рекомендаций психолога из ВШЭ, которые изменят вашу жизнь

8 рекомендаций психолога из ВШЭ, которые изменят вашу жизнь

Good Enough Is Good Enough

Good Enough Is Good Enough

Вы превосходите других? Или это иллюзия? | Питер Фуда | Big Think

Вы превосходите других? Или это иллюзия? | Питер Фуда | Big Think

Как заговорить на любом языке? Главная ошибка 99% людей в изучении. Полиглот Дмитрий Петров.

Как заговорить на любом языке? Главная ошибка 99% людей в изучении. Полиглот Дмитрий Петров.

Paul Ekman 1 of 5 Do We All Have the Same Basic Emotions?

Paul Ekman 1 of 5 Do We All Have the Same Basic Emotions?

Psychology of feedback: How to give or receive valuable critique | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

Psychology of feedback: How to give or receive valuable critique | Melanie Katzman | Big Think

Японская система отказа от любой вредной привычки — метод Кайдзен

Японская система отказа от любой вредной привычки — метод Кайдзен

French Paris Chanson🎼Un Voyage Romantique Entre Mélodies Douces et Émotions Sous le Ciel de Paris 🇫🇷

French Paris Chanson🎼Un Voyage Romantique Entre Mélodies Douces et Émotions Sous le Ciel de Paris 🇫🇷

© 2025 ycliper. Все права защищены.



  • Контакты
  • О нас
  • Политика конфиденциальности



Контакты для правообладателей: [email protected]