Thursday, 25 June 2015

Track Progress in a Work Journal to Feel Your Achievements

Track Progress in a Work Journal to Feel Your Achievements

The days at work start to blur together after you've been at one job for a while. In that time, you may begin to wonder if you've hit a wall. So, how do you continue to make progress when you have little or no way to measure how far you've come? Keep a progress journal, writes Daniel Pink for Wired.

In his article, he calls on Harvard Business School professor Teresa Amabile and her husband, psychologist Steven Kramer to back up this statement. The team collected around 12,000 diary entries about the work 238 employees had done, and the diversity of their work spanned seven different companies. 

Pink writes:

“The single greatest day-to-day motivator — by far — was making 'progress in meaningful work.' On days when people made headway — whether on fixing up Buicks or stitching up bodies — their motivation and performance soared. The lesson: Relentlessly gather feedback on how you’re progressing and celebrate progress at every turn.”

Gretchen Rubin has echoed this same kind of philosophy on her happiness podcast, where she described how keeping a one-sentence journal has helped her not only stick with the habit, but also improve her life. The research would agree with her.

After listening to Rubin's podcast months ago, I decided to apply this habit to my work life. Freelancing is often unstable and requires a lot of self-motivation. To-do lists kept me honest about the work I should be doing, but seeing everything that needed to be done stressed me out before the day even began. So, I started writing down what I had done. It proved to be a great motivator — each day I try to write more posts than the last. What's more, it helps me track where I'm improving and what needs improvement, and the upkeep of such a habit requires little effort.

For those that work at more traditional jobs, a progress journal could be a good resource for keeping yourself honest during times when you get to thinking you're doing more work than everyone else. It could also prove useful the next time you go to a performance review. You can have dates to help chart your progress and show how much (and how hard) you've worked.

Read more tips at Wired.

Photo Credit: Shutterstock

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