How to do the Job of Two People

January 13, 2024
3 mins read

By Francis Wade

Wednesday, 8 May
2013.

Bad news: your boss informs you
that a departing co-worker isn’t being replaced after all. Instead, you are
going to be doing his/her work in addition to your regular job.

If leaving the company
isn’t an option, how do you cope?

After you consider, and
then set aside the option of a protest to the Human Resource Department, you
wonder: Can I still have a balanced life? What can I do to adjust the way I
work? Is this the beginning of the end?

What not to do:

Don’t turn yourself into
a victim. While escaping self-pity is easier said than done, you can take action
to keep your mind open. For example, whenever you find yourself believing your
negative thoughts, try writing down the offending thought. Question it calmly
and rationally.

Such techniques,
championed by authors such as Byron Katie, help me clear my head almost every
day. Personal experience has taught me that a clear head can be my biggest
asset when facing stress.

Cutting both jobs down to
size:

Call a meeting with your
boss to create a plan to cut both jobs down to one. If your boss isn’t available,
you can take a first cut on your own and send him/her the results. What you are
looking to do is reduce each job down to its essentials: shed those aspects
that are either unnecessary or being duplicated elsewhere.

How can you make these
decisions? Start by asking tough questions, like:

What are the consequences
of not performing this task?

Am I the only person who
can do this task?

What would be nice to do,
but isn’t absolutely necessary?

Let go of all your prior
assumptions about both jobs. Remember, you are creating a new solution, not
merely replicating the jobs in the way that they were done in the past.

Combining jobs:

If you are fortunate,
there will actually be some overlap between the two jobs you are being asked to
perform. New technology can help you achieve new economies of scale; similar
efforts can be combined, and outputs can be re-used for multiple purposes. Take
this opportunity to upgrade old computers, stale software and obsolete phones.

Expanding your plate:

The biggest mistake that people
make is stopping. Never assume that you can’t do more. While the measures
mentioned so far are useful, I’ve learned even more by listening to Jamaicans
who have migrated.

This isn’t the kind of
thing that returning Jamaicans talk much about between sips of sorrel, but if
you press them, they’ll tell you that their workplaces are way more productive
than ones at home, and they are now using much better time management skills.

For example, when I lived
in South Florida, a fellow Jamaican who owned a contracting company told me why
he always hired Mexican workers, and never his countrymen.

“They (Mexicans)
work non-stop and don’t take breaks,” my friend said.

It was as simple as that.
He went on to describe the Jamaican worker’s propensity to argue, protest and
stop working to take a rest, which caused him to lose money.

Jamaicans who leave these
shores are often forced to improve, or else. But a Green Card isn’t needed to
expand the ‘size of our plate’.

The IMF and other lenders
have been telling us the same story in different words, with greater urgency.
On an individual level, we can commit to being just as productive here at home.
But first, we need to get comfortable being uncomfortable.

Being uncomfortable:

Your initial experience
attempting to do the work of two people is likely to be one of struggle. You’ll
find yourself feeling incompetent as the number of demands for your time
multiplies.

Stuff will fall through
the cracks — you may even find yourself forgetting to pick the children up from
school one day — and you will realise that whatever you were doing before
simply won’t work.

Welcome that realisation.
It opens the opportunity for further growth. If you accept the challenge, you
can take action to expand your time-management skills so that you can handle
more demands than ever before. You are never stuck at any point; you can always
add new capacity, but you need to do it consciously and with a pre-determined
plan.

These are by no means
quick fixes, but they are reliable ways to help you cope with the assignment of
two jobs. The fact is that you are a human being, not a machine, and you can
grow to fit challenges that seem impossible if you give yourself the
opportunity.

Francis Wade is president of Framework Consulting and author of ‘Bills Im-Perfect Time Management Adventure’. He can be reached at columns@fwconsulting.com

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