• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Crushing Krisis

Comic Books, Drag Race, & Life in New Zealand

  • DC Guides
    • DC Events
    • DC New 52
    • DC Rebirth
    • Batman Guide
    • The Sandman Universe
  • Marvel Guides
    • Marvel Events
    • Captain America Guide
    • Iron Man Guide
    • Spider-Man Guide (1963-2018)
    • Spider-Man Guide (2018-Present)
    • Thor Guide
    • X-Men Reading Order
  • Indie & Licensed Comics
    • Spawn
    • Star Wars Guide
      • Expanded Universe Comics (2015 – present)
      • Legends Comics (1977 – 2014)
    • Valiant Guides
  • Drag
    • Canada’s Drag Race
    • Drag Race Belgique
    • Drag Race Down Under
    • Drag Race Sverige (Sweden)
    • Drag Race France
    • Drag Race Philippines
    • Dragula
    • RuPaul’s Drag Race
    • RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars
  • Contact!
You are here: Home / Personal / topics / thoughts / work duration vs. work effort, and walking the (productivity) plank

work duration vs. work effort, and walking the (productivity) plank

June 14, 2017 by krisis

Today, my friend and former colleague Stephanie wrote a great, brief article on productivity, procrastination, and burnout for SuperYesMore entitled “The Law of Reversed Effort.”

I tend to approach all tasks in life exactly as Stephanie describes the simple act of walking across a plank of wood on the ground.

“Walk the Plank” ©2012 Mike Russell.

[S]ay I put a long sturdy plank of wood on the ground in front of you and asked you to walk across it. You’d tell me “no problem” as you scurried along it. It’s such a simple task.

Let’s say I need 5 hours to accomplish something in our house. Anything. Blog writing. Exercising. Room cleaning.

I look at that personal work effort like it’s a plank of wood I have to step across. If the board is five times the length of my stride, I need to take five steps. If the work I want to do is 5 hours worth of work effort because that’s how fast I can type, exercise, or clean, I find 5 hours over the span of my week where I can accomplish said thing.

I starting thinking about the thing as already being completed if not for the formality of spending the actual 5 hours of work effort.

That’s not always the case, because work effort does not always equal work duration.

In a professional project management sense, that’s tends to result from a constraint on the schedule of the resource which puts in the effort. If you only have access to the designer on your project for an hour each day, it will take 5 days to do 5 hours of work. The work effort is 5 hours, but the work duration is 5 days.

However, let’s say your designer is available all day, every day. That 5 hours of work can be done in the next 5 hours starting at this very second, right?

Not really. Good professional project managers also understand that when people are resources their time cannot be perfectly maximized to be 100% effort in the way that, say, a printer can print X sheets in Y minutes. For a designer to produce 5 hours of measurable work product it might take them time to set up their physical and digital environment, some amount of drafting and backtracking, time to ask a colleague a question, a few minutes for the printer to warm up to print out their new draft, plus a moment stretch out their hand after it becomes cramped from drawing on their tablet.

Perhaps they really need almost 7 hours to conduct that 5 hours of work. The work effort is 5 hours in a vacuum or performed by a perfectly calibrated machine that doesn’t make mistakes or need bathroom breaks, but the resource’s time efficiency to complete that 5 hours of work is about 75%.

I know this professionally. I would never estimate the amount of time a person needs to do something based solely on how quickly they could do that work while I stood by with a stop watch in my hand. I build “slack time” into work effort. That’s not time for slacking or using Slack, but time for the things that need to happen around the work effort for the work effort to happen.

“Walk the Plank” ©2007 Jason Rogers

Systems that don’t account for that slack time fail at efficient scheduling. And, that slack is not always just about time to perform helper tasks like asking questions and stretching. Sometimes you simply need time to make mental space for the task at hand, because you cannot always make yourself walk the plank of a project starting in the very first second.

Stephanie explains why.

[W]hat if I then took that very same board, placed it 30 stories high in the air with each end on a skyscraper and asked you to walk across it again. We both know you can do it; you just demonstrated that on the ground. So why are you suddenly sweating at the thought of walking across that very same board?

Or, as she points out that Aldous Huxley succinctly stated:

The harder we try with the conscious will to do something, the less we shall succeed.

We account for this when it comes to our formal, professional life. The structure of that world is built around maximizing our work efficiency. Yet, we are human machines, and we cannot be perfectly calibrated and ruthlessly maximized.

Good, sustainable businesses where people like to work understand that human resources are not the same as machine resources – sometimes they need time to mentally prepare to walk the plank.

We look for a business that understands that when we’re seeking a job where we’ll be happy, but so often we don’t ask ourselves to follow the same rules. We think we can make a household repair or lose weight with the same ruthless efficiency we’d employ in building a spreadsheet, but spreadsheet building happens in a ruthlessly perfected digital workflow.

Why, then, don’t we as people give ourselves more slack when it comes to walking our personal planks?

If you ever find yourself asking that question, I suggest you give Stephanie’s essay a read. It’s shorter than this one, but it turns out this is how much time I needed to process her message.

 

Filed Under: thoughts Tagged With: productivity, project management, work duration, work effort

Previous Post: « she can read (much to my amazement)
Next Post: Comic Book Review: Dark Days – The Forge #1 by Snyder, Tynion, Kubert, Romita, & Lee »

Primary Sidebar


Support Crushing Krisis on Patreon
Support CK
on Patreon


Follow me on BlueSky Follow me on Twitter Contact me Watch me on Youtube Subscribe to the CK RSS Feed

About CK

About Crushing Krisis
About My Music
About Your Author
Blog Archive
Comics Blogs Only
Contact Krisis
Terms & Conditions

Crushing Comics

Marvel Comics

Marvel Events Guide

Spider-Man Guide

DC Comics

  • hold one moment, please!
    Folks, all CK content and updates are on pause while I […]
  • Crushing Comics Live Aftershow 2027 Marvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft PicksPatrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow – Post-Fantasy Draft Hangout and Q&A
    It’s time for another hour of Krisis uncut, […]
  • Crushing Comics Live 2027 Marvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft PicksMarvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft 2027 – Predicting Next Year’s Marvel Omnis (& you can too!)
    I’m back with an absolutely massive new […]
  • Patrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow for Ranking Every X-Men Omnibus
    We’re trying something new! Yesterday after my […]
  • Crushing Comics Live - Ranking Every X-Men OmnibusRanking Every X-Men Omnibus, Ever
    Today, I woke up and chose violence… violence […]
  • Haul Around The World: 2026 So Far in Omnis, Epics, DC Finest, and more!
    It’s Sunday, and that means it’s time for […]
  • My Ballot for the 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll - Avengers (2023) #34-36 connecting coversMy Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus List, 2026 Edition
    Want to know my Top 60 Most-Wanted Marvel omnibuses of 2026? You might be surprised by how much of it is NOT X-Men... […]
  • Krisis Selfie for the Tigereyes 14th Annual Marvel Most Wanted Omnibus poll launchit’s weird to be seen
    I am a micro micro-influencer with a tiny amount of name and face recognition. But, it's still recognition, and it can be deeply weird. […]
  • Not Dead (yet!)
    It is Krisis, fresh from several months of real-life […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2025 Marvels Anthology Omnibus MappingMarvel Anthology, Creator-Centric, & Magazine Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll
    Marvel Magazine & Anthology omnibus mapping for books that don't yet exist - all options on the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2025 Alf Marvel License Omnibus MappingMarvel Licensed Properties Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll
    Marvel's License Omnibus mapping for non-Marvel IP books that don't exist - all options on the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2026 - Marvel Alternate Realities and What If Omnibus Mapping - What If?: Fantastic Four (2005) #1What If & Marvel Multiverse Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll
    Marvel What If? and Alternate Reality omnibus mapping for books that don't yet exist - all options on the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2026 - Malibu Omnibus Mapping - Rune (1994) #7Malibu Ultraverse Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll
    Malibu Ultraverse omnibus mapping for books that don't yet exist - all options on the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 13th Annual Secret Ballot […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2026 - CrossGen Omnibus Mapping - Sojourn (2001) #6CrossGen Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll
    CrossGen omnibus mapping for books that don't yet exist - all options on the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot […]

Content Copyright ©2000-2023 Krisis Productions

Crushing Krisis participates in affiliate programs including (but not limited to): Amazon Services LLC Associates Program (in the US, UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain), eBay Partner Network, and iTunes Affiliate Program. If you make a qualifying purchase through an affiliate link I may receive a commission.