«Work Without Walls: An Executive's Guide to Attention Management, Productivity, and the Future of Work» by Maura Nevel Thomas
English | MP3@192 kbps | 4h 16m | 352.5 MB
English | MP3@192 kbps | 4h 16m | 352.5 MB
Knowledge Work is Changing the Business Landscape. Are you Ready?
The competitive work environment seems to require 24/7 communications, perpetually changing priorities, and constant distractions.
Yet high quality knowledge work requires the thoughtful application of wisdom, experience, and brain power. Executives must manage these conflicting realities, while protecting knowledge workers (and themselves!) from stress and burn-out.
Today's "always-on" work culture actually prevents you and your team from producing what really matters: ideas, innovation, and meaningful results.
According to Maura Thomas in Work Without Walls, "{in the knowledge economy,} the most important individual and corporate resources are neither time nor money, but body and mind." Her research and 20+ years of experience in the productivity field confirm that relationships and productivity suffer when people are stressed, and that greater employee happiness creates success and productivity, and is essential to deliver great customer experiences.
Author Maura Thomas describes how to intentionally create a workplace culture that nurtures creativity and improves productivity by getting intentional about:
Work-life balance
Holistic well-being
Significant results
Attention management vs. time management
Effective communication strategies
Office design that supports both collaborative and focused work
Vacation and downtime
Off-site work with healthy boundaries
Each chapter provides personal shifts and organizational changes through specific action items you can implement now to support the well-being and long-term success of you, your team, and your organization.
It IS possible to create a thriving organization that provides exceptional customer experiences, while also offering a high-quality employee experience. In fact, it’s not only possible, it’s critical. But it requires intention. Without it, instead of maximizing performance, you leave individual and organizational productivity to chance.
"If conventional wisdom now says that constant work is necessary for professional success, I can't think of a more important time to buck convention." ~Maura Nevel Thomas