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Great at Work: How Top Performers Work Less and Achieve More

Great at Work: How Top Performers Work Less and Achieve More

byMorten Hansen
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Ian Mann
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars” People who work smart select a tiny set of priorities and make huge ...
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2018
Do you know anyone who is more successful than you at work, (define success any way you wish,) and doesn’t work nearly as hard as you do? What do they have that you don’t? This is the question that Professor Hansen’s book answers.
The usual answer is either that they put in more time than you, or they are simply more talented. Hansen’s thorough research has a different answer – the highest performers across industries, age groups, gender, education, and other dimensions, work smarter, not harder.
Of course, no-one wants to work ‘dumb’, but few people work ‘smart’ because there is so little solid guidance on how to work ‘smart’. This book is the solid guidance we have been looking for.
In 2011, Hansen launched one of the most comprehensive research projects ever undertaken on individual performance at work. It was based on in-depth interviews with 120 professionals and a 300-person pilot survey. The framework that emerged was used in a study of 5,000 managers and employees.
“In the end,” Hansen reports, “we discovered that seven “work smart” practices seemed to explain a substantial portion of performance.”
People who work smart select a tiny set of priorities and make huge efforts in those areas. They focus on creating value for the end user, not just reaching pre-set goals. The fact that you get your excellent reports in on time, every time, doesn’t mean they add any value. They only add value, if they are read or considered by the recipients.
Smart working avoids mindless repetition. The famous 10,000 hours of practice won’t improve your management ability. It only works with an activity that has a fixed rule structure. Instead, you need to practice ever better skills.
When work is infused, deliberately and thoughtfully with passion and a worthy purpose, it leads to work that really produces. These practices relate to mastering your own work, and the next set of practices address how to get the most out of working with others.
When working with others, smart work requires the effective use of influence to elicit support. Working efficiently and effectively requires that you avoid time-wasting meetings, and participate only in meetings that spark vigorous debate. The interdepartmental projects you commit to must be exclusively those that are most productive.
I will focus on just two practices that were found to be foundational – “Do less, then obsess”, and “P-Squared”.
As you no doubt know, people who prioritise well, perform well, but Hansen’s research revealed that these people do something else as well. They obsess over those chosen tasks to produce quality work. They had a smaller volume of activities and are able to exert more concentrated effort.
If you rank as a middle level performer (in the 50th percentile,) and then change to choosing a few key priorities, and channel a tremendous amount of effort into doing exceptional work in those areas, your performance will leap into that of the 75th percentile of achievers. This particular practice affects performance more than any other of the 6 practices in this book.
The need for narrowing your activities is to avoid the “complexity trap” and the mental exertion that is wasted on a wider spread of your attention.
To do anything exceptionally well requires great effort on a focused area. Alfred Hitchcock required more than seventy shots to perfect the shower scene in the movie ‘Psycho’. James Dyson created 5,000 prototypes of his famous vacuum cleaner.
This book is very practical. It deals for example, with the common problems real people have in real workplaces where they are not in total control. How do you say “no” to your manager? Hansen suggests that you make clear that you’re not trying to slack off. You’re prioritising because you want to excel in a few key areas that will add most value. And no, it is just not possible to give the attention necessary to excel in all areas: so which area is preferable?
700 years ago, a European Friar and philosopher William of Ockham, formulated a principle known as ‘Occam’s razor’. According to this principle one pares activities and explanations down to their simplest form, but no more simple. Do you really need all those steps or intermediaries in the production of goods or services? What can you eliminate that will not affect the desired outcome?
There are few parts of your responsibility where you will find nothing to eliminate. Now you can “obsess” about what remains to perfect it - and keep perfecting it.
A second fundamental is the issue of passion and purpose. This not the simplistic view that you should “just harness your power to your passion.”
Following your passion is not the one key to success, it also leads to poverty, as so many have found out the hard way. Ignoring your passion isn’t great either, as anyone working at something they don’t feel for, knows well.
The solution uncovered in Hansen’s research is to match passion with purpose, something available to almost everyone, almost everywhere.
To clarify these terms, Hansen explains: “Passion is ‘do what you love,’ while purpose is ‘do what contributes.’ Purpose asks, ‘What can I give the world?’ Passion asks, ‘What can the world give me?’”
The statistical analysis of 5,000 people shows that people who match passion with purpose perform much better, on average, than those who lack either purpose or passion or both - by 18 points!
When you love what you do, you work with vigour. And if you also feel that you’re helping other people—that they need you and depend on your contribution—your motivation to excel becomes that much more intense.
What the research shows, is that nearly everyone can achieve this match, and that there are no truly special workplaces. “We found that nearly every industry or occupation boasted at least some people who reported lots of passion and purpose.”
That only certain industries and jobs allow for passion and purpose is a myth. Hansen found might not hear much about passionate truck drivers or shop attendants or call centre employees, but the data indicates that they are there. Passion comes in various forms.
You can find passion for your work because you love achieving and your work allows you to achieve; or be creative; or be with people you like; or learn and grow; or do what you do best every day.
A strong sense of purpose only comes from activities that don’t harm anyone—customers, suppliers, your manager, your organization, employees, the community, or the environment.
In a 2009 study of zookeepers, researchers found that some saw cleaning cages and feeding animals as a filthy, meritless job, while others saw it as a moral duty to protect and provide proper care for the animals. Same job, different feelings of purpose. One can find purpose anywhere.
People with both passion and purpose are more energized, and accomplish more in each hour of work. The challenge is to find both in the context in which you operate.
To work smart means to maximize the value of your work by selecting a few activities, and applying intense targeted effort.
This book offers a sound method for increasing your effectiveness at work. It is well worth reading very carefully; it holds value way beyond what is contained in this short piece.
Readability Light ---+- Serious
Insights High +---- Low
Practical High +---- Low

*Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on leadership and strategy and is the author of the recently released ‘Executive Update.
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16 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Jane Johansson
2.0 out of 5 starsIs this book for corporate employee? Or, people working independently?
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2019
At the beginning, the author mentioned an employee has better performance than others in a consulting firm( where teamwork and performance scores given by your boss are in the setting). I am looking for solutions for how one can thrive in this setting. However, Chapter2 all the successful examples are about a chef, an elementary teacher, a real estate realtor, a business owner working with clients. Can you tell the huge differences between the Corporate America employee setting and the examples listed in Chapter2(these people are independent performers with low team work involvement)? I think the author is mixing different settings and want to reach to a general solution: how individual can over perform others. The different settings can have different solutions in core. The fact the author mixes them make me think the author does not touch the core of a critical question raised in his beginning chapter: why your colleague in your office performed better than you?
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From the United States

Ian Mann
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars ” People who work smart select a tiny set of priorities and make huge ...
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2018
Verified Purchase
Do you know anyone who is more successful than you at work, (define success any way you wish,) and doesn’t work nearly as hard as you do? What do they have that you don’t? This is the question that Professor Hansen’s book answers.
The usual answer is either that they put in more time than you, or they are simply more talented. Hansen’s thorough research has a different answer – the highest performers across industries, age groups, gender, education, and other dimensions, work smarter, not harder.
Of course, no-one wants to work ‘dumb’, but few people work ‘smart’ because there is so little solid guidance on how to work ‘smart’. This book is the solid guidance we have been looking for.
In 2011, Hansen launched one of the most comprehensive research projects ever undertaken on individual performance at work. It was based on in-depth interviews with 120 professionals and a 300-person pilot survey. The framework that emerged was used in a study of 5,000 managers and employees.
“In the end,” Hansen reports, “we discovered that seven “work smart” practices seemed to explain a substantial portion of performance.”
People who work smart select a tiny set of priorities and make huge efforts in those areas. They focus on creating value for the end user, not just reaching pre-set goals. The fact that you get your excellent reports in on time, every time, doesn’t mean they add any value. They only add value, if they are read or considered by the recipients.
Smart working avoids mindless repetition. The famous 10,000 hours of practice won’t improve your management ability. It only works with an activity that has a fixed rule structure. Instead, you need to practice ever better skills.
When work is infused, deliberately and thoughtfully with passion and a worthy purpose, it leads to work that really produces. These practices relate to mastering your own work, and the next set of practices address how to get the most out of working with others.
When working with others, smart work requires the effective use of influence to elicit support. Working efficiently and effectively requires that you avoid time-wasting meetings, and participate only in meetings that spark vigorous debate. The interdepartmental projects you commit to must be exclusively those that are most productive.
I will focus on just two practices that were found to be foundational – “Do less, then obsess”, and “P-Squared”.
As you no doubt know, people who prioritise well, perform well, but Hansen’s research revealed that these people do something else as well. They obsess over those chosen tasks to produce quality work. They had a smaller volume of activities and are able to exert more concentrated effort.
If you rank as a middle level performer (in the 50th percentile,) and then change to choosing a few key priorities, and channel a tremendous amount of effort into doing exceptional work in those areas, your performance will leap into that of the 75th percentile of achievers. This particular practice affects performance more than any other of the 6 practices in this book.
The need for narrowing your activities is to avoid the “complexity trap” and the mental exertion that is wasted on a wider spread of your attention.
To do anything exceptionally well requires great effort on a focused area. Alfred Hitchcock required more than seventy shots to perfect the shower scene in the movie ‘Psycho’. James Dyson created 5,000 prototypes of his famous vacuum cleaner.
This book is very practical. It deals for example, with the common problems real people have in real workplaces where they are not in total control. How do you say “no” to your manager? Hansen suggests that you make clear that you’re not trying to slack off. You’re prioritising because you want to excel in a few key areas that will add most value. And no, it is just not possible to give the attention necessary to excel in all areas: so which area is preferable?
700 years ago, a European Friar and philosopher William of Ockham, formulated a principle known as ‘Occam’s razor’. According to this principle one pares activities and explanations down to their simplest form, but no more simple. Do you really need all those steps or intermediaries in the production of goods or services? What can you eliminate that will not affect the desired outcome?
There are few parts of your responsibility where you will find nothing to eliminate. Now you can “obsess” about what remains to perfect it - and keep perfecting it.
A second fundamental is the issue of passion and purpose. This not the simplistic view that you should “just harness your power to your passion.”
Following your passion is not the one key to success, it also leads to poverty, as so many have found out the hard way. Ignoring your passion isn’t great either, as anyone working at something they don’t feel for, knows well.
The solution uncovered in Hansen’s research is to match passion with purpose, something available to almost everyone, almost everywhere.
To clarify these terms, Hansen explains: “Passion is ‘do what you love,’ while purpose is ‘do what contributes.’ Purpose asks, ‘What can I give the world?’ Passion asks, ‘What can the world give me?’”
The statistical analysis of 5,000 people shows that people who match passion with purpose perform much better, on average, than those who lack either purpose or passion or both - by 18 points!
When you love what you do, you work with vigour. And if you also feel that you’re helping other people—that they need you and depend on your contribution—your motivation to excel becomes that much more intense.
What the research shows, is that nearly everyone can achieve this match, and that there are no truly special workplaces. “We found that nearly every industry or occupation boasted at least some people who reported lots of passion and purpose.”
That only certain industries and jobs allow for passion and purpose is a myth. Hansen found might not hear much about passionate truck drivers or shop attendants or call centre employees, but the data indicates that they are there. Passion comes in various forms.
You can find passion for your work because you love achieving and your work allows you to achieve; or be creative; or be with people you like; or learn and grow; or do what you do best every day.
A strong sense of purpose only comes from activities that don’t harm anyone—customers, suppliers, your manager, your organization, employees, the community, or the environment.
In a 2009 study of zookeepers, researchers found that some saw cleaning cages and feeding animals as a filthy, meritless job, while others saw it as a moral duty to protect and provide proper care for the animals. Same job, different feelings of purpose. One can find purpose anywhere.
People with both passion and purpose are more energized, and accomplish more in each hour of work. The challenge is to find both in the context in which you operate.
To work smart means to maximize the value of your work by selecting a few activities, and applying intense targeted effort.
This book offers a sound method for increasing your effectiveness at work. It is well worth reading very carefully; it holds value way beyond what is contained in this short piece.
Readability Light ---+- Serious
Insights High +---- Low
Practical High +---- Low

*Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on leadership and strategy and is the author of the recently released ‘Executive Update.
16 people found this helpful
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Natalie Remsen
5.0 out of 5 stars While a majority of the tips given in this book are easily applicable, one that is not is refusing your ...
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2018
Verified Purchase
Morten Hansen’s educational and compelling new book, “Great at Work,” provides readers with a new perspective on “great performance” in the workplace. The attractiveness of this book is that it presented an evidence-based, comprehensive understanding. In creating the survey discussed in this book, Morten considered the findings of over 200 published academic studies relating to working smarter. Throughout the book, Morten provides results from a regression analysis performance study of 5,000 people. The 5,000 people represented 15 industry sectors and 22 job functions with a balanced ratio of gender, age and education level. The results are presented within three main parts – mastering your own work, mastering working with others and mastering work-life balance.

Morten had a sophisticated literature review; he not only talked about his own books in the field, but also the works of other authors. Within the book, he referenced The War for Talent, On the Mend, Drive, Peak, Contagious, Power, and 7 Habits of Highly Effective People to name a few. Even Oprah Winfrey made the cut, when Morten talked about her commencement address to Stanford’s graduating class of 2008.

In what could have been a dry, instructional, lecture style novel, Morten Hansen has created a composition of tips to help employees work smarter (not harder) and achieve more. By enhancing the reading with scenarios in multiple work settings, he has allowed any individual the ability to relate to these different situations and develop ways to use the strategies in their own daily work lives.

Morten presented strategies for measuring and maximizing value, the art of deliberate practice, and matching purpose and passion. Morten mentioned that more activities does not equal more value and provided an equation for measuring value. This equation states that the value of a person’s work equals the benefits to others multiplied by the quality of the work multiplied by the efficiency. Another idea he presented was deliberate practice which involves doing a new skill, getting feedback, and making the necessary changes based on the feedback provided. Morten challenged the accepted idea to “follow your passion”. Morten tested the idea and concluded that one had to match his or her passion with purpose to be truly effective at work.

While a majority of the tips given in this book are easily applicable, one that is not is refusing your boss. Although, Morten does mention the difficulty of this task and how it should be exercised with caution, there are many factors to consider before applying this tip. Firstly, the employee must fully understand the goals of the team and his or her role. If the employee does not have this understanding, he or she will not be able to give proper reasoning for refusing his or her manager. Secondly, he or she must understand the culture of the company that he or she is working for. If the culture in the company encourages employee involvement with changing processes, then refusing to take on a new project would not be frowned upon. Conversely, if the culture of the company does not encourage employee involvement then the refusal might not be accepted.

Morten defies convention by providing a new perspective profound beliefs from the learnings within the chapter. A person doesn’t have to change his or her life by any modern standard, but this appreciably readable book is not in the business of following the status quo. Not only does this book elucidate the keys for top work performance, it provides a new perspective which could change one’s approach in all fields of life and maintain a positive work life balance.
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add
5.0 out of 5 stars Book Review
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2019
Verified Purchase
Have you ever wondered why those long hours you put are in are not quite enough? Have you wondered why that co-worker who barely clocks in 40 hours a week, is breezing through and getting top marks from management? Or wondered if you truly left your job to follow your passion would you achieve success? The book “Great at Work: How Top Performers Do Less, Work Better, and Achieve More” by Harvard professor and former Boston Consulting Group Consultant Morten Hansen will help you answer this question. After years of contemplating what he coins the “Natalie question” Hansen took action to understand why those who put in seventy, eighty or even ninety-hour weeks are still lagging behind others. Through a 5-year 5,000 participant study Hansen has uncovered what he considers the 7 principles to succeed while doing less.

From everyday tasks to defining new roles in organizations Hansen’s principles will uncover the means to succeed in today's modern fast paced business environment. Through exhaustive interviews, his detailed research and personal experience have uncovered the secret of doing more in less time and succeeding where others have failed. From factory workers and CEO's, transport companies in Spain to boutique headhunters in New York, Hansen will show you how simple changes will lead to profound success and achievement at work. From saying “no” to “Occam’s razor” and asking the “stupid question” his book will show you what distinguishes the good from the great. How collaboration will help you succeed and fail and how choosing a single task and obsessing over it can truly mean the difference between life and death, boom or bust.

Hansen includes examples, insights and stories from everyday people who have not only experienced success, but also found joy in their work. From failing principles to Indian villagers his work clearly traverses both geographic and wage distances. Challenging age-old maxims from “if you work harder it will work out” to “in order to succeed you must follow your passion” and replaces them with new ideas such as “Smart Grit” & “Work Smarter.” Hansen ideas will have you reconsidering your job function, passions and the value you can bring to your own company.

If you are looking to do better at work, if you are looking to achieve more while doing less or to simply work smarter Hansen’s revolutionary book is a must read.
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Mark Goulston
5.0 out of 5 stars A worthy addition to the Good to Great thought leadership in the world
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2018
Verified Purchase
I love books like this that are:

1. intuitively correct
2. you never would have thought of it
3. you can use it today to make your life better

Why is that?

Because the three main sections hit the very core of being successful at work and in life:

I. Mastering Your Own Work - you really do need to be competent and if possible, excellent (i.e. consistently better than very good) and using the "10,000 hours to become an expert" is a great way to accomplish. One reason for this is that when you internalize those skills and abilities so that they become hard-wired, you can turn to the next section.
II. Mastering Working with Others - given the complexity of this world, there is very little that you can get done on your own without relying on and working with others. And to do that, you need to be someone that other people want to work with. The difference between your putting a smile on others faces vs. dreading seeing you will spell the difference between great success or great failure.
III. Mastering Your Work-Life - it really is difficult to give your best to your job, when you have to go to divorce mediation in the afternoon, or attend a family therapy session with you drug addicted teenager. At the end of your life don't be someone who too late realizes that everything you thought was important, isn't and everything you thought was unimportant, is. No dying man or woman, wishes he or she spent more time at the office.

One final value add:

If you want to improve company culture, do a pilot program at your company using this as your guide. You may discover it is all you need to create a great corporate culture, because the appreciation and gratitude you employees will feel will translate into:

a. higher performance
b. loyalty
c. unpoachability
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Ed Barton
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars Rethink Your Approach
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2020
Verified Purchase
An interesting combination of academic research and self improvement that will get you rethinking your approach to work. The biggest take away is that doing less, but obsessing over what you are doing, tends to result in both better outcomes and happier lives. Looking to balance work success and non-work success, the author explores items around passion, efficiency, scheduling, teamwork, collaboration and environment. Attempting to succeed in a world that is seemingly moving faster every day and demanding that we we multi-task, this book offers a refreshing countervailing viewpoint backed by research. A good read.
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Candi L
4.0 out of 5 stars Redesign your process
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2018
Verified Purchase
This was interesting book. I've read quite a bit of productivity books but this was still helpful. A lot of books I've read mostly focused on mindset. This one focused more on practices. The most notable advice I took from it is, work less then obsess. You minimize the amount of things you work on and then obsess over the one task or topic. I've learned from work experiences that it's better to work on one item at a time vs multiple. They had a studies proving that working longer hours didn't result in more work done. If only all managers in this world knew this.

Redesigning your workflow can also help you be more productive. The example of flipped learning in schools was intriguing. Having students learn their lessons at home by watching videos and then doing the work in class where teachers could help. Makes me wonder how many schools actually practice this method and how successful are they with it.

If you are looking to have that work/life balance, that's the last topic they cover. Too often have I thought about work while at home rather than spending it with my family. We all need that balance regardless if you have kids or significant other or just yourself.
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Lucia
5.0 out of 5 stars Do less = outperform?
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2020
Verified Purchase
You know when you read a book and there are really only a few concepts that stick with you? Well it’s been probably 6 months since I read this book and I remember liking it even if it’s slightly dry. These are they concepts: 1. Do less then obsess. This is the idea that you select fewer projects or areas of focus but truly drill down on what you do own and therefore outperform. 2 There are creative and simple ways to manipulate a meeting to get more group feedback and btw meetings should be 30 minutes, not an hour. They have a tendency to expand to fit the space allotted. 3. Don’t volunteer- there are two types of work activities: ones that are basically housekeeping and ones that propel you forward and are career developing. Anything that falls into the first category should be avoided and anything that requires a volunteer does not fall into the second category . If you find these tidbits worthwhile, you should read the book to learn more.
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Sara Russell-Clark
5.0 out of 5 stars Read smart
Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2022
Verified Purchase
Great book for any professional at any stage in their career. Insightful, with simple and easy to implement changes on how to work smarter.
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Juan Pablo Gómez
5.0 out of 5 stars great book!
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
wow top read… very good teachings… if I had to go with one I’d say “do less, then obsess”… I already went through my top priorities and then talked to my boss about the time I needed to complete them, he totally understood my situation… and supported me on trimming some activities and I could postpone (maybe that’s basic for some of you, but sometimes we think it’s just you in that situation)… again great book!
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Brian K. Seitz
5.0 out of 5 stars Actionable is what this book is about
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2019
Verified Purchase
I've read may so-called business improvement books. Many have great insights but little actionable ideas. Morten's book not only gives you the theory, but the case studies AND details on how to implement. No its not a step by step. I would be suspect of something like that as each company's culture is different. What he provides is a series if you will of menu items and the recipe behind each of what great performers do and how they do it. I'm halfway reading the book for the third time; only this time I've been implementing selected items to implement in my organization and have been getting the results he's documented at other organizations. If there was a 6th Star I would have assigned it to this book.
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