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Episode 77: Redefining Productivity
Faithful on the Clock is a podcast with the mission of getting your work and faith aligned. We want you to understand Who you're serving and why so you can get more joy and legacy from every minute spent on the clock. Thanks for joining us and taking this step toward a more fulfilling job and relationship with God!Want to join us on social media? We'd love to have you stay up-to-date with the show on all our platforms!TwitterFacebookPinterestInstagramLinkedInYouTubeIn this episode...Episode 77: Redefining Productivity Most professionals talk on a regular basis about being productive. But what does that word even mean? Episode 77 of Faithful on the Clock seeks to redefine the term toward a more meaningful application that gets you away from dollars and cents and one-upmanship.Timestamps:[00:04] - Intro[00:33] - A recent article implied that it’s not OK for people to simply BE—instead, they have to always be doing MORE. [01:17] - There’s a hierarchy in terms of what is productive and what isn’t.[02:55] - Defining productivity only in terms of dollars and cents is damaging because it limits the positive ways we could spend our time.[03:53] - Productivity needs to be defined individually based on goals and personality.[04:25] - You probably wouldn’t label God’s 6 days of creation as unproductive. In the same way, many other things on Earth are productive but often are not properly assessed as having good value.[05:40] - Productivity might be defined simply as working toward the completion of tasks. This definition acknowledges that many productive activities cannot be quantified, as well as the fact that results can take a long time to gain.[07:34] - Productivity ties back to your priorities, which connect back to your values, which always should connect back to God.[08:00] - Assess what gifts you have and what you feel matters.[08:48] - All of us need some productivity to yield dollars and cents, but don’t make it a hierarchy. You will know you are using your time productively because you will feel more human. Consider the thesis of Jenny Odell’s book, How to Do Nothing, Resisting the Attention Economy, which is that we have the power to decide where to put our attention.[10:12] - Prayer[11:33] - Outro/What’s coming up next
Key takeaways:A recent article offered tips for how work-at-home moms could be more productive, suggesting that productivity is something that attaches only to work or paid time. That concept reveals a bias toward a hierarchy system in which we tend to see productivity in terms of quantifiable metrics and attach it to careers instead of general tasks and goals.Defining productivity only in terms of dollars and cents or competitiveness limits the positive ways we spend our time. It’s better to define productivity based on how we personally want to prioritize and pay attention.God was enormously productive during the six days in which He created the world. Yet, He was not paid for it and none of the work was measured. The creati