Saturday, April 6, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
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Employees more productive earlier in the week, experts say

More and more employers are allowing employees to do online shopping from the office.
More and more employers are allowing employees to do online shopping from the office.

You’d like to send a note to a colleague, asking if there are opportunities at his firm. You just might boost your chances of a favorable reply if you send the note to arrive on Monday or Tuesday.

People who work the traditional Monday through Friday week tend “to make plans on Monday and Tuesday for what they want to accomplish during the rest of the week,” notes Francesca Gino, a Harvard Business School associate professor and author of “Sidetracked: Why Our Decisions Get Derailed, and How We Can Stick To The Plan”. (Harvard Business Review Press, 2013)

Given the propensity to schedule projects early in the week, it just may mean that a manager would be more receptive to finding new talent to get the work done, believes Gino.

Indeed, the tendency to plan early in the week is just one of many insights researchers have uncovered into how different days impact workers’ moods and productivity.

Discovering how you own mood moves is easy, explains Richard Ryan, University of Rochester psychology professor: “Keeping a diary would reveal patterns quickly.”

For many, moods brighten on Friday and stay positive until Sunday evening, says Ryan. Moods tend to be more positive during the weekend than during weekday evenings, even though workers are off the clock then as well.

For those who experience deep mood drops during the work week, perhaps accompanied by physical ailments, it might mean your job isn’t a good fit for you, Ryan notes.

Of course, many don’t work the traditional 9 to 5 week. Other researches, says Ryan, have found that erratic schedules and irregular sleep prompt energy and wellness issues.

© CTW Features

Marilyn Kennedy Melia CTW Features
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Comments  (4)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:45 AM, 03/26/2013
    Well, yeah, you're refreshed from coming off of 2 days of not dealing with whatever BS you're dealing with at work. During the week, you know that you have to go back to that BS the next morning. Best job ever- a researcher that researches the most obvious things in the world as a living. My next application will be "Does Pain Make People Sad?"
    verve
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:53 PM, 03/26/2013
    Ah, yeah, that's safe to say...most people dial it down on Thursday and Friday.
    drbob1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:05 AM, 03/27/2013
    Employees have been demanded to do more with less since the beginning of the 90s, when corporate mergers, downsizing, and outsourcing became widespread... takes a toll on people, especially veterans of the workforce. You can only squeeze so much juice out of a lemon. Go have a meeting to discuss that.
    road515
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:48 PM, 03/27/2013
    The old saying is never buy a car made on a Monday or a Friday. Reason being, the assembly line workers are still hung over from their weekend drunk on Mondays and on Fridays they're only thinking about where they're going to get wasted.