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2020 was an especially challenging year. And this year continues to require some extra effort to start and finish things that matter. Even if you’ve built a business for yourself (like I did), you can still have creative exhaustion and feel trapped by your work.
Maintaining discipline is more critical than having motivation. Preserve your energy and leave some fuel in the tank. Steady, daily progress through discipline allows you to cultivate long-term motivation. When you have autonomy, discretion, rewards that you value, social support, fair policies, and meaningful work, you feel more engaged and less burnt out.
In episode 30 of The Incrementalist podcast, you will learn:
1. Small, key things to do when you're in a motivation rut and feeling depleted
2. Why maintaining discipline is more important than having motivation
3. The three key dimensions of the burnout-engagement continuum, as defined by Dr. Christina Maslach and Dr. Michael Lieter:
4. The six workplace factors that trigger burnout:
5. External factors and rewards don't always match with internal drivers and intrinsic motivation
6. How a unique framework -- the Motivation Code (MCODE) -- helps you to understand what motivates you and why
7. The Motivation Code includes 27 motivational themes that are grouped into six motivational families:
Visionary
Achiever
Team Player
Learner
Optimizer
Key Contributor
8. What motivates you does not always include work that you love, but involves work that allows you to accomplish what really matters to you.
9. Use clean fuel to motivate your work and create possibilities, meaning and significance to feel alive and engaged, instead of depleted and drained.
Read the Transcript.
Resources cited:
Music by:
Dyan Williams
Check out the book: The Incrementalist, A Simple Productivity System to Create Big Results in Small Steps
Visit website: www.dyanwilliams.com
Subscribe to productivity e-newsletter
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2020 was an especially challenging year. And this year continues to require some extra effort to start and finish things that matter. Even if you’ve built a business for yourself (like I did), you can still have creative exhaustion and feel trapped by your work.
Maintaining discipline is more critical than having motivation. Preserve your energy and leave some fuel in the tank. Steady, daily progress through discipline allows you to cultivate long-term motivation. When you have autonomy, discretion, rewards that you value, social support, fair policies, and meaningful work, you feel more engaged and less burnt out.
In episode 30 of The Incrementalist podcast, you will learn:
1. Small, key things to do when you're in a motivation rut and feeling depleted
2. Why maintaining discipline is more important than having motivation
3. The three key dimensions of the burnout-engagement continuum, as defined by Dr. Christina Maslach and Dr. Michael Lieter:
4. The six workplace factors that trigger burnout:
5. External factors and rewards don't always match with internal drivers and intrinsic motivation
6. How a unique framework -- the Motivation Code (MCODE) -- helps you to understand what motivates you and why
7. The Motivation Code includes 27 motivational themes that are grouped into six motivational families:
Visionary
Achiever
Team Player
Learner
Optimizer
Key Contributor
8. What motivates you does not always include work that you love, but involves work that allows you to accomplish what really matters to you.
9. Use clean fuel to motivate your work and create possibilities, meaning and significance to feel alive and engaged, instead of depleted and drained.
Read the Transcript.
Resources cited:
Music by:
Dyan Williams
Check out the book: The Incrementalist, A Simple Productivity System to Create Big Results in Small Steps
Visit website: www.dyanwilliams.com
Subscribe to productivity e-newsletter