8 Lessons from High Performers


In 2023 we assessed over 1,000 people on their ways of working & burnout risk. We learned that most people were struggling with:

  • Switching off at the end of the workday

  • Blurred boundaries between work and home

  • Feeling overloaded

However, about 5% of the people we assessed had very low burnout risk. Why? This year I've been interviewing them to find out. These 'positive deviants’ ranged from CEO’s to supervisors.

Here are the 8 things I learned that they have in common (nb - these are individual factors. In the next post I'll talk about org level factors):

1.    When they are at work, they work very hard

  • They are not lazy

  • They are driven

  • They are high-performers

2.    They’ve reflected on the best/worst ways to work (and live)

  • Nearly all used to work in unhealthy ways and suffered as a result

  • They stepped back, examined their approach and made key decisions about how to work in a sustainable way

  • They are disciplined about sticking to their new approach

3.    They made peace with not getting everything done

  • Early in their careers they prided themselves on completing everything each day

  • As they got into bigger jobs they learned they had to let that go

  • Now they prioritise in the morning, do all they can, and leave what's incomplete for tomorrow

4.    All have a ritual to switch from work to personal mode

  • Activity: Mike reads a book on his bus ride home (never looks at his phone)

  • Mantra: Mary runs through a checklist before saying ‘shutdown complete’

  • Visualisation: Tony mentally hangs his work uniform on a lamppost in front of his house

5.    They have clear boundaries between work and home

In the past, nearly all had blurred boundaries and suffered

  • They are now vigilant not to think about or do work at home

  • “I don’t work at home. I wait until the workplace to think about work”

  • “My spouse and I agreed not to talk about work at the weekends

6.    They grew into multifaceted people

  • Most used to be one-dimensional career people, but saw the downsides

  • They now have many identities, interests, and 'opposite worlds' that absorb and recharge them e.g. Dancing, running, quilting, volunteering

  • “You (Nick) talked about people needing a hobby. I have too many hobbies.”

7.    They have a ‘phone strategy’

  • They observed the negative impact that phones had on their well-being. They became 'digital minimalists'

  • They're very disciplined about their phone use at home 

  • Nearly all put their phone out of site and don’t check it till morning

  • “I no longer feel drained. I'm far more effective at work and home”

8. They keep work in perspective

  • They watched absolutely dedicated people get laid off and how it shattered their identity

  • They see the impermanence of jobs

  • They now work hard but do not fuse their identity to a role

"My boss told me I should be dating the company, not married to it."

Download the 8 patterns worksheet here https://lnkd.in/geakPtPM

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Do you have a phone strategy?

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Do you have an Opposite World?