
Are You Efficientโฆ at the Wrong Things?
Being busy doesnโt mean youโre productive.
If youโre a senior leader who feels constantly exhausted, racing from one meeting to another yet sensing that youโre still behind โ youโre not alone. Many high-achieving executives fall into this trap: theyโve mastered efficiency, but not necessarily effectiveness.
Letโs explore why that happens and how you can shift your focus to ensure your time and energy go toward what truly matters.
The Meeting That Shouldnโt Have Happened
Imagine this:
You execute a meeting flawlessly โ you invite the right people, share a professional agenda in advance, start and end on time, and ensure all points are covered. You even send a polished summary afterward.
Perfect execution, right?
But hereโs the catch โ what if that meeting shouldnโt have happened at all?
What if it added no real value and wasnโt aligned with your strategic priorities?
Thatโs when efficiency becomes misleading. You did things right โ but not necessarily the right things.
Efficiency vs. Effectiveness: The Core Difference
Peter Drucker once said:
โThere is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.โ
- Efficiency means doing things right.
Itโs about execution, structure, and optimization. - Effectiveness means doing the right things.
Itโs about alignment, purpose, and measurable impact.
You can be highly efficient โ yet still not advance your goals โ if youโre focusing on the wrong priorities.
The Trap: Being Efficient at the Wrong Things
Many leaders operate at top efficiency, but their focus is misplaced.
Here are common examples:
- Back-to-back meetings: You attend or lead many โ but few drive decisions.
- Polishing presentations: You perfect internal updates that donโt change outcomes.
- Micro-managing operations: You ensure flawless execution but neglect strategy.
- Constant responsiveness: You reply to everything immediately โ leaving no time to think deeply.
These actions feel productive because theyโre visible and measurable, but they often divert your focus from meaningful work.
Why Leaders Fall Into the Efficiency Trap
There are three major reasons this happens:
1. The Comfort of Control
Efficiency offers instant satisfaction โ ticking boxes feels good. Effectiveness, however, demands ambiguity, patience, and courage to say โno.โ
2. The Visibility Bias
Efficiency is easy to see and measure โ full calendars, instant replies, polished reports. Effectiveness often operates quietly in the background and takes time to show results.
3. The Reward System
Many organizations reward activity over impact. We praise the โhard workerโ whoโs always busy, not the strategic leader who cancels low-value work.
To escape this, you need to rethink how you measure success.
The Solution: Effectiveness First, Efficiency Second
Hereโs how to lead and work with true productivity:
1. Clarify What Matters Most
Define your top three strategic goals for the next quarter or year.
Before every task or meeting, ask:
โDoes this directly contribute to one of my top goals?โ
If not, pause or delegate.
Example: Replace recurring status meetings with monthly decision-focused sessions.
2. Audit Your Activities
Review your past weekโs calendar and to-do list. Categorize each item:
- โ Effective & necessary
- โ๏ธ Efficient but not impactful
- โ Neither efficient nor effective
Eliminate, automate, or delegate the last two categories.
Youโll likely reclaim 20โ30% of your week for more strategic work.
3. Empower Instead of Execute
Your value as a senior leader lies not in doing everything, but in enabling others to do it well.
- Delegate execution to trusted team members
- Set clear outcomes, not micromanaged steps
- Coach your team to make decisions confidently
Effectiveness means multiplying your impact through others.
4. Build Strategic Reflection Time
Schedule regular, non-negotiable time for reflection โ even 30 minutes weekly can be transformative.
During this time:
- Review progress on key goals
- Identify whatโs noise vs. what drives results
- Adjust priorities for the week or month
Leaders who think deeply, lead wisely.
5. Redefine Productivity Across Your Team
Encourage a culture that values results over activity.
Ask your team regularly:
โIs this the best use of our time?โ
Celebrate those who simplify, streamline, or eliminate unnecessary work.
When you model effectiveness, your team follows suit.
From Doing More to Doing What Matters
True productivity isnโt about doing more โ itโs about doing what matters most.
Imagine the impact if you eliminated just 10% of low-value tasks.
Youโd gain time, clarity, and focus โ and your team would notice the difference.
When you stop being efficient at the wrong things, you start being effective at the right ones.
Thatโs where real leadership begins.
Key Takeaways
- Efficiency = doing things right
- Effectiveness = doing the right things
- You can be efficient โ but at the wrong things
- Always start with effectiveness, then enhance efficiency
- Productivity is about doing what truly matters every single day
Ready to Reclaim Your Effectiveness?
If youโre ready to move beyond busyness and lead with clarity, purpose, and impact โ join The Productivity Hub.
Our coaching and training programs for senior leaders and executives help you:
- Align goals with daily execution
- Eliminate wasted effort and distractions
- Build sustainable productivity systems
- Lead teams that work smarter, not harder
๐ Enroll today in โThe Productivity Hubโ workshops and start transforming how you work โ and how you lead.
Because success isnโt about doing more.
Itโs about doing what truly matters

