It’s real. It’s happening. It has a detrimental effect on every person on your team. Information overload is no joke. Its impact is insidious and more damaging than you realize.
Never before has so much information been so readily available or easily accessible. That’s a good thing, right?
WRONG.
It’s only a good thing if you understand how to manage the consumption of information. If you set expectations (real or perceived) that people in your workplace have to be plugged in, tuned in, and constantly open to new inputs, you’re promoting infobesity, a dangerous disease that has serious side effects.
To cope with the overwhelming and never-ending abundance of information, people usually respond in ways that become counter-productive. If you see these three warning signs of information overload, it’s time to make some changes.
Recognizing these issues is easy. Deciding to do something about them is another matter. But now, more than ever, it’s essential for healthy workplaces to acknowledge AND address the intense and pervasive effects of information overload.
Consider these three factors that contribute to infobesity:
The onslaught of emails is now multiplied by all the other locations where messages are delivered. In a single day, in addition to dozens of emails, a single individual may also receive messages via text, Slack, Teams, Skype, LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Tik Tok, voice mail, and countless other sources.
It’s now linked to causing attention-deficit disorders because the human brain simply doesn’t work that way. When multi-tasking, we think we’re splitting our attention between two or more tasks. We’re not because we can’t do that. Instead, we’re rapidly shifting our attention back-and-forth, back-and-forth, back-and-forth. That’s why it’s so exhausting. It’s always why over 97% of people produce poorer quality work when multitasking than when focusing on one task at a time.
Work from home stations many people in front of a computer for hours on end, often with multiple tabs open and multiple screens to view, and with other technology nearby. The slightest hint of a question produces a Pavlovian response to search online, ask Alexa, or access a document or email. We don’t turn to books. We don’t reflect and think things through on our own. We don’t pick up the phone to brainstorm with others (at least not without scheduling a Zoom meeting first!).
Businesses suffer when employees feel overwhelmed, disillusioned, and subject to unrealistic expectations. That leads to low morale and makes it difficult for employees to be highly engaged in their work. Diminished employee engagement is proven to result in higher levels of turnover, reduced productivity, dissatisfied customers, reduced revenue, and lower profit margins.
But that’s only part of the problem. Infobesity leads to unmanageable workloads, being spread too thin, poor follow-up on promises and commitments made, mental exhaustion, and even email apnea (the unconscious suspension of regular, steady breathing when plowing through emails).
But wait, there’s more! Hewlett-Packard commissioned a study that reported the average IQ scores of knowledge workers who were constantly distracted by emails and phone calls dropped 10 points from their normal average.
And then there’s information addiction, getting hooked on the constant inputs and feeling jittery when unable to immediately access email or text messages or online and social media sites.
Aside from the impacts that come from low engagement, businesses also experience direct effects from these problems. How many hours a day are wasted on unnecessary emails and meetings? How many bad decisions result from filtering, satisficing, or withdrawing coping mechanisms? And what is the cost of those bad decisions? Run the numbers with conservative estimates, and you will begin to see just how serious a problem information overload really is.
Supervisors and managers can support their direct reports by taking swift action to: