Facebook Pixel The power of hitting pause during a workday | Mint Mumbai - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

The power of hitting pause during a workday

Mint Mumbai

|

April 28, 2025

Due to the inability to carve out more personal time, employees often have a myopic view of their careers

- Geetika Sachdev

The power of hitting pause during a workday

arthak Joshi, 36, believes he's living his worklife in "autopilot mode". Once he reaches office by 9am, his schedule almost always looks the same. "As soon as I am at my desk, I clear my inbox or respond to emails, attend calls or meetings, and then finish the mundane tasks," says Joshi, an account manager at a digital marketing agency in Delhi. "Last year just flew by without me realizing it. I was inundated with work and was only focused on completing one task after the other. I didn't get any time to put on my creative cap, think of new ideas or upskill myself. When there's so much to do, you feel too exhausted to even go home at the end of the day."

That's a day in the life of most corporate employees across the world—respond to mails, constantly check Slack, attend meetings, many of which could have been a text/email, and check items off.

"I don't think I am capable of using my creative faculties anymore. It feels like my grey matter has depleted just by focusing on survival in the corporate world," says Sakshi Pradhan, 41, a senior content specialist at a multinational in Bengaluru. "When was the last time I sat down and thought of a big idea? Probably three to four years ago."

We operate in a work world obsessed with "getting stuff done". This constant "doing" mode, which revolves around meeting short-term targets, leaves little time to hit pause during the day and focus on real work that brings joy and makes life and work worthwhile—be it achieving long-term goals or investing in learning opportunities to move up the ladder.

Recent global research by Harvard Business Review, based on the responses of 1,500 mid and senior managers, concluded that close to 40% of workers were unable to pause during the day to reflect on how to "plan and prioritize". Fifty-nine percent described meetings as "rushed", and 29% said they were unable to take the time needed to consider and respond to what others said.

MORE STORIES FROM Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

DRONES TEST DUBAI REAL ESTATE RESILIENCE

The city-state’s realty market tore into 2026 on a four-year boom—until Iran’s drones and missiles iced it

time to read

8 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

JSW Steel raises capacity target sharply amid strong FY26 show

Sajjan Jindal-led JSW Steel plans to nearly double its capacity to about 80 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) by 2031 through aggressive brownfield expansion and joint ventures, positioning India’s largest steelmaker among the world’s biggest producers.

time to read

2 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Air India’s FY26 loss nears $3 billion amid headwinds

Air India posted an estimated loss of nearly $3 billion in FY26, as foreign exchange losses, airspace disruptions and elevated fuel costs battered the Tata Group-owned airline during the year.

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Bond yield surge dents PSU banks’ non-core income

Rising government bond yields hit banks’ treasury income in the March quarter (Q4FY26), dragging down non-core earnings, especially at public sector lenders. Analysts now expect the pressure to intensify in the June quarter after an oil-driven spike in bond yields following the West Asia conflict.

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

FMCG firms begin hiking prices as war hits input costs

Consumer goods makers are raising prices and bracing for weaker demand as commodity inflation spreads across fuel, packaging and food inputs.

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Oil calm as Trump, Xi meet amid strife

Fresh attacks on vessels in Gulf underscore fragility of ceasefire

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Big tech’s fat profits conceal unsettling cashflows

A chart is haunting Silicon Valley. The profits of big cloud-computing firms (Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Oracle) are rising inexorably. Yet the amount of cashflow they generate after capital spending is falling. Sketched together, these soaring profits and diving free cashflows, which until recently rose in unison, resemble the gasps of the world’s investors.

time to read

4 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Cement firms turn defensive as war shock spikes costs

Cement makers are responding with fuel substitution, long-term sourcing contracts

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Tata Motors PV revenue dips

The firm posted its first annual revenue decline in five years and a FY26 operating loss, hurt by JLR headwinds

time to read

3 mins

May 15, 2026

Mint Mumbai

ASK launches ₹2,500-cr 2nd pvt credit fund

ASK Alternates, part of the Blackstone-backed ASK Asset & Wealth Management Group, launched its second private credit fund with a target corpus of ₹2,500 crore, including a ₹1,500 crore green-shoe option, a top executive at the company said.

time to read

1 min

May 15, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size