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Why Prioritisation Alone Doesn’t Fix Overwhelm at Work

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Some days, the work itself isn’t the hardest part. The hardest part is deciding what deserves your attention first.

You’re busy all day, constantly responding, switching, and reacting, yet nothing meaningful seems to move forward. The list gets longer, not shorter, and the sense of control slips away.

This is exactly the tension explored in Liane Davey’s upcoming book Thoughtload. Her core idea is simple: when you’re overwhelmed, you don’t just need a better list. You need the right kind of support to process the workload.

And that support doesn’t look the same for everyone.

The Four Ways People Cope with Overwhelm

When pressure builds, people tend to default to one of four responses.

Some people need to talk things through. Conversation helps them clarify priorities, test ideas, and reduce the mental load.

Others need to take action. Starting something, even imperfectly, creates momentum and cuts through inertia.

Some need structure. They want to organise, categorise, and build a system that makes the work feel manageable again.

And some need to reconnect with meaning. They reframe tasks, adjust how they approach the work, or find ways to make it more engaging.

These are not personality traits. They are ways of restoring control.

The problem is that most workplaces unintentionally favour just one of them, usually structure. We default to lists, systems, and processes as the solution to overload, even when that isn’t what people need in that moment.

Why One-Size-Fits-All Productivity Advice Falls Short

Traditional productivity advice often assumes that better organisation will solve the problem. It tells people to plan more carefully, structure their workload, and stick to a system.

Structure is valuable, but it’s not always the starting point.

When someone is overwhelmed, forcing structure too early can increase friction. Equally, constant action without clarity leads to busywork, and too much discussion without decisions slows everything down.

Work today is too complex for a single mode of working. As we often say, you will never get everything finished, so productivity becomes less about completion and more about making better choices with your attention.

That requires flexibility, not just discipline.

What This Looks Like in Practice

This is exactly why our How to be a Productivity Ninja workshop works so well.

It doesn’t rely on one approach to productivity. Instead, it creates space for all four ways people regain control, often within the same session.

There’s connection built in from the start. It’s a group workshop with time to talk, reflect, and sense-check thinking. Many participants say they feel immediate relief simply from articulating what has been sitting in their head.

There’s action early on. The brain dump exercise gets everything out of your head and into a trusted place, creating instant clarity and momentum.

There’s structure through the “second brain” system. Participants build a simple, practical way to organise their work on the day, rather than leaving with ideas they may never implement.

And there’s space for creativity. Whether it is renaming projects, experimenting with formats, or shaping a system that feels intuitive, people find ways to make their work more engaging and personal.

This blend matters because productivity is not just about tools or discipline. It is about giving people the right kind of support at the right time so they can move forward with clarity.

In fact, 82% of participants go on to implement a new productivity system and report feeling more in control of their work after the workshop.

A Simple Way to Regain Control Today

If everything on your list feels urgent, start with a different question.

Ask yourself what you actually need right now.

  • Do you need to talk something through to gain clarity?
  • Do you need to take one small action to build momentum?
  • Do you need to step back and organise the work properly?
  • Or do you need to reconnect this task to something more meaningful?

Choosing the right response can help you move out of reaction mode and back into control.

Ready to Work This Way for Real?

If this resonates, join our upcoming How to be a Productivity Ninja public workshop to help you put it into practice straight away.

You’ll not just learn a system, you’ll build one that works for you, with the support, structure, and space to actually make it stick.

Book your place and start creating the clarity you need to focus on what really matters.

The post Why Prioritisation Alone Doesn’t Fix Overwhelm at Work appeared first on Think Productive UK.

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