(As opposed to engineering with hectic grumpiness)
Ah, finally - it’s the Christmas holidays. At last, I’ve a chance to divert the kids into the path of their doting and understanding grandparents, then to sneak upstairs for a spot of stolen quiet-time. Time for switching off, for thinking and, in not too big a dose, writing.
Time for calm, quiet reflection is an astoundingly rare commodity. It has to be cherished and nurtured wherever possible, especially in that most unlikely of environments, work, where we happen to spend a goodly chunk of our lives. Reflecting on the the year that is petering out as I write, the biggest theme for me has been focus, or how difficult it has been to apply it with any regularity, and asking why I’ve not been successful at blanking off the world to exclude everything and everyone save the task to hand.
In the hustle and bustle of this engineering world that we inhabit, it’s easy to get caught in the undertow of “actionism” (from that great German word Aktionismus) - doing stuff, doing more stuff, doing the same stuff again, doing more of the same stuff slightly differently; all of it urgent, most of it dull, mostly simultaneous, all of it with consequences for colleagues, suppliers and customers that mean, under the circumstances, we’re unable to say “sod it.” We’re lynchpins without the luxury of deciding our priorities. Well, that’s how I’ve been of late.
So, making use of this Christmas calm, I’ve tried to slow down, to reappraise how I - how we - work as engineers. The goal, I have decided, after a few sips of tea and a little staring out of the window, is that we must be able to work with grace, patience and precision.
This may sound like a whimsical, romantic view of master watchmakers or coffee roasters at their most reflective - but there’s no way around it: it’s the best way to approach any task. So let’s have a think about what each of those concepts mean, and see if they make sense.
Grace and patience
Grace and patience are the rhino hide protecting the core of precision, which is the aim of any engineering activity. When they are too thinly applied, actions and deadlines chip away at the “precision” aspect of what we do. If we lack precision, then it’s easy to become rattled or ratty when our decisions are questioned.
Grace is the ability to take on board what a task or a product requires, as communicated by people or by circumstance - or, as is more often the case, as not quite communicated by people or by circumstance. Grace means:
- Not being caught up in the emotion of the action
- Not being ruffled by the urgency of the action
- Retaining the ability to think clearly
- Retaining the ability to call in help and assistance from others without transferring the “panic”
… all the while, if possible, without becoming aloof, or putting on the “insufferable smile.”
Patience is very much linked to grace, but means having the inner robustness to delve into a task, to keep at it, to maintain the ability to ask the right questions, to wait for the right answers as they develop. It is and requires:
- the ability to focus on a project
- the ability to “plod” through the logic of a project
Precision
Precision is the mark of getting things as right as they can be. It doesn’t mean perfection (of which there is very little to go round), but rather getting the small things right, even if it’s a version change to 1.1.2, so that the big steps can also be taken later. There are hundreds of examples that I could list, but in our world, understanding tolerances, GD&T callouts, specification callouts. etc spring to mind. They need to be defined them correctly in the context of your product.
Note that I don’t mean setting tolerances arbitrarily small - precision is a result of the discussions with production, with suppliers, with customers, in the spirit of grace and patience. Getting things right, properly, defensibly.
Discovering the environment of grace and patience
A corollary of all of the above is that we as engineers need the environment in which to work with grace and patience. I would love to be able to say that we should be developing everything in splendid isolation from business needs. Like an AT&T Bell Labs from the glory days of transistors and lasers, or a 1960s IBM, we should be capable of working on the future. To be honest, though, I can’t even imagine working in such a world. It could be wonderful, it could be terminally dull (though I dream it would be the former).
We need to face reality. I work in the automotive industry, which tends to be rather full of rowdy reality, so I know what it means to suffer business pressures alongside engineering and development pressures, in open-plan offices, without air conditioning.
Attaining the “state” of grace and patience in such an environment has to stem from a conscious decision to find and to nurture them first. As far as I can see, the breakthrough needs to be mental.
Without coming over too Zen, I think (but can’t say from experience) it should be possible to filter out background noise and to focus on the task at hand. We can help ourselves by taking small physical steps like turning off email alert pop-ups, silencing phones and perhaps setting up “do not disturb” signals for our colleagues; big headphones, for example. Occasionally escaping to a lonely meeting room can work, though it does mean leaving a whole desk’s worth of tools behind.
What I’m saying is that we (I, at least) need to be clearer of what our mental capabilities are, what we need to learn and how we should develop ourselves, our processes and our communications with colleagues (commercial, quality, purchasing, suppliers - that whole bubble world that we interact with) so that we end up being able to focus on work, permit the minimum of distractions and can take time to research, collaborate and to iterate our way to the future, all in the spirit of grace, patience and precision.
Easy job. Let’s have at it in 2014…!