
Your team puts in long hours and their calendars are packed, but key projects still fall behind. This is the gap between being busy and being effective.
Managers feel this firsthand. You see the effort, but you also see missed deadlines and rising stress. The team seems to be constantly putting out fires.
A constant sense of urgency is not a sign of a high-performing team; it's a symptom that something is wrong. The real issue is often a misalignment of effort. Teams get trapped reacting to whatever feels loudest, not what is most valuable for the long term. Everyone is working hard, but they are not moving forward.
The True Cost of a Reactive Work Culture
This reactive cycle has tangible costs. A recent study found that only 12% of managers consistently make time for strategic, long-term activities.
The fallout is significant. The same study showed 48% of managers report chronic stress from being overloaded with urgent tasks. In an economy with 1.8 million knowledge workers, this constant firefighting contributes to 27% absenteeism rates in tech sectors, costing an estimated €4.2 billion every year.
Focused change works. In 2026, DevOps leads in Utrecht using WhatPulse to analyse their work patterns achieved a 24% increase in time spent on important, non-urgent work. This directly correlated to a 19% boost in the adoption of new, more efficient tools. You can dig into more of the research on these time management findings on highberg.com.
Stephen Covey’s time management matrix offers a framework for diagnosing where your team’s time is going. By categorizing tasks, you can see the patterns trapping your team in a low-impact, high-stress loop. It is the first step toward redirecting their energy to work that creates sustainable results. This guide shows you how to apply this framework using real data from your team's digital activity.




