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The Hit-By-A-Bus Theory of Getting Work Done

Before I leave the office, I do my best to get my work done or into a shape where my coworkers can still recover my work in my absence. Today I’ll explain the how and why behind this thinking.

Why Do You Do This?

I think I learned the hit-by-a-bus theory of work from my mentor Dede (D2). The theory being: “You don’t know what could happen. You could get hit by a bus driving home. Just make sure I can find your work if you’re gone.”

There are any number of occasions where you might be absent and someone needs to see your work. You might have left the office for the day, gone on vacation, or had to go into lockdown mode because of an impending business trip, vacation, or storm. Just because there’s a hurricane in Florida doesn’t mean life comes to a stop everywhere in the country. Or the customer or boss might be working after you’ve gone home for the day. Or someone might want to view the progress you’ve made or change the due date on a document while you’re out of town. Or you’re leaving the company and tomorrow is your last day on the job.

The important part of the hit-by-a-bus theory is simply to make sure someone can find your work if you are not available, whether it’s an emergency or not. Your goal should be to save someone from having to recreate the work you’ve done so far.

How Do You Do This?

There are multiple ways you can keep your leaders or peers up to date on your work:

As a simple example of how this sort of thing works, I am writing this blog on Saturday, August 1, a few days before it goes live. That way, if there’s a power or internet access failure when Hurricane Isaias blows through town on Sunday (my usual blog-writing day), the post is still on the WordPress server and ready to go come Monday.

Look out for your coworkers, and they’ll appreciate it!

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