How this gaming app can beat procrastination

Published Oct 22, 2020

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“I will do it tomorrow or later today.”

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

According to statistics, procrastination affects 45% of adults at some point in their lives and a quarter of adults describe themselves as procrastinators.

One study estimated that procrastinating employees wasted a quarter of their working days, at a loss of R165 000 per year per employee.

What if the same technology that enables slacking (scrolling through social media, internet surfing, playing games) offer the solution to this procrastination?

MBA student, Sam Orton of University of Stellenbosch Business School (USB) thinks so. Orton researched whether the design and technology that get people hooked on online games could also turn beating procrastination into a game, with a winning outcome for both employees and employers.

The answer came via “gamification”. This is the use of game design elements like avatars, scores, leaderboards and virtual rewards in non-game contexts such as apps for learning a skill or tracking one’s exercise. In this case, a gamified smartphone app targeted at boosting productivity.

Gamification can contribute to the motivation that helps procrastinators overcome their work-delaying tactics. It can also help those working from home to set goals, manage their time and feel more connected to work amid household distractions.

Workplace procrastination does not only come at a cost for businesses in lost productivity and under-performing employees, but it can also contribute to an individual’s increase in stress and anxiety, lowered self-confidence, a negative reputation at work and, ultimately, reduced employability and earning potential.

“Procrastination is the thief of time, time is money, time waits for nobody – procrastinators have heard them all and still continue to put off getting things done, even though they know there will be negative consequences.

“They struggle to gain control over their procrastinating even though they know it is irrational, and they generally mean no harm to themselves or their employer or client by it. That was the reason for exploring the relationship between gamification and procrastination, to see if it would be a useful tool in helping people to overcome the problem,” he said.

The growing use of computer-based therapy in mental health, and promising results seen in the use of gamification in psychotherapy, along with the growing popularity of smartphones as gaming devices and their widespread accessibility, made exploring a gamified smartphone app as an intervention for procrastination a “logical next step”, Orton said.

How does game design and principles tackle a work-related problem?

“When people play games and have fun, their emotional and motivational engagement is plain to see. When people play games, they experience enjoyment, competence, mastery, engagement and flow – all elements of intrinsic motivation in human behaviour. The fundamental concept of gamification is to use this motivational ability of games for reasons other than entertainment, such as in learning a workplace skill or tracking progress of tasks.

“The way that games motivate participation and reward achievement of goals, as well as the instant and continuous feedback on performance, satisfies some of the basic psychological needs of employees in the workplace – autonomy, competence, social interaction and a feeling of belonging – and thereby increases their motivation to get things done and overcome procrastination,” said Orton.

Orton enlisted 12 retail store managers, who had scored highest on a survey of procrastination tendencies, to install a gamified task management app called Habitica on their smartphones and record their experiences over four weeks.

The app included game elements like avatars, leaderboards, experience and skill points to be earned, levelling up and earning achievements and rewards, the ability to customise avatars and choose difficulty and rewards, as well as social elements in chatrooms and joining team challenges to reach collective goals.

Participants entered their real-world work tasks into the app, creating goals to be achieved in the “game”.

“Turning boring, mundane, or unpleasant tasks into motivating and exciting goals in the game can reduce task aversiveness – an identified procrastination factor,” Orton said.

At the end of the four weeks, the participants reported that using the app had helped them to break their work down into manageable tasks and to prioritise tasks better. The prospect of earning more points in the game helped motivate them to get difficult or unpleasant tasks done earlier in the day and to start their next task sooner. This also made people feel more competent and less overwhelmed.

Orton said the study, albeit with a small sample, had shown that the gaming elements that give people a sense of autonomy, competence and relatedness bolster employees’ internal motivation and in turn reduce procrastination, making work more enjoyable and people more effective.

He warned though, that for organisations wanting to apply gamification strategies, “it can’t be superficial or just another thing to do”.

“Implementation must be monitored, so the company can really understand where it stands and how people are responding. If it works, it can definitely make a difference between success and failure for individuals and companies.”

IOL TECH

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