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Hidden Forces

Daniel H. Pink | Biological Clock: Why "What" You Do is Just as Important as "When" You Do It

Hidden Forces

Demetri Kofinas

Business, Government

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 21 May 2018

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In Episode 45 of Hidden Forces, Demetri Kofinas speaks with Daniel Pink, the highly acclaimed author of numerous, best-selling books including his latest, When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing.

Timing is everything, so it's kind of surprising that most of us don't give it any serious consideration. We think about what things we want to do. We think about who we want to do these things with. When we want to do something is generally our final consideration — if we consider it at all.

Take college students, for example. They must take classes in art, math, history, science, and a host of other fields. Each year, just before the semester begins, students flock to their computers and plot out the class schedules that will govern their lives for the next five months. Their top considerations are when their friends are taking classes, how they can avoid getting up early, and how they can ensure their classes are all on the same day so that they get a few extra days off.

This is a bit of a problem.

As Daniel Pink notes in his latest book When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing, there is a biological reality to our daily rhythms. This means that, at certain times, we are better at problem solving. At others, we perform better when it comes to creative endeavors. It may seem counterintuitive, but we each have a biological clock that has a material impact on our lives. Put simply, the time that we choose to do something alters our performance, influences our wellbeing, and shapes our overall experience. So if we are making decisions about when to do things on an impulse or according to whatever happens to be convenient, in many ways, we are setting ourselves up for failure.

However, there is a solution to this problem. It's known as "chronobiology," and it allows us to make fact-based decisions about when we should do things. By using chronobiology — by following the natural patterns found in our biology — we can help ensure that we are at our peak performance when we attempt any given task.

But how can we tell what our natural cycle is? How do we know if we are making good when-based decisions? In this episode, Demetri Kofinas speaks with Pink about the science of perfect timing and why when we do something is just as important as what we do and how well we do it.

Producer & Host: Demetri Kofinas

Editor & Engineer: Stylianos Nicolaou

Join the conversation on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter at @hiddenforcespod

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

What's up everybody?

0:01.0

What's up everybody?

0:02.0

What's up,

0:05.0

what's up everybody?

0:08.0

What's up everybody?

0:11.0

Welcome to this week's episode of Hidden Forces with me,

0:14.3

Demetric of Phoenix. Today I speak with Daniel Pink, the author of numerous

0:19.3

highly acclaimed and best-selling books including his latest when the scientific secrets of perfect timing

0:26.2

in addition to his writing career pink was also the host and co-executive producer of

0:31.1

crowd control a television series about human behavior.

0:35.4

He also appears frequently on NPR's Hidden Brain, the PBS News Hour, and other TV and radio

0:41.2

networks.

0:42.2

He's been a contributing editor at Fast Company and Wired, as well as a business

0:46.4

columnist for the Sunday Telegraph. Pink's TED Talk on The Science of Motivation is one of the

0:52.1

ten most watched TED Talks of all time

0:54.9

with more than 19 million views and his RSA animated video about the ideas in his book

1:00.8

Drive has collected more than 14 million.

1:04.2

Daniel, welcome to Ed Enforcers.

1:06.1

Dimitri, thanks for having me.

1:07.5

That was well-sinked.

1:09.1

Indeed.

1:09.9

That was synchronous.

...

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