The Difference Between Performing Well and Operating Efficiently

Most of the people I end up working with are not struggling in any obvious way. In fact, they are typically doing well, often very well, with strong careers, high levels of responsibility, and consistent results.

What tends to stand out more is something subtle – a sense that certain areas require more effort than they should, or that things don’t run as cleanly or predictably as expected.

It’s not about something being wrong. It’s more about noticing where there is unnecessary friction.

 

At that level, the usual solutions don’t always apply.

More strategies, more frameworks, or more productivity tools tend to add complexity rather than resolve it. The issue is rarely a lack of knowledge.

More often, it comes down to how someone is operating in real time – how decisions are made under pressure, how attention is allocated, and how reactions unfold in specific situations. It can start to show up as a sense of “this could have gone better,” or noticing that things that used to feel quick and straightforward now take more time or effort. At the same time, the spillover tends to become more visible – tension or frustration from work carrying into personal interactions, or a general sense of cognitive load that doesn’t fully switch off.

 

One of the things that tends to get overlooked is how much performance is influenced by what sits outside of work.

Not in a broad “work-life balance” sense, but in very concrete ways – relationship dynamics, communication patterns, unresolved friction in day-to-day interactions, or the accumulation of small decisions that quietly take up mental space.

None of these are dramatic on their own, but together they shape how clearly someone thinks, how efficiently they act, and how much energy they actually have available.

 

Approaching this from a more structured lens – drawing from cognitive behavioral frameworks, medical training, and performance work – tends to shift the focus away from adding more, and toward understanding what is already happening.

Once those patterns are clear, the work becomes more focused. It does require active effort to shift them, but the changes are targeted rather than broad, which is what tends to make them effective and sustainable over time.

 

There is also an important distinction here.

This kind of work is not therapy, and it doesn’t try to be.

It doesn’t center on processing the past or working through experiences in a clinical way. The focus stays on current functioning – how someone is operating now, what is influencing that, and what can be refined to make it work better.

 

For people who are already performing well, improvement tends to come from where effort is directed and from fine-tuning what is already working to make it more effective. It usually involves identifying what is creating friction, clarifying patterns, and doing the work required to shift them in a more targeted way. Over time, that is what allows things to run more efficiently and with greater consistency across both professional and personal domains.

If this way of working resonates, you can find more information here:
https://drmariabruce.com/coaching

Share:

More Posts

Optimalist – Guided Journal

I’m excited to announce that, in partnership with The Scribes, we’ve just launched The Optimalist Guided Journal – a tool designed to bring clarity to goal setting while raising awareness of mood, wellbeing, and daily focus. This collaboration blends science-backed structure with creative freedom, helping you stay intentional and grounded in both productivity and self-care.

The journal features erasable dry-marker pages, allowing you to prioritize tasks, tick off goals once completed, and create flexible daily or weekly schedules that can be updated as your plans evolve. It also includes dotted pages for notes, reflections, and sketches – perfect for tracking progress or creative thinking.

A huge thank you to everyone who made this project possible, especially Michael Reiney, CEO of @thescribesco, and my incredibly talented friend @littletigernyc for the beautiful logo design.

The Optimalist Journal is now available in the Shop section.
.

L’Officiel: La Desatanudos

L’Officiel: ¿Qué es el Optimal Performance Training (entrenamiento de rendimiento óptimo) que vos proponés?

María C. Bruce: Es un enfoque que busca maximizar el potencial de una persona en contextos de alto rendimiento. En general, se lo relaciona con el deporte, pero también se aplica a la dirección empresarial y a la gestión de equipos, donde la necesidad de alcanzar el mejor desempeño es constante e hiperexigente. Además, estos profesionales enfrentan mucha presión para sobresalir en sus respectivas áreas. Esta presión puede venir de expectativas personales, demandas externas o por la competencia inherente a esos ámbitos. Por eso, el OPT pone el énfasis en el manejo del estrés y la ansiedad utilizando, por ejemplo, técnicas centradas en la respiración como principal regulador fisiológico. Además, se entrena el “reencuadre” (reframing), que implica un cambio consciente y constante de perspectivas y pensamientos negativos a positivos, permitiendo que los individuos puedan gestionar mejor la presión que sienten. Por otra parte, se trabaja en la resiliencia para sobreponerse a los fracasos o a situaciones difíciles, incorporando estas experiencias negativas como partes fundamentales (building blocks) para fortalecer el carácter y la determinación. La resiliencia se traduce en una capacidad de aprendizaje, de recuperarse rápidamente, y de seguir adelante con el objetivo final en mente.