Our workdays often start in third gear, with back-to-back meetings, emails, and Slack notifications, leaving people tired and exhausted by the end of the day.
Disjointed work and miscommunications are all too common. A project moves fast for a week, then hits a wall. A deliverable gets built and then rebuilt because it wasn’t what the business needed.
That's why in many workplaces, the problem is a lack of perspective.
People spend long stretches either executing tasks without context or talking strategy without turning it into clear next steps. The result is misalignment, constant re-prioritization, and a steady drip of frustration and rework.
A simple habit clears things up: Zoom In, Zoom Out (ZIZO)—a repeatable way to reconnect daily execution to direction, and direction back to concrete action.
Perspective changes how work is experienced.
Zooming in is executing, focusing, and getting things done. Focusing on one small, concrete action gives your brain something to hold onto and provides a sense of progress.
Zooming out is using strategy and context to drive daily meaning, direction, and vision. Zooming out creates mental space and clarity.
Both modes are necessary, but it’s not uncommon for people to favor one or the other. The problem comes to a head when teams get stuck in one mode where strategy stays abstract, and execution stays busy.
Taking a few minutes to spend on ZIZO can bring the two together. Zooming out creates space. Zooming in creates containment. Both are necessary for work to feel manageable instead of overwhelming.
Most workdays just happen. People start in automatic mode and zoom in on what’s the loudest. By midmorning, they’ve answered messages, attended meetings, and knocked out tasks, yet still feel unsettled.
Instead of starting the day in reaction mode, zoom out long enough to answer these questions:
What are my actual priorities today?
What would meaningful progress look like?
You don’t have to plan every aspect of your day, but having a plan creates alignment. This way, you stop treating every task as if it deserves the same level of urgency and zoom in on your priorities and what will push things forward.
So: Zoom out, choose, zoom in.
Once you're in the groove, misalignment can still happen when you don’t decide your priorities or zoom in on too many things at once. In this sense, you’re still reacting, instead of choosing.
If you find yourself doing this, pause, zoom out, and ask:
That short reset prevents hours of unfocused effort. Then, you can zoom in and focus on the task at hand. This is what makes progress feel real.
So: Zoom out, re-decide, zoom in.
At the end of the day, it’s tempting to log out of everything and immediately head home. But burnout leads to an overly zoomed-in attitude, where you take your work home with you.
At the end of the day, take a five- to ten-minute zoom-out. This helps you:
So: Zoom out, close the loop.
A common concern is that “zooming out” will slow momentum. In practice, the opposite is usually true: short, structured pauses prevent hours of misdirected effort.
Leaders can model ZIZO by building it into workflows:
Over time, viewing business operations from both macro and micro perspectives builds trust and ownership among your team. People stop confusing busyness with value and learn how to make choices that measurably move work forward.
Thinking intentionally about perspective gives teams a repeatable way to connect daily work to company initiatives, reduce rework, and create clearer ownership. When work feels clearer and more contained, engagement with it improves, which in turn leads to better outcomes.
Content published by Q4intelligence
Photo by Creative Station