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Home » Why Getting More Done At Work Is Creating More Workplace Pressure

Why Getting More Done At Work Is Creating More Workplace Pressure

By News RoomMay 8, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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Why Getting More Done At Work Is Creating More Workplace Pressure
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When I was a pharmaceutical representative, they gave a quota to hit, hoping everyone would reach at least 100% of forecast. If salespeople came in higher than 105%, the following year they raised their forecast. If they came in lower, the following year they lowered it. It never really made sense to me because it encouraged people to not work too hard because the ceiling just kept getting higher. That is why it is so interesting to me to see how performance measurements have changed. Until recently, there was always a clear advantage for people who were more prepared or more organized, and that usually came from experience. The old system provided you with something to strive for. What feels different now is where everyone starts due to new workplace tools raising the bar. With AI, even someone with less experience can present at a much higher level right away. This creates borrowed confidence, where the shiny new report you came up with might make you look good in the moment, but it also raises the standard for everyone and creates workplace pressure to keep up as expectations continue to climb. Research from UC Berkeley shows these tools are increasing the pace, the volume, and the expectations of work, which makes it harder for employees to sustain that level over time. Trying to keep up has created a new kind of stress.

Workplace Pressure Is Rising Faster Than People Can Keep Up

New workplace tools make it easier to produce high-quality work quickly, which sounds like progress and in many ways it is. Where this becomes a problem is how quickly expectations adjust, because what felt like strong performance last month can feel average today. Managers start expecting clearer communication, teams expect faster turnaround, and work that once stood out becomes what is assumed. Most people do not notice the change until they feel the pressure, and the challenge is not doing better work once, it is keeping that level going. Expectations move faster than people can adapt, which creates a steady sense that you have to keep pushing just to stay even.

These tools also influence confidence. Employees can produce responses, ideas, and communication that sound very capable, which creates a sense of confidence going into meetings, presentations, or difficult conversations. The challenge comes when that confidence has not been built through experience and has been supported by tools that shape the message. When conversations move in unexpected directions or deeper questions arise, that confidence can feel harder to sustain. This creates borrowed confidence, where the confidence is coming from the tool more than your own experience. You can sound clear and sure of yourself because the tool helped shape the response, even if you have not fully worked through the thinking on your own. The gap between how prepared someone sounds and how prepared they feel internally can increase stress.

Workplace Pressure And The Challenge Of Sustaining Performance

It is one thing to perform at a higher level once and another to sustain that level consistently. New workplace tools can help employees produce strong work quickly, but they also create an expectation that this level of performance will continue. Many people begin to feel the strain when a strong day turns into a standard that must be repeated, because sustaining that level requires energy, focus, and adaptability. When employees feel they must maintain a constant level of high performance without variation, pressure increases and the concern moves from doing well to continuing to do well every time.

Over time, this starts to change how people approach their work. Instead of focusing on making a clear decision, people spend more time refining and second-guessing to avoid falling short of the new standard. That can lead to overthinking and slower decisions. It can also change how you judge your own work. You may start to feel something is not ready unless it sounds as strong as what the tools produce, which keeps you refining instead of deciding.

Workplace Pressure And What You Can Do About It

Understanding this pressure is the first step. The goal is to use new workplace tools in a way that supports your thinking rather than replaces it.

Start by building your own perspective before turning to tools. Even a few minutes of outlining your thoughts can help you stay grounded in your own ideas. When you use tools after that, they become a way to refine your thinking rather than define it.

Set a simple limit for refinement. Decide in advance how many passes you will make before you move forward. This helps prevent endless reworking and keeps your focus on making a clear decision.

Pay attention to how you prepare for conversations. Instead of focusing only on what to say, consider different directions the conversation might take. That can help you feel more confident when things change.

It also helps to recognize that overly refined output can hide gaps in deeper understanding. If you feel pressure to match how others sound, take a step back and focus on the quality of your thinking. Asking better questions and exploring ideas more deeply can set you apart in ways that tools cannot replicate.

For leaders, there is an opportunity to reduce pressure by clarifying expectations. If your team is using new workplace tools, acknowledge that adjustment takes time. Encourage thoughtful work rather than constant perfection. That can create room for employees to build confidence that lasts.

Workplace Pressure And Why It Is Important Now

New workplace tools are changing how employees experience their own performance. As workplace pressure increases, expectations rise quickly and confidence becomes harder to sustain, which can drive stress even in high-performing environments. Why getting more done at work is creating more workplace pressure is a question more organizations need to ask, and the answer is not about removing tools but understanding how those tools influence expectations, comparison, and confidence. If you recognize the workplace pressure you feel, you are not alone, and the key is to stay focused on your ability to think, adapt, and engage with your work in a meaningful way so tools enhance what you do without defining how you measure your own value.

AI at Work burnout risk confidence at work employee performance employee stress performance expectations Productivity Tools work stress workplace productivity
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