Original article
You probably don’t want to admit it but you love distractions. In fact, just like monkeys, you get a shot of dopamine every time something pulls you in another direction. Why do you think you check your email so much?
You probably don’t want to admit it but you love distractions. In fact, just like monkeys, you get a shot of dopamine every time something pulls you in another direction. Why do you think you check your email so much?
Want to be more productive and get your focus
back? There are no secret tricks here… do one thing at a time. Stop
multitasking—it’s just another form of distraction.
1. Work backwards from goals to milestones to tasks. Writing “launch company website” at the top of your to-do
list is a sure way to make sure you never get it done. Break down the work into
smaller and smaller chunks until you have specific tasks that can be
accomplished in a few hours or less: Sketch a wireframe, outline an
introduction for the homepage video, etc. That’s how you set goals and actually
succeed in crossing them off your list.
2. Stop multi-tasking. No, seriously—stop.
Switching from task to task quickly does not work. In fact, changing tasks more
than 10 times in a day makes
you dumber than being stoned. When you’re stoned, your IQ drops by five
points. When you multitask, it drops by an average of 10 points, 15 for men,
five for women (yes, men are three times as bad at multitasking than
women).
3. Be militant about eliminating distractions. Lock your door, put a sign up, turn off your phone, texts,
email, and instant messaging. In fact, if you know you may sneak a peek at your
email, set it to offline mode, or even turn off your Internet connection. Go to
a quiet area and focus on completing one task.
4. Schedule your email. Pick two or three times
during the day when you’re going to use your email. Checking your email
constantly throughout the day creates a ton of noise and kills your
productivity.
5. Use the phone. Email isn’t meant for
conversations. Don’t reply more than twice to an email. Pick up the phone
instead.
6. Work on your own agenda. Don’t let something
else set your day. Most people go right to their emails and start freaking out.
You will end up at inbox-zero, but accomplish nothing. After you wake up, drink
water so you rehydrate, eat a good breakfast to replenish your glucose, then
set prioritized goals for the rest of your day.
7. Work in 60 to 90 minute intervals. Your brain uses up more glucose than any other bodily
activity. Typically you will have spent most of it after 60-90 minutes. (That’s
why you feel so burned out after super long meetings.) So take a break: Get up,
go for a walk, have a snack, do something completely different to recharge. And
yes, that means you need an extra hour for breaks, not including lunch, so if
you’re required to get eight hours of work done each day, plan to be there for
9.5-10 hours.
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