Focus. Part 8

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You're going to clear your desk -- shove everything in a drawer or box if you have to, and leave only the papers necessary to work on your Something Amazing, and a couple of other essential items (phone, pen & pad, etc.).

You're going to clear your computer -- close all programs, including your browser, that you don't absolutely need for this task. It's also crucial that you turn off all notifications on your computer that might distract you: email notifications, Instant Messaging (IM), calendar notifications, anything. Make your computer as distraction-free as possible.

Also turn off your phone, Blackberry, iPhone, and anything else that might distract you from your Something Amazing.

Finally, clear away meetings and anything on your task list that will interfere with this one task. You can get to those other tasks later, but for now, you're going to work on nothing but this one amazing task.

step 3: focus on that Something Amazing.



OK, everything is clear. Now you just need to focus on that Something Amazing -- that one task you chose that you're excited about, that's going to change your life in some small way.

Do this as soon as you can in the day -- not after lunch or late in the day, but as close to First Thing as you can. Either before you go into work or as soon as you get into work and can clear your desk. Don't wait until later, or things will pile up and you'll never get to it.

This is actually the step that most people have a problem with. They get the urge to check email or make that phone call or... do anything else, really. No! Stop yourself, take a deep breath, and remember why you chose this task. You're excited about it. Feel that excitement, and focus.

Even if that focus only comes for a few minutes, give it your best shot. You might give in to the urge to do something else, but then bring yourself back and see if you can't focus for a few more minutes. Repeat until you've worked a good chunk (30 minutes, an hour, two hours, half the day if possible) on your Something Amazing.

Do your best to either finish this Something Amazing, or a good chunk of it. If it's a big project that will take days, months or years, just finish a chunk that'll take at least an hour or two of your day.

When you're done, bask in the glory of your accomplishment.

If you have more time and energy, repeat the process. Work on your next Something Amazing. Keep doing this, working on exciting and amazing things, for the rest of your life.

2: single-tasking and productivity.

"Concentrate all your thoughts upon the work at hand. The sun's rays do not burn until brought to a focus."

Alexander Graham Bell.

Many of us grew up in the age of multi-tasking, where you couldn't call yourself productive if you weren't a good multi-tasker. We learned to always have several b.a.l.l.s in the air at once -- while writing something on the computer, we had a phone call going, we were writing something on a notepad or paper form, we were reviewing doc.u.ments, sometimes even holding a meeting at the same time. That's the productive worker, the effective executive.

When email and Instant Messaging and blogs and the rest of the Internet came along, multi-tasking went haywire. Now we're expected to do 10 things on the computer at once, still with the paper, phone, and meetings going, along with texting and Blackberry Messaging. Multi-tasking is no longer about being productive -- it's a way of living.

It's not a sane way of living, however, and it's not necessarily the most effective way of working either. A few notes on why: Multi-tasking is less efficient, due to the need to switch gears for each new task, and the switch back again.

Multi-tasking is more complicated, and thus more p.r.o.ne to stress and errors.

Multi-tasking can be crazy, and in this already chaotic world, we need to reign in the terror and find a little oasis of sanity and calm.

Our brains can really only handle one thing at a time, and so we get so used to switching between one thing and another with our brains that we program them to have a short attention span. This is why it's so hard to learn to focus on one thing at a time again.

a single-tasking life.

Imagine instead, a single-tasking life. Imagine waking and going for a run, as if running were all you do. Nothing else is on your mind but the run, and you do it to the very best of your abilities. Then you eat, enjoying every flavorful bite of your fresh breakfast of whole, unprocessed foods. You read a novel, as if nothing else in the world existed. You do your work, one task at a time, each task done with full focus and dedication. You spend time with loved ones, as if nothing else existed.

This is summed up very well by something Charles d.i.c.kens once wrote, "He did each single thing as if he did nothing else." This is a life lived fully in the moment, with a dedication to doing the best you can in anything you do -- whether that's a work project or making green tea.

If you live your life this way, by this single principle, it will have tremendous effects: Your work will become more focused.

You will become more effective at your work.

You'll become better at anything you do.

Your time alone will be of better quality.

Your time with your family will be much more meaningful.

Your reading will have less distractions.

You'll lose yourself in anything you deem worthy enough of your time and attention.

how to live a single-tasking life.

It sounds nice, but how do you live a life like this? Is it as simple as saying you're going to do it, or is it impossible? Somewhere in between, of course, and like anything worth doing, it takes practice.

Here's what I'd recommend: Become conscious. When you start doing something, become more aware you're starting that activity. As you do it, become aware of really doing it, and of the urge to switch to something else. Paying attention is the important first step.

Clear distractions. If you're going to read, clear everything else away, so you have nothing but you and the book. If you're going to do email, close every other program and all browser tabs except the email tab, and just do that. If you're going to do a work task, have nothing else open, and turn off the phone. If you're going to eat, put away the computer and other devices and shut off the television.

Choose wisely. Don't just start doing something. Give it some thought -- do you really want to turn on the TV? Do you really want to do email right now? Is this the most important work task you can be doing?

Really pour yourself into it. If you're going to make tea, do it with complete focus, complete dedication. Put everything you have into that activity. If you're going to have a conversation, really listen, really be present. If you're going to make your bed, do it with complete attention and to the best of your abilities.

Practice. This isn't something you'll learn to do overnight. You can start right now, but you're not likely to be good at it at first. Keep at it. Practice daily, throughout the day. Do nothing else, but practice.

single-tasking productivity.

While the above tips will apply to work tasks as well as life in general, here are some tips focused more on productivity at work: Pick just a few tasks each day. While you might keep a longer master list of things to do, each day you should make a short list -- just 1-3 things you really want to accomplish. Call this your Most Important Task (MIT) list. These should be extremely important tasks that will have a high-impact on your life.

Don't do anything else before doing the first thing on your short list of MITs. Don't check email, Facebook, Twitter, blogs, online forums, news sites. Start your day after making your short list by working on your first MIT.

Clear distractions. Shut off phones, close the browser if possible, close your IM program if you have one, even disconnect your Internet if you can stand it.

One task at a time. Keep things simple, focused and effective by single-tasking. Focus on one task until it's done, then move to the next.

If you feel the urge to check your email or switch to another task, stop yourself. Breathe deeply. Re-focus yourself. Get back to the task at hand.

Keep on your MITs until you're done. Then you have time for email, paperwork, routine tasks, etc. Or if you have the time, pick another set of MITs.

If other things come up, note them on a piece of paper or small notebook. These are notes for things to do or follow-up on later, or ideas. Just take a short note, and then get back to your MIT. This way you don't get sidetracked, but you also don't forget those things you need to remember later.

Take deep breaths, stretch, and take breaks now and then. Enjoy life. Go outside, and appreciate nature. Keep yourself sane.

Keep a very short to-do list, clear distractions, do one thing at a time, until the list is finished. That's single-tasking productivity at its essence.

on multi-projecting.

There's a distinction between tasks and projects that should be made in any discussion of mult-tasking. Doing multiple tasks at the same time is less effective than single-tasking. But doing multiple projects at once is sometimes more effective than only one project at once.

Sometimes it's necessary to work on multiple projects -- even if you are in complete control of your work, which is not true for many people. If you only work on one project at once, often you are held up because you're waiting for somebody to do a task or reply to you with necessary information. What happens then? Or what happens if you're collaborating on a project but while someone else is doing their part, you don't have much to do? In these cases, it would probably be a waste of your time if you just waited, and worked on nothing else.

So multi-projecting can work -- you get one project going, but while you're waiting on something, you can switch to a second or even third project. All the time, you're only working on one task at a time, until each task is done, however.

Do note that there's a danger in taking on too many projects at once. I'd suggest taking on as few projects as possible. If you can do only one project at a time, without getting stuck in waiting, then do that -- it's much more effective and you'll get your projects done much faster. But when you must wait, you can switch to a second project. Again, work on as few at a time as you can get away with.

3: the power of a smaller work focus.

"Success demands singleness of purpose."

Vince Lombardi.

When you set your sights on a large target, broad in scope, you spread yourself thin. This is why the best companies are those with a laser focus. They do less, but they do it better.

Apple is a good example of this -- they don't try to tackle every computer niche. They don't make netbooks or low-end PCs, for example. They have a very small product line for such a big company. And yet, they do extremely well -- they make beautiful, well-made, high-functioning devices that customers absolutely love. And they make billions to boot. That's just one example of many.

A narrower focus allows you to do a better job -- to be better than anyone else, perhaps, at the narrower thing that you're good at.

the danger of a broad focus.

One of the biggest problems many people have in their careers, with work projects, with their businesses, is too broad of a focus. Just a few examples: Working on too many projects and trying to juggle your time between all of them.

Adding too many features to your software and creating a bloated application.

Trying to do everything for every customer, and spreading yourself too thin.

Trying to be everything for everybody, but ending up being nothing good.

Trying to please all your bosses and coworkers and forgetting what's important.

Communicating all the time via email, several social networks, phones, text messaging, cell phones, faxes and more... and never communicating with any depth.

Again, there are lots of other ways to have a focus that's too broad. In the end, it's a choice between trying to do everything but doing it poorly, or doing only a tiny amount of things really well.

take stock.

What's your current focus at work? Are you a writer involved in a whole range of writing projects at once? Are you a developer trying to offer something that appeals to everyone and solves every problem? Do you try to satisfy every possible customer, even if most of those possibilities are the exception rather than the rule?

Whatever your focus, take a closer look at it. What do you focus on that's absolutely essential, and what isn't as important? Figure out your top priorities, and also think about how much time you allocate to each of these focuses.

What are the possibilities of narrowing your focus? Of dropping some features or catering to a smaller group of customers or doing fewer things for fewer people? How hard would that be? What would need to be done to make that happen?

Focus. Part 8

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Focus. Part 8 summary

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