Wednesday, April 26, 2017

7 Deep Work Tips That Will Dramatically Boost Your Productivity

Deep work

Being busy is more often than not a trap — an illusory euphemism for poor time management. By doing deep work you'll get rid of distractions, gain more focus, get more things done and, unexpectedly, have more time for other things.

Take Cal Newport, the author of Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World — in just a few years he earned a PhD from MIT, published 4 books and lots of academic papers, all while leaving the office by 5:30PM and rarely working on weekends. Oh, and he's also a professor at Georgetown University, married, and a father of two.

In a more familiar example, I'm a musician, software developer, entrepreneur, and — as of recently — a contributor to online publications (and I'm sure I'm not a multidisciplinary exception among SitePoint readers). I love pursuing all of my goals while learning something new (like a language or a dance), and exercising. I’ve found that I’ve never made more productive use of my time than since I adopted deep work practices.

What is Deep Work Anyway?

Cal, who coined the term, puts it this way:

Deep Work: Professional activities performed in a state of distraction-free concentration that push your cognitive capabilities to their limit. These efforts create new value, improve your skills, and are hard to replicate.

Cal also defines the counter-side of deep work — shallow work:

Shallow work: Non-cognitively demanding, logistical-style tasks, often performed while distracted. These efforts tend to not create new value in the world and are easy to replicate.

While staying focused and doing deep work, you'll find that you multiply your output by 2X, 4X, or even more, every day or week. You'll also feel happier and more accomplished.

Whether you are figuring out the business plan for your startup, doing some programming, or writing content, deep work is a valuable, rare and meaningful asset that will enable you to produce more of what actually makes your business, program, or publishing shine. You get all of this while cutting the clutter and freeing more time for other matters.

So let's get to it!

1. Schedule Your Entire Week Ahead

This may seem daunting at first, but you'll get better at it with practice. You'll see that trying to plan the whole week will force you to actually think and define in detail what it is that you need to do. Also, while you put these tasks in your calendar, you'll need to allocate time for them, also forcing you to be realistic.

Doing this is critically important as you don't want to be wandering through every workday, thinking about what you have to do and making decisions all the time — just check your schedule for today, and execute.

Again, it doesn't need to be perfect. You'll get better at it. Since this is a big one, let's expand a little:

Define Tasks the Right Way

Ask yourself: if I get one thing done this day and feel satisfied, what would that be? Yes, that "one thing" is deep work, and you'll be amazingly productive if you can get one of those tasks done every day (just like the Seinfeld Strategy).

Be specific. "Write article" or "program app" won't do it. You'll have to think in terms of actionable sub-tasks. For writing an article, that could be:

  1. Write an outline
  2. Write the draft
  3. Proof-read and edit

For a program, this can vary wildly, but one possible course of action may be:

  1. Define scope and pick a component
  2. Research and reference documentation
  3. Code
  4. Test, debug, and refactor
  5. Document
  6. Repeat

Be small. Small tasks are more actionable and less intimidating than big ones. While "1 hour of workout" is specific enough, you could end up exhausted and discouraged if you're not used to that level of exertion. Two different blocks of "30 minutes of exercise" could be more approachable (besides, it turns out that even just 30 minutes of daily exercise does the trick). While planning your week, go through this mental process: am I intimidated by this? If the answer is yes, try breaking it into smaller, more actionable sub-tasks.

At the Beginning of the Workweek

Brainstorm the current state of your project. Take a moment to think about what you want to accomplish, and try to deconstruct or reverse-engineer the process so that you can see what its components are.

Review "for later" tasks. You might have a mix of deep and shallow tasks that you’ve been leaving for later. Review them all and see if they fit somewhere in the week.

Leave some room. I normally schedule about 75% of my work week. This makes it possible for me to move things around and handle unexpected events.

You could schedule every minute, and that would be incredibly productive if you're good at it. For most, this isn’t realistic — go easy on the scheduling at first.

At the End of the Workweek

Ask yourself (and be sincere): am I labeling shallow work as deep just to feel more accomplished?

Evaluate. Did it go well? Did you over-estimate or under-estimate time assignments? Keep all of this in mind for next week.

Shut down. You're done. Close all of your browser tabs, apps, and everything work-related. See you next week.

2. Don't Multitask

Multi-tasking is a myth. As I mentioned in one of my articles, changing from one task to another not only has a cost in time, but more importantly, it comes at a very high cognitive expense. That is, it makes you less productive because you let your limited focus and mental power drain as you switch from one task to another. See these articles for more info about this:

Do one thing, and one thing only. Don't attempt to write a report while talking to your peers, or code PHP routines while checking the news. It'll easily take you double the time.

In fact, unless it's your actual job, don't surf the web. This has been happening to me a lot — I'm coding something and some random thought crosses my mind, and I just take a minute to check it on the Internet. Or I take a little break and go check the news for five minutes... don't do it.

One day I was working in a tiny room with no TV, no phone (more on this later), and no Internet. Since I had my computer I decided to focus on tasks I didn't need the Internet for, and I had my most productive day in years.

I hear what you're saying — "if I don't check this right now, I'll forget about it!" Fair enough, make a "for later" note on a piece of paper and put your focus back on what you were doing.

3. Ritualize

The more you can go on auto-pilot for the mundane tasks (cooking, eating, hygiene, relaxing, choosing what to do next), the more focus you'll be able to maintain.

Something you can use the Internet for: search for "morning rituals", read a couple of articles to see if one routine makes sense to you. Put it in practice and you'll see how it pays off after a week or so.

Extra tip: don't do email first thing in the morning. Your brain is at its best after a coffee and a shower, and you want to save this very valuable state for things that actually require this capacity. With some exceptions, replying to email isn't the most mentally demanding task, so leave it for later.

4. Take Breaks from Focus, Not from Distractions

With YouTube, instant notifications, podcasts, and more, we live in a distracted world. If you want to gain more focus to get more done, there will have to be a change of paradigm in your life. You’ll need to make deep work the most important part of your activities, with breaks scheduled around it rather than through it.

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by Lucero del Alba via SitePoint

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