Exclusive- How To Train Your Brain To Stay Focused
As an entrepreneur, you have a lot on your plate. Staying focused can be tough with a constant stream of employees, clients,
emails, and phone calls demanding your attention. Amid the noise,
understanding your brain’s limitations and working around them can
improve your focus and increase your productivity.
Our brains
are finely attuned to distraction, so today’s digital environment makes
it especially hard to focus. “Distractions signal that something has
changed,” says David Rock, co-founder of the NeuroLeadership Institute and author of Your Brain at Work (HarperCollins,
2009). “A distraction is an alert says, ‘Orient your attention here
now; this could be dangerous.’” The brain’s reaction is automatic and
virtually unstoppable.
While
multitasking is an important skill, it also has a downside. “It reduces
our intelligence, literally dropping our IQ,” Rock says. “We make
mistakes, miss subtle cues, fly off the handle when we shouldn’t, or
spell things wrong.”
To make
matters worse, distraction feels great. “Your brain’s reward circuit
lights up when you multitask,” Rock says, meaning that you get an
emotional high when you’re doing a lot at once.
Ultimately,
the goal is not constant focus, but a short period of distraction-free
time every day. “Twenty minutes a day of deep focus could be
transformative,” Rock says.
Try these three tips to help you become more focused and productive:
1. Do creative work first. Typically,
we do mindless work first and build up to the toughest tasks. That
drains your energy and lowers your focus. “An hour into doing your work,
you’ve got a lot less capacity than (at the beginning),” Rock says.
“Every decision we make tires the brain.”
In order
to focus effectively, reverse the order. Check off the tasks that
require creativity or concentration first thing in the morning, and then
move on to easier work, like deleting emails or scheduling meetings,
later in the day.
2. Allocate your time deliberately. By
studying thousands of people, Rock found that we are truly focused for
an average of only six hours per week. “You want to be really diligent
with what you put into those hours,” he says.
Most
people focus best in the morning or late at night, and Rock’s studies
show that 90 percent of people do their best thinking outside the
office. Notice where and when you focus best, then allocate your
toughest tasks for those moments.
3. Train your mind like a muscle. When
multitasking is the norm, your brain quickly adapts. You lose the
ability to focus as distraction becomes a habit. “We’ve trained our
brains to be unfocused,” Rock says.
Practice
concentration by turning off all distractions and committing your
attention to a single task. Start small, maybe five minutes per day, and
work up to larger chunks of time. If you find your mind wandering, just
return to the task at hand. “It’s just like getting fit,” Rock says.
“You have to build the muscle to be focused.”
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