The Productivity Experts

Avoiding the Multitasking Habit

productivity improvement

The Multitask Downfall

We all multitask – that is a given. We text while we are in meetings, we work on a project while checking Facebook, and we talk on the phone while reading our email. The list can go on and on with how many ways we multitask on a daily, routine basis. The real question is this: Are we more or less productive when we are multitasking?

 

When we are multitasking, are we improving our work? Are we getting that project done in a timely fashion with little to no mistakes? The answer is usually no, we are not accomplishing more nor are we going to hand in a project with no mistakes because of multitasking.

 

Peter Bregman, writer for the Harvard Business Review website and CEO Leadership counselor, found this when studying the damages of multitasking:

A study showed that people distracted by incoming email and phone calls saw a 10-point fall in their IQs. What’s the impact of a 10-point drop? The same as losing a night of sleep. More than twice the effect of smoking marijuana. Doing several things at once is a trick we play on ourselves, thinking we’re getting more done. In reality, our productivity goes down by as much as 40%. We don’t actually multitask. We switch-task, rapidly shifting from one thing to another, interrupting ourselves unproductively, and losing time in the process.

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Productivity goes down by 40% and our IQ drops 10 points! Not only does it hit you hard on the IQ scale, but it affects your health also. Jonathan Wells, founder of the blog Advanced Life Skills, found that research has shown that multitasking can increase productivity to some extent. This increase likely results from the mental pressure and sense of urgency that it imposes. However, this pressure is a form of stress that will trigger a physiological stress response. That means that frequent multitasking can quickly become a source of chronic stress. Over time, this stress will hinder your ability to focus and could even compromise your health.

Both Jonathan Wells and Peter Bregman have ways to help you keep yourself focused and not multitask while working on a project or even talking on the phone. Wells has five tips to avoid the stress from multitasking and Bregman has the results and breakthroughs he found when he did nothing but focus on what was at hand.

Jonathan Wells’ 5 Tips for avoiding the stress from multitasking

Peter Bregman’s Revelations through not multitasking

Start Single Tasking

Starting today, stop multitasking. It’s not good for your health, your IQ level, or the mistakes you make along the way. So start single tasking and making sure all distractions – for a time – are off and away. Relax more, enjoy those around you without rush, and have a higher IQ level!

 

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