Why you should manage your energy, not your time

When our workloads increase, many of us decide to up our number of working

hours. But harnessing moments of 'unfocus' might be the key to getting more

done in less time.

By Madeleine Dore

13 June 2017

For ten years, Lisa Congdon s days were packed like a can of sardines.

Juggling between five and 20 projects at any one time, the artist and author,

based in Portland, Oregon in the US, tried to squeeze as much into her daily

work schedule as she could.

Finally, in the tenth year of her career, she started to have physical symptoms

as a result of the stress chronic back pain, upper neck pain and headaches.

I was waking up with anxiety, feeling a sense of tension in the pit of my

stomach, and I had trouble sleeping, she says.

What if working less were the key to getting more done?

Many of us will have had that sense of there just not being enough hours in the

day to do everything we need to do. Tasks that should take only a few minutes

can stretch into hours, all while other work mounts up.

For most, the solution is to work later into the evening or even over the

weekend, which leaves many of us feeling exhausted, stressed and burned out.

But what if working less were the key to getting more done?

The time management myth

Previously, Congdon would often work from eight in the morning until seven at

night without a break.

It s an easy trap to fall into it s drilled into us that working solidly for

eight or more hours will increase our output and impress our colleagues and

managers. But in reality, even the traditional nine-to-five workday is not

conducive to productivity.

An average working professional experiences 87 interruptions per day

A workplace study found an average working professional experiences 87

interruptions per day, making it difficult to remain productive and focused for

a full day.

Knowing something had to give, Congdon began to adjust her approach to work and

restructured her day to achieve the same amount of output, without working

around the clock. She decided to split her day into fewer 45-minute segments,

and aimed to maximise her productivity within those strict time sessions.

The key to maintaining focus and energy in shorter bursts was to apply

flexibility to those segments she could use some for exercise, some for

meditation, some for work. Getting rest within her workday helped lower stress

levels and therefore achieve better results within the allotted time for

working, Congdon found.

This makes sense in the light of research that has found our productivity has

less to do with the amount of hours we squeeze out of the working day, and more

to do with the rest we have.

In 2014, the social networking company The Draugiem Group used a time-tracking

productivity app to study what habits set their most productive employees

apart.

The key to their productivity was that for every 52 minutes of focused work,

they took a 17-minute break

Surprisingly, the top 10% of employees with the highest productivity didn t put

in longer hours than anyone else often they didn't even work eight-hour days.

Instead, the key to their productivity was that for every 52 minutes of focused

work, they took a 17-minute break.

While our culture may be pushing us towards working 24/7, Alex Soojung-Kim

Pang, a Silcon Valley consultant and author of Rest: Why You Get More Done When

You Work Less, believes this is not helping us to be more productive or to come

up with creative solutions.

The research instead points towards the importance of rest, he says.

Generally, short bursts of long hours do lead to increases in productivity,

but over time those gains disappear, says Pang. The odds of costly mistakes

rise, and as a result the gains that come from working longer hours disappear.

One study from Illinois Institute of Technology by Raymond Van Zelst and

Willard Kerr in 1951 found that scientists who spent 25 hours per week in the

workplace were no more productive than those who spent just five.

In fact, as few as one to three hours of concentrated work could serve to be as

effective as a traditional workday. For Cal Newport, author of Deep Work: Rules

for Focused Success in a Distracted World, this is because being busy is simply

a proxy for productivity.

In the absence of clear indicators of what it means to be productive and

valuable in their jobs, many workers turn back toward an industrial indicator

of productivity: doing lots of stuff in a visible manner, says Newport.

Working for show, it seems, is also futile. A study of consultants by Boston

University s School of Business found that managers could not tell the

difference between employees who actually worked 80 hours a week and those who

just pretended to.

Deflecting distraction

To combat the trap of putting such a premium on being busy, Newport recommends

building a habit of deep work the ability to focus without distraction.

There are a number of approaches to mastering the art of deep work be it

lengthy retreats dedicated to a specific task; developing a daily ritual; or

taking a journalistic approach to seizing moments of deep work when you can

throughout the day. Whichever approach, the key is to determine your length of

focus time and stick to it.

Newport also recommends deep scheduling to combat constant interruptions and

get more done in less time. At any given point, I should have deep work

scheduled for roughly the next month. Once on the calendar, I protect this time

like I would a doctor s appointment or important meeting, he writes.

Another approach to getting more done in less time is to rethink how you

prioritise your day in particular how we craft our to-do lists. Tim Harford,

author of Messy: The Power of Disorder to Transform Our Lives, points to a

study in the early 1980s that divided undergraduates into two groups: some were

advised to set out monthly goals and study activities; others were told to plan

activities and goals in much more detail, day by day.

I protect deep work time like I would a doctor s appointment or important

meeting

While the researchers assumed that the well-structured daily plans would be

most effective when it came to the execution of tasks, they were wrong: the

detailed daily plans demotivated students. Harford argues that inevitable

distractions often render the daily to-do list ineffective, while leaving room

for improvisation in such a list can reap the best results.

In order to make the most of our focus and energy, we also need to embrace

downtime, or as Newport suggests, be lazy.

Idleness is not just a vacation, an indulgence or a vice; it is as

indispensable to the brain as vitamin D is to the body [idleness] is,

paradoxically, necessary to getting any work done, he argues.

In order to complete tasks [people] need to use both the focus and unfocus

circuits in their brains

Srini Pillay, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School,

believes this counterintuitive link between downtime and productivity may be

due to the way our brains operate. When our brains toggle between being focused

and unfocused on a task, they tend to be more efficient.

What people don't realise is that in order to complete these tasks they need

to use both the focus and unfocus circuits in their brain, says Pillay, who

has written a book on the subject called Tinker, Dabble, Doodle Try: Unlock the

Power of the Unfocused Mind.

This is something exploited by some of the world s highest achievers.

Serena Williams, for example, has often spoken about how in tennis it's

important to be both focused and relaxed, says Pillay. Warren Buffett is also

known for having days in his calendar where nothing is scheduled because he

finds sitting and thinking has a much higher priority than filling every minute

of his day. It is an approach that Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, has

borrowed from the billionaire investor.

Using the slumps

According to research by Harvard University psychologists Matthew Killingsworth

and Daniel Gilbert, we spend 46.9% of our time not thinking about what is

happening in front of us.

The key to being productive might be found in using that time effectively

through embracing the slumps in our day those moments when your productivity

begins to ebb away, usually in the midmorning, directly after lunch or

midafternoon.

In the past, Justin Gignac, co-founder of freelance network Working Not

Working, left little room in his routine to be lazy. Now, he believes it is

important to build time to kick back and let his brain think by itself, and is

one of many successful people debunking the myth that working more equals

working best.

Recently he started lying in his newly-bought hammock each night after work.

I light a couple of candles and then I just lie in the hammock and don t do

anything, he says. It's amazing. Giving my brain that space is so crucial and

has helped me to learn to survey the whole field, not just the thing that is

directly in front of me.