Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Tell me how familiar this sounds to you. You've got some work to do, so you pack up your backpack. You find the perfect study space, perfect amount of sunlight, plenty of space to work in, a little bit of nature thrown in, a fatherly picture of Nick Offerman staring down at you. You brew yourself a fresh cup of coffee. On go the noise-canceling headphones, and you find yourself an excellently tailored study playlist to accompany your impending deep dive into the practical uses of l'hopital's rule rule for Monday's calc assignment. Everything is set up perfectly for you to start doing some good old fashioned deep work, and then... - [Friend] Oh hey Tom, productivity guru, is that, uh, is that the IKEA cabinet planner? - No uh, it's for research. - [Friend] You're disgusting. - Now I know what you're thinking. - It's too real Roy, it's too real! - It's the same thing that I think all the time, how can I make sure that when I sit down to do my work, I actually do my work instead of falling into a distracted rut? After all, just sitting down at my desk isn't gonna result in really anything getting done. One of my favorite lines in Cal Newport's book Deep Work is his productivity equation. Time times intensity of focus equals quality of work produced. One of his case studies in the book, Peter Roosevelt, though at this time a freshman at Harvard University, knew this rule really really well. His biographer Edmund Morris wrote that every single day Roosevelt would look at his schedule between the hours of 8:30 and 4:30 and block off everything that was already scheduled. Things like classes, recitations, lunch, and his athletic training. Anything leftover was time spent for studying. And Morris noted that these fragments didn't usually add up to a large number of total hours but he would get the most out of them by working only on schoolwork during these periods and doing so with a blistering intensity. So the question that we wanna answer today is how do you achieve that ability to work with that blistering intensity like Roosevelt did? And hopefully the following seven tips that I have compiled will help you get started. (electronic music) First off, when you go into a work session, have a single target of focus. One of my biggest pitfalls in my professional life is that I'll wake up in the morning and I'll create a list of things I need to do but then when I sit down, I don't choose one to work on. I get confused and I don't really know which one that I wanna start with which leads to me just getting distracted and looking at car specs on the internet. So, one piece of advice that I'm really trying to apply in my own life and that you should too is that before you earnestly start a work session, decide on the one task that you're going to work on, this creates limitations for yourself which can be very, very helpful as is emphasized by one of my favorite quotes from all time which comes from the I Ching "Unlimited possibilities are not suited to man, if they existed his life would only dissolve in the boundless. To become strong, a mans life needs limitation ordained by duty and voluntarily accepted." Now there is a lot more that could be said about this passage as it applies to many, many areas of life but in this particular context, just remember that one particular single focus creates limitation that narrows and strengthens your level of focus. (electronic music) Tip number two is to keep the work session sacred and what I mean by this is that when you sit down to do you work and you've chosen your one task, only work on that task. Don't do anything before even if it's light, even if its checking your email, even if its watching a little video on YouTube or even if it's eating. So this comes from a common pitfall that I've noticed in my own work. I will get it into my head that I need to go to a coffee shop because that's my favorite place to focus so I will go to Starbucks and then sometimes I'm a little hungry so I'll get like a little breakfast sandwich, one of those little protein packs and a coffee, and of course I don't wanna do real work while I'm eating so I'll look at Reddit or I'll look at YouTube or I'll do something really really light while I eat that sandwich. The problem is, now I've gotten myself into a distracted rut and it's very hard for me to transition myself into the real work that I actually went to Starbucks to do. So the change for me is eat breakfast at home or eat whatever meal it is at home and then only go to the coffee shop to get coffee and to do work, no food. (electronic music) A third way to keep your level of focus high is to ensure that you're using the right tools and maintaining them. I love to cook, it's one of my favorite things to do at night when I'm done working. But one of the things that can make me really not want to cook is a dull chef's knife. If you've ever tried to cut an onion or an eggplant or really anything with a dull knife it is not fun to do at all and actually it's pretty dangerous as well. Now on occasions in the past, I've let my knife get dull and a lot of times when that happens, I'll start using it and I'll start cooking a meal but then I'll get frustrated and then we'll just end up ordering take out. So I've learned that if I wanna be cooking on a consistent basis, which I do because it's healthy and it's fun to do, I need to sharpen my knife on a consistent basis as well. Every couple weeks or every month at the very least. Now this doesn't mean that you need to wait around to have the perfect tools to start doing your work because that is a road you don't wanna go down. But just like a knife's edge dulls a little bit every single time you use it, something like say your computer's file system, gets unorganized every time you use it. So build a little time in your schedule to maintain the tools that you already have and if an opportunity presents itself to acquire a better tool that's not gonna take a ton of time or resources, take it. (electronic music) Now for the fourth and least fun tip on this list. If you want to work with that blistering level of intensity, if you wanna be like Teddy Roosevelt, you need to practice. An intense work ethic is something that is built over time just like the calluses on the hands of a lumberjack. When you start out you might be able to focus intensely for say 20 minutes, but day after day after you keep doing it again and again, that ability is going to grow and strengthen. A couple of years ago I realized that I wasn't reading as many books as I wanted to, so I bet my friend Martin 100 dollars that I would read 25 pages every single day for three months. When that challenge started, I found it really hard to read 25 pages a day especially if the book that I had selected was really technical or detail oriented but something interesting happened as the months went on. Later in the challenge I found it really easy to intensely focus on those 25 pages even if they took a full hour to read until I was done. So if your initial attempts to work with that intense level of focus seem difficult, just remember that over time it's going to get easier and your ability to do it is going to improve. (electronic music) Tip number five is to use timers to guide your work but leave some buffer room at the end of those timers in your schedule. Now I talk a lot on the channel about the Pomodoro technique, setting a timer for 25 minutes and working on that single task you selected and nothing else until the timer goes off. But a lot of people seem to think that they're obligated to take a break at the end of that Pomodoro session and I don't do this. For me, the Pomodoro session is just a way to get started, to overcome that initial resistance to doing the work.