In time, maybe you get that number to just 17 minutes, then 15, then 12-you get the idea. There’s no harm in trying, right? The next time you get off track, see if you can’t force yourself to return to your zone in under 20 minutes. You can opt to turn off your notifications, and you can also give the Pomodoro method a shot.Īlso, in spite of the study’s findings, you can try willing yourself to refocus faster. I recommend wearing headphones (you can play music or just pretend like you’re listening to something). There are a number of ways you can single-handedly do this. Let me do the math for you: If you get distracted three times a day, you’re losing an hour of work. It’s not necessarily the distraction itself, which, arguably, isn’t such a terrible thing but the post-distraction period that’s the real issue here.Įven if you only get distracted a few times a day, the amount of time you lose as you struggle to get back into your happy work place is significant. There’s nothing like getting in the zone, crunching numbers, drafting proposals, or drawing up plans, and yet there’s nothing worse than being removed from your motivated reverie only to face a serious uphill battle to get back into it when you’re ready. There’s a reason that distractions threaten your work output: According to a University of California Irvine study, “it takes an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to get back to the task.”Īnd if you thought that the amount of time you spend on email- 1/3 of your office hours-was bad, this isn’t going to make you feel better. If I don’t get up from my desk or move my eyes away from my screen at some point during my workday, my brain will feel completely fried at the end of it (and not in a good way).īut taking much-needed and deserved breaks (intentional) are one thing-getting distracted (involuntarily) is another. De-stressing at work with a walk around the block, a few minutes of meditation, or easy do-at-your-desk exercises is essential for productivity.