Ninja_stealth_camouflageThis is characteristic 4 of being a Productivity Ninja….

Protecting your attention spans and keeping focussed is hard to do. This is where the Ninja needs to employ a bit of old-fashioned stealth and camouflage.If you’re in the limelight, you might get caught in the crossfire. One of the worst things you can do is make yourself always available. It’s an invitation to some of your biggest enemies: distraction and interruption. Here are a few examples:

 

  • Spend as much time as you can away from your desk – work from home, in cafés, in meeting rooms, and outside.
  • Get a gatekeeper who can help you say “No” to appointments or meetings just not worth your while
  • Screen your calls and don’t answer your phone unless you decide the call is likely to be more important than what you’re currently working on.
  • Book time in your calendar for creative thinking, reviewing, forward planning and other important activities.
  • Set clear boundaries around things like email, Facebook chat, Skype and Instant Messenger. It’s time to wriggle away from the pressures of connectivity and ‘go dark’.

Going dark

As well as protecting our attention from others, we must recognise the need to protect our attention from ourselves. We can be our very own worst enemy. There’s a phrase in software development called ‘Going Dark’ which refers to the time when a developer is ‘in the zone’ with their programming and has subsequently stopped answering emails or responding to other communications. They can be extremely difficult to find but  there’s probably some amazing productivity happening… somewhere.

If your attention and focus is likely to be impeded by unlimited access to the internet and you’re likely to be tempted by its millions of distraction possibilities (and who isn’t?!), disconnect once in a while. Yes, a productivity book is telling you to turn off the internet! If I turn off my wifi connection for two hours, I know there will be no new email arriving during that time, and that it will be annoying enough having to fiddle around with turning the connection back on to keep me from doing so.

The art of camouflage is an important skill in keeping us productive. We may be off the radar, but that certainly doesn’t mean we’re not working. Quietly hiding away is not for everyone and it’s not something you can’t do all the time. But it does focus the mind on the task at hand and avoids so many of the interruptions and distractions that we place in front of our own eyes.

Stealth delegation

Finding other people to do your work for you is a great way to get more done. The problem is that the world is pretty scarce with people who actually want to do your work for you! Hence, a bit of stealth delegation is in order. This is unorthodox for a number of reasons, but consider first that you are unlikely to be able to claim credit for your actions and also that things may turn out differently to how you had imagined.

If you’re prepared to tolerate that, it’s a great tactic. Better still, work out from your project list which of the projects you could afford to have others work on in different ways, or that you care least about. These are the ones to consider stealth delegating. Here are three common forms of stealth delegation. As a Ninja, you might well discover your own techniques, too.

  • Piggy backing: advertising your offer through someone else’s mailout,
  • Launching your new product at someone else’s event or ‘borrowing’ their contact list to launch something jointly
  • Cultivating ‘partners-in-crime’: looking for the ‘win-win’ opportunities to work with equally savvy, equally useful and equally inspiring people.
  • Short-cutting: find people who’ve done the research, got a recommendation, learned the hard way and are eager to give their advice so that you don’t make the same mistakes. A five-minute phone call to get a personal recommendation is much easier than an hour Google searching the best solution. Find people whose opinions you trust – and trust them!

Setting boundaries with meetings and your email etiquette is one of the topics we cover in our Think Productive Productivity workshops www.thinkproductive.co.uk.

4 - Pay Attention-01

 

I’m currently suffering from that most modern and urban inconvenience.

I am in between home wifi connections.  Until the new wifi is connected, I’m relying on the tethering of my phone to my PC and iPad and I’ve noticed that since tethering often ends up being a temperamental extra step, I’m doing more of my casual web browsing on my phone.  And I don’t like it one bit.

My phone is always there, begging for just another check of Twitter or Facebook.  I’m listening to more chattery radio.  I’m addicted to Tetris again and I’m just reaching the point where I delete it from my phone again – and about to follow the lead of my fellow Ninja Grace Marshall on this (see her recent experiment stuff here).

Just three months ago, I was on my ‘Email Fridays‘ experiment: only checking emails on Fridays, and at the same time more or less off Facebook and Twitter completely.  And do you know what?  I definitely got more done that month and felt less of a compulsion to keep checking checking checking.  There seemed little point to keep connecting into the world.

4 - Pay Attention - small-05So you’re probably wondering what this has got to do with meditation.

Well, I’ve definitely noticed that on the days I’m more disciplined with meditation and other mindfulness techniques, I’m less prone to my mind “flitting“.

“Flitting” is something I think we probably all do to a greater or lesser degree.  That innate sense of urgency pertaining to things that even we ourselves deep down realise require no urgency.

Quick!  check to see if there’s any new emails!”

“I might be missing something on Facebook!”

“I’m bored of this writing, let me go do something digital, purposeful-sounding but ultimately largely pointless“.

“Flitting” isn’t the same as procrastination and it doesn’t necessarily follow that whenever we’re “flitting” we’re procrastinating either.  I see it as a product of our adaptation to the constant input of information in our lives.  It’s our minds trying to cope with the barrage and just presuming everything is of the same urgency – when of course we know that little that’s important is urgent and vice versa.

“Flitting” is a sure-fire sign that we’re getting our kicks from connectivity, not productivity.

Perhaps more than needing a better to-do list, more than needing to improve our stationery collections, more than being on top of all the latest apps, more than trying to ‘manage our time’, more than needing to read more productivity tips, we just need to do less “flitting” and give attention to our attention.

So, get off the internet, stop “flitting”, take a deep breath and start making stuff happen.  Being connected and being productive are not the same thing.

 

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Like this? Try these

Focus your own time – attend one of our Time Management Workshops with a difference

Read more about Graham’s Pay Attention experiment

100 Time Management Tips to Boost Productivity « thinkproductive.co.uk 

 

When we’re doing team building training, one of the issues that often arises is “distraction”. Here’s how we do things at Think Productive HQ.

Elena is one of the stars of the Think Productive office, and is on many projects our main linchpin between our client, our Productivity Ninja delivering the workshop and our administrative support.

As such, she gets a lot of questions from the rest of us in the office, all of which interrupt her flow. If she’s in need of some proactive attention time she has a small china kitten that she places on the desk. Everyone else in the office, including me as her boss, knows that when we see the kitten it’s a sign that she needs proactive attention time. We save up our questions or ideas for later and she stays focussed.

I have seen other similar versions of this during my work coaching productivity at people’s real desks. I’ve seen homemade plastic signs, whiteboards, hats, police style tape on the back of a chair – (“Stay back, there’s nothing here to see”) – and many other variations.

Perhaps the simplest and most effective is a big pair of headphones. As well as having the extra practical function that you can drown out the office hubbub with music (which some people love to work to, whilst others find difficult to concentrate with), it’s also a real barrier to you hearing the bits of the conversation or questions aimed at you. If you are interrupted whilst wearing headphones, it’s kind of obvious to the person interrupting you that they’re breaking your flow.

What are your “do not disturb” signs?

 

Like this? Try these

Improve your office morale – sign up for our Team Building Training 

5 tips to survive working from home thinkproductive.co.uk 

5 Ways to Stop Being Distracted thinkproductive.co.uk 

 Top 10 Distraction Stoppers Lifehacker

Minimizing Distractions MindTools.com 

When we’re doing team building training, one of the issues that often arises is “distraction”. Here’s how we do things at Think Productive HQ.

Elena is one of the stars of the Think Productive office, and is on many projects our main linchpin between our client, our Productivity Ninja delivering the workshop and our administrative support.

As such, she gets a lot of questions from the rest of us in the office, all of which interrupt her flow. If she’s in need of some proactive attention time she has a small china kitten that she places on the desk. Everyone else in the office, including me as her boss, knows that when we see the kitten it’s a sign that she needs proactive attention time. We save up our questions or ideas for later and she stays focussed.

Image by pellesten

I have seen other similar versions of this during my work coaching productivity at people’s real desks. I’ve seen homemade plastic signs, whiteboards, hats, police style tape on the back of a chair – (“Stay back, there’s nothing here to see”) – and many other variations.

Perhaps the simplest and most effective is a big pair of headphones. As well as having the extra practical function that you can drown out the office hubbub with music (which some people love to work to, whilst others find difficult to concentrate with), it’s also a real barrier to you hearing the bits of the conversation or questions aimed at you. If you are interrupted whilst wearing headphones, it’s kind of obvious to the person interrupting you that they’re breaking your flow.

What are your “do not disturb” signs?

 

Like this? Try these

Improve your office morale – sign up for our Team Building Training 

5 tips to survive working from home thinkproductive.co.uk 

5 Ways to Stop Being Distracted thinkproductive.co.uk 

 Top 10 Distraction Stoppers Lifehacker

Minimizing Distractions - MindTools.com 

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