Deep Work by Cal Newport
The
Book in Three Sentences
1.
Deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on a
cognitively demanding task.
2.
Shallow work is non-cognitively demanding, logistical-style work,
often performed while distracted.
3.
Deep work is like a superpower in our increasingly competitive
twenty-first-century economy.
The
Five Big Ideas
1.
In order to produce the absolute best stuff you’re capable of, you
need to commit to deep work.
2.
The ability to quickly master hard things and the ability to
produce at an elite level, in terms of both quality and speed, are two core
abilities for thriving in today’s economy.
3.
“To learn hard things quickly, you must focus intensely without
distraction.”
4.
“Your work is craft, and if you hone your ability and apply it
with respect and care, then like the skilled wheelwright you can generate
meaning in the daily efforts of your professional life.”
5.
“The key to developing a deep work habit is to move beyond good
intentions and add routines and rituals to your working life designed to
minimize the amount of your limited willpower necessary to transition into and
maintain a state of unbroken concentration.”
Deep Work
Summary
·
Deep Work: Professional
activities performed in a state of distraction-free concentration that push
your cognitive capabilities to their limit. These efforts create new value,
improve your skill, and are hard to replicate.
·
Shallow Work: Non-cognitively
demanding, logistical-style tasks, often performed while distracted. These
efforts tend not to create much new value in the world and are easy to
replicate.
·
Newport argues if you spend enough time in a state of frenetic
shallowness, you permanently reduce your capacity to perform deep work.
·
“Deep work is not some nostalgic affectation of writers and
early-twentieth-century philosophers. It’s instead a skill that has great value
today.”
·
In order to produce the absolute best stuff you’re capable of, you
need to commit to deep work.
·
Newport calls deep work, “the superpower of the 21st century.”
·
The Deep Work
Hypothesis: The ability to perform deep work is becoming increasingly
rare at exactly the same time it is becoming increasingly valuable in our
economy. As a consequence, the few who cultivate this skill, and then make it
the core of their working life, will thrive.
In Newport’s own words,
I
build my days around a core of carefully chosen deep work, with the shallow
activities I absolutely cannot avoid batched into smaller bursts at the
peripheries of my schedule. Three to four hours a day, five days a week, of
uninterrupted and carefully directed concentration, it turns out, can produce a
lot of valuable output.
·
The ability to quickly master hard things and the ability to
produce at an elite level, in terms of both quality and speed, are two core
abilities for thriving in today’s economy.
·
“The differences between expert performers and normal adults
reflect a life-long period of deliberate effort to improve performance in a
specific domain.”
·
The core components of deliberate practice are usually identified
as follows: (1) your attention is focused tightly on a specific skill you’re
trying to improve or an idea you’re trying to master; (2) you receive feedback
so you can correct your approach to keep your attention exactly where it’s most
productive.
·
“This new science of performance argues that you get better at a
skill as you develop more myelin around the relevant neurons, allowing the
corresponding circuit to fire more effortlessly and effectively. To be great at
something is to be well myelinated.”
·
“By focusing intensely on a specific skill, you’re forcing the
specific relevant circuit to fire, again and again, in isolation. This
repetitive use of a specific circuit triggers cells called oligodendrocytes to
begin wrapping layers of myelin around the neurons in the circuits—effectively
cementing the skill.”
·
“To learn hard things quickly, you must focus intensely without
distraction.”
·
“When you switch from some Task A to another Task B, your
attention doesn’t immediately follow—a residue of your attention remains stuck
thinking about the original task. This residue gets especially thick if your
work on Task A was unbounded and of low intensity before you switched, but even
if you finish Task A before moving on, your attention remains divided for a
while.”
·
According to Sophie Leroy, “People experiencing attention residue
after switching tasks are likely to demonstrate poor performance on that next
task,” and the more intense the residue, the worse the performance.”
·
“To produce at your peak level you need to work for extended
periods with full concentration on a single task free from distraction.”
·
The Principle of
Least Resistance: In a business setting, without
clear feedback on the impact of various behaviors to the bottom line, we will
tend toward behaviors that are easiest in the moment.
·
“Clarity about what matters provides clarity about what does not.”
·
Busyness as Proxy
for Productivity: In the absence of clear
indicators of what it means to be productive and valuable in their jobs, many
knowledge workers turn back toward an industrial indicator of productivity:
doing lots of stuff in a visible manner.
·
“Deep work is at a severe disadvantage in a technopoly because it
builds on values like quality, craftsmanship, and mastery that are decidedly
old-fashioned and non-technological.”
·
“Human beings, it seems, are at their best when immersed deeply in
something challenging.”
·
“To build your working life around the experience of flow produced
by deep work is a proven path to deep satisfaction.”
·
“Your work is craft, and if you hone your ability and apply it
with respect and care, then like the skilled wheelwright you can generate
meaning in the daily efforts of your professional life.”
·
“You have a finite amount of willpower that becomes depleted as
you use it.”
·
“The key to developing a deep work habit is to move beyond good
intentions and add routines and rituals to your working life designed to minimize
the amount of your limited willpower necessary to transition into and maintain
a state of unbroken concentration.”
·
“You need your own philosophy for integrating deep work into your
professional life.”
·
“You must be careful to choose a philosophy that fits your
specific circumstances, as a mismatch here can derail your deep work habit
before it has a chance to solidify.”
·
“[Donald] Knuth deploys what I call the monastic philosophy of
deep work scheduling. This philosophy attempts to maximize deep efforts by
eliminating or radically minimizing shallow obligations.”
·
“[Carl] Jung’s approach is what I call the bimodal philosophy of
deep work. This philosophy asks that you divide your time, dedicating some
clearly defined stretches to deep pursuits and leaving the rest open to
everything else.”
·
“[The rhythmic philosophy] argues that the easiest way to
consistently start deep work sessions is to transform them into a simple
regular habit.”
·
John Paul Newport on Walter Isaacson, “It was always amazing … he
could retreat up to the bedroom for a while, when the rest of us were chilling
on the patio or whatever, to work on his book … he’d go up for twenty minutes
or an hour, we’d hear the typewriter pounding, then he’d come down as relaxed
as the rest of us … the work never seemed to faze him, he just happily went up
to work when he had the spare time.”
·
The journalist philosophy: you fit deep work wherever you can into
your schedule.
·
“To make the most out of your deep work sessions, build rituals of
the same level of strictness and idiosyncrasy as the important thinkers
mentioned previously.”
·
“Your ritual needs to specify a location for your deep work
efforts.”
·
“Regardless of where you work, be sure to also give yourself a
specific time frame to keep the session a discrete challenge and not an
open-ended slog.”
·
“Your ritual needs rules and processes to keep your efforts
structured.”
·
“By leveraging a radical change to your normal environment,
coupled perhaps with a significant investment of effort or money, all dedicated
toward supporting a deep work task, you increase the perceived importance of
the task.”
·
“[Peter Shankman] booked a round-trip business-class ticket to
Tokyo. He wrote during the whole flight to Japan, drank an espresso in the
business class lounge once he arrived in Japan, then turned around and flew
back, once again writing the whole way—arriving back in the States only thirty
hours after he first left with a completed manuscript now in hand.”
The Four Disciplines of Execution (4DX)
These deep work rules include the ability to:
1.
Focus on the Wildly Important
2.
Act on the Lead Measures
3.
Keep a Compelling Scoreboard
4.
Create a Cadence of Accountability
·
“For an individual focused on deep work, the implication is that
you should identify a small number of ambitious outcomes to pursue with your
deep work hours.”
·
David Brooks: “If you want to win the war for attention, don’t try
to say ‘no’ to the trivial distractions you find on the information
smorgasbord; try to say ‘yes’ to the subject that arouses a terrifying longing,
and let the terrifying longing crowd out everything else.”
·
“In 4DX, there are two types of metrics for this purpose: lag
measures and lead measures.”
·
“Lag measures describe the thing you’re ultimately trying to
improve.”
·
“Lead measures, on the other hand, ‘measure the new behaviors that
will drive success on the lag measures.’”
·
“Lead measures turn your attention to improving the behaviors you
directly control in the near future that will then have a positive impact on
your long-term goals.”
·
“At the end of the workday, shut down your consideration of work
issues until the next morning—no after-dinner e-mail check, no mental replays
of conversations, and no scheming about how you’ll handle an upcoming
challenge; shut down work thinking completely.”
1.
Reason #1: Downtime
Aids Insights
2.
Reason #2: Downtime
Helps Recharge the Energy Needed to Work Deeply
3.
Reason #3: The
Work That Evening Downtime Replaces Is Usually Not That Important
·
Deep work training must involve two goals: improving your ability
to concentrate intensely and overcoming your desire for
distraction.
·
“Schedule in advance when you’ll use the Internet, and then avoid
it altogether outside these times.”
·
The Craftsman
Approach to Tool Selection: Identify the core
factors that determine success and happiness in your professional and personal
life. Adopt a tool only if its positive impacts on these factors substantially
outweigh its negative impacts.
·
“The first step [to the Craftsman Approach to Tool Selection] is
to identify the main high-level goals in both your professional and your
personal life.”
·
“The key is to keep the list limited to what’s most important and
to keep the descriptions suitably high-level.”
·
“When you’re done you should have a small number of goals for both
the personal and professional areas of your life.”
·
“Once you’ve identified these goals, list for each the two or
three most important activities that help you satisfy the goal. These
activities should be specific enough to allow you to clearly picture doing
them. On the other hand, they should be general enough that they’re not tied to
a onetime outcome.”
·
“The next step in this strategy is to consider the network tools
you currently use. For each such tool, go through the key activities you
identified and ask whether the use of the tool has a substantially positive
impact, a substantially negative impact, or little impact on your regular and
successful participation in the activity. Now comes the important decision:
Keep using this tool only if you concluded that it has substantial positive
impacts and that these outweigh the negative impacts.”
·
“After thirty days of this self-imposed network isolation, ask
yourself the following two questions about each of the services you temporarily
quit: Would the last thirty days have been notably better if I had been able to
use this service? Did people care that I wasn’t using this service?”
·
“If your answer is ‘no’ to both questions, quit the service
permanently. If your answer was a clear ‘yes,’ then return to using the
service.”
·
“The shallow work that increasingly dominates the time and attention
of knowledge workers is less vital than it often seems in the moment.”
·
How long can deep work be sustained by an individual in a given
day?
·
“[Anders Erickson] note[s] that for someone new to such practice
(citing, in particular, a child in the early stages of developing an
expert-level skill), an hour a day is a reasonable limit. For those familiar
with the rigors of such activities, the limit expands to something like four
hours, but rarely more.”
·
“We spend much of our day on autopilot—not giving much thought to
what we’re doing with our time.”
May
this book bring success in your life. Help yourself and your friends and family
as well. Share this knowledge to them. Read knowledge share knowledge.
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