Nerd Journey Podcast Knowledge Graph

Search

Search IconIcon to open search

Episode 143

Last updated Sep 4, 2022 Edit Source

# Episode 143

Welcome to episode 143 of the Nerd Journey Podcast @NerdJourney! We’re John White ( @vJourneyman) and Nick Korte ( @NetworkNerd_), two Pre-Sales Technical Engineers who are hoping to bring you the IT career advice that we wish we’d been given earlier in our careers. In today’s episode we share part 3 of a book discussion series, providing more on practical tips for the execution of deep work focused on the remainder of rule # 1 from Cal Newport’s book.   

Original Recording Date: 10-02-2021 

Topics – 2nd Half of “Rule #1 – Work Deeply”, Format Reminder, Execute Like a Business, Be Lazy, Shutdown Ritual 

=============================================================== 

# 0:58 Part 3 of our discussion on Deep Work by Cal Newport 

* Format: We’ll do some summarization, then answer whether we believe the point, whether it applies to us, whether it makes us want to change, and what we anticipate changing, if anything. 

on by doing the following: 

 ## Second Half of Rule #1 – Work Deeply 

# 3:14  Execute Like a Business 

Ironic after discussing how businesses are missing deep work. This phrase refers more to the distinction between what to do and how to do it. 

# Discipline #1: Focus on the Wildly Important 

Create a specific goal; Focus what you’re working on down to the minimum things that will lead to professional success. Instead of trying to accomplish many things, try to accomplish a very few key things very, very well. 

# Discipline #2: Act on the Lead Measures 

Important goals involving deep work often have trailing metrics (measurements of the outcome) that come too late to make changes. Instead, make sure to measure lead metrics, the behaviors that should lead to the success measured by the trailing metrics. (Conflict with the idea of the metrics black hole?) 

For knowledge workers, the leading metric is clear: time spent doing deep work in pursuit of the identified goal. 

  

# Discipline #3: Keep a Compelling Scoreboard 

Measuring a behavior changes how you behave. Since the lead measure is hours spent in deep work in pursuit of the goal, the scoreboard should display that metric. 

  

# Discipline #4: Create a Cadence of Accountability 

Have a regular accountability meeting to review metrics and commit to specific adjustments in order to keep on track. A weekly review which lasts a few minutes can help to draw attention to sagging or rising work metrics and figure out what is causing the good or bad effect (in order to enhance or correct it). 

# 6:12 Reactions 

# Do I believe this? 

# Does this apply to me? 

# Does it make me want to change behavior? 

# What will I change to align myself with this idea? 

# 18:12 Be Lazy 

“Laziness” is really an emphasis on the division between work and relaxation. In order to fully commit to work, one needs to also fully commit to stopping work and relaxing.   

  

# Reason #1: Downtime Aids Insights 

Work that involves synthesizing lots of ambiguous and even conflicting information with many potential solutions is aided by the additional neuronal bandwidth which the unconscious mind has to bring to bear on a task. Thus, giving oneself a habit or ritual of ending the work day and allowing the unconscious mind time to go over one’s work can be very helpful. 

# Reason #2: Downtime Helps Recharge the Energy Needed to Work Deeply 

Attention Restoration Theory claims that spending time in nature can help improve one’s ability to concentrate later. Psychologists studying it call concentration “directed attention” and say that it’s a finite resource. If it’s used up, it can lead to “attention fatigue.” This is similar to the idea of limited willpower to do deep work or inhibiting attention on distractions. Restoring attention heavily depends on not revisiting work at all (full attention on spending time in nature, for example). Knowledge workers can at least start this process by fully putting down work when they finish for the day. 

# Reason #3: The Work That Evening Downtime Replaces Is Usually Not That Important 

In “The Role of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance,” Anders Ericsson writes that novices can’t perform “cognitively demanding work” for more than an hour a day, while experts can only rarely do more than four. Recognizing this leads us to protect the time that we do spend on deep work but also that just adding hours to the end of the day is rarely productive. 

  

# 21:44 Shutdown Ritual 

Ensure you have a plan to act on every incomplete project that you have, in a place you’ll find it. This removes the cognitive overhead of wondering if you’re forgetting anything. 

Saying the shutdown phrase, “Shutdown complete” was an interesting tactic. This might seem silly, but is a minor point compared to actually recording your state on all your projects. It’s probably a way of using the auditory part of your brain to also understand that the work day is over.  

  

# 24:06 Reactions 

# Do I believe this? 

# Does this apply to me? 

# Does it make me want to change behavior? 

# What will I change to align myself with this idea? 

# Summary thoughts on Rule #1: Work Deeply 

Contact us if you’ve read Deep Work and have reactions you think we missed, we’d like to hear from you. Or if you have other books you’d recommend. Or if you need help on the journey.