If you had asked me a year ago to define deep work, I would’ve mumbled something about long, uninterrupted hours of focus. Probably locked away in a cabin. Without WiFi.
A way of working that sounded idyllic but completely impractical and out-of-touch with the demands of modern life.
Turns out, the enemy of deep work isn’t your lack of a mountain retreat. The enemy is that little voice whispering, “Just a quick scroll before I start.” Mastering deep work is about silencing that voice and staying put when your brain is screaming for its next dopamine hit. Whether you’re in a cabin or a cubicle, the real power is about developing the strength to protect your attention in a world designed to steal it.
Being able to do deep work has never been more important for anyone who wants to produce work that matters.
Sobre el libro
Deep Work argues that the ability to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task is increasingly rare and valuable. Cal Newport lays out the benefits of cultivating a deep work ethic for anyone looking to make the most of their time and produce better results. Whether you’re an academic, writer, entrepreneur or someone striving to improve your skills, this book will transform how you think about work.
Deep Work is divided into two main sections. The first part explains why deep work is valuable in our increasingly distracted world. As machines automate more cognitive tasks, Newport argues that the ability to quickly master hard things and produce at an elite level is key to thriving. Deep work helps you learn hard things faster and produce higher quality, more creative output.
The second part then lays out four rules for integrating more deep work into your life:
Published in 2016, the book Deep Work became a Wall Street Journal business bestseller and has been translated into more than 30 languages. Readers appreciate Newport’s blend of academic research, engaging stories and practical advice for getting more depth out of work and life.
Sobre el autor
Cal Newport is an associate professor of computer science at Georgetown University. He earned his PhD from MIT in 2009 and studied the theory of distributed systems. Newport is the author of six books, including Deep Work and Digital Minimalism, published in over 30 languages. His work has been featured in major publications like The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, New Yorker and The Economist. Newport maintains an active blog at calnewport.com, where he writes about the intersection of culture and digital technology.
Reviews
Since its publication, Deep Work has sparked conversations about the nature of focused work in our distracted age. Here’s what emerges when we analyze hundreds of their experiences, critiques and book reviews.
The book is an inspiring look at how cultivating intense focus on meaningful work is both necessary and fulfilling. Not every strategy will work for every reader, but the core idea is crucial for anyone who works with their mind. Even implementing just a few of the rules can make a huge impact on your output and satisfaction.
Pros
Cons
Introducción
Deep work is professional work performed in a state of concentration free from distraction on a single task that pushes your cognitive abilities to their limit. In an increasingly distracted world, it’s also increasingly rare. However, the ability to do deep work is key to learning hard things and producing at an elite level – precisely the abilities needed to thrive in today’s economy.
Knowledge workers increasingly replace deep work with the shallow alternative—constantly sending and receiving e-mail messages like human network routers, with frequent breaks for quick hits of distraction.
Definitions
Shallow work is noncognitively demanding, logistical-style tasks, often performed while distracted. These efforts tend not to create much new value and are easy to replicate.
Deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task. Cal Newport, who coined the term, defines it more formally: “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.”
Story
Carl Jung built a stone tower in the woods to do deep work on analytical psychology. Isolated for weeks with no electricity, he generated his most creative ideas and influential work here.
Takeaways
A 2012 McKinsey report found the average knowledge worker spends over 60% of their workweek engaged in shallow electronic communication and searching, with close to 30% dedicated to email alone.
Pregunta
Track your deep work vs shallow work time for a few days to get hard data. The results may surprise you. Most find huge chunks of time lost to email, social media, IM, poorly run meetings, etc. Imagine if even half that time was redistributed into more concentrated efforts.
Exercise
Build a Deep Work ritual. Choose (1.) a location for focusing, (2.) the length of time you’ll work, (3.) the rules for working (no internet, metrics for progress, etc.), and (4.) how you’ll support the work (food, relaxation methods, etc.). Commit to scheduling this ritual at least once per week. Don’t expect it to be easy at first. Training your brain for deep work takes time.
PART 1: The Idea
Chapter 1: Deep Work Is Valuable
Three groups will have an advantage as intelligent machines transform the economy:
To thrive in this new economy, you must master two core abilities:
Both abilities depend on your ability to perform deep work. Deliberate practice that stretches your abilities requires intense, uninterrupted concentration. And to produce at an elite level, you need to work deeply, not just efficiently.
Direct quote
To learn hard things quickly, you must focus intensely without distraction.
The successful warrior is the average man, with laser-like focus.
Bruce Lee
Definitions
Attention residue: When you switch from Task A to Task B, your attention doesn’t immediately follow. Some residue remains stuck thinking about the original task. This reduces performance on the next task you perform.
Story
Adam Grant dramatically increased his academic output by batching hard but important intellectual work into long, uninterrupted stretches. This habit allowed him to produce more, higher-quality papers than his peers.
Takeaways
A study, “The cost of interrupted work,” found that after being interrupted, it takes an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to get back to the original task. Frequent switching devastates productivity.
Pregunta
Isolate the skill and break it into well-defined subskills. Build a deep work ritual for working on those subskills with intense focus and immediate feedback. Keep track of progress to stay motivated. Over time, the compounded impact of this regular deep work will be huge.
Exercise
Do a Deep work reflection after work each day. Log the hours spent on deep work vs. shallow tasks. Note your output and the results accomplished from deep work. Use this scorecard to motivate your deep work ratio to increase each week.
Chapter 2: Deep Work Is Rare
Big trends in business are pushing us away from deep work despite its importance:
These trends actively reduce our ability to go deep even though their benefits are dwarfed by deep work. So why are they so common? Three reasons:
Direct quote
In the absence of clear indicators of what it means to be productive and valuable in their jobs, many knowledge workers turn toward an industrial indicator of productivity: doing lots of stuff in a visible manner.
Multitasking is the enemy of focus.
Peter Bregman
Definitions
The metric black hole refers to a challenge in measuring productivity where the impact of deep, focused work is difficult to quantify. In the absence of clear value indicators, organizations and individuals tend to default to visible busyness as a proxy for actual productivity.
Busyness as a proxy for productivity means looking like you’re working hard instead of actually doing important work. It’s when people do lots of visible tasks – like sending tons of emails, attending many meetings, or constantly messaging colleagues – to make it seem like they’re being productive, even if those activities don’t really help them get meaningful work done.
The cult of the internet is when people treat the internet like it’s super important and amazing, even though it often stops us from doing deep, meaningful work. It’s like being so obsessed with social media, constant messaging, and being online that you can’t focus on anything important.
Story
When forced to disconnect from email for 5 days, a group of management consultants at BCG initially resisted and feared losing clients. Not only did the sky not fall, but they also found that their work improved with the increased focus. The perceived need for constant connectivity was largely an illusion.
Takeaways
A 2012 article in The New Yorker titled “The Rise of the New Groupthink” highlighted research showing open offices reduce productivity and increase stress and illness. Creative people especially need privacy and freedom from interruption to do their best work.
Pregunta
Audit your schedule and identify the activities that most depend on constant connectivity or busy-looking behaviours. Question their true impact on your goals. For the worst offenders, make the case that reducing them in favour of deep work will produce more valuable outcomes. Be ready to prove it.
Exercise
Estimate your deep work ratio. Analyze your last work month and estimate what percentage of your time was spent on shallow work vs intentional deep work. If your ratio is below 50% deep work, implement strategies to increase it in favour of more concentrated efforts on things that move the needle. Re-calculate each month.
Chapter 3: Deep Work Is Meaningful
Deep work is meaningful and personally rewarding. It’s meaningful for neurological, psychological and philosophical reasons.
Neurologically, what we pay attention to determines our experience of life. Focusing intensely on things that matter makes a life built around deep work feel rich and meaningful. In contrast, constant distraction breeds a frenetic shallowness.
Psychologically, deep work leads to flow states that are intrinsically rewarding. The feeling of total absorption and losing yourself in a task is satisfying beyond just the results produced.
Philosophically, deep work is meaningful because it’s an effort to master your craft. Like a medieval craftsman working with materials, the deep worker seeks to uncover meaning through focus and skills. Sustained deep work is a path to a life well lived.
Direct quote
Struggle to deploy your mind to its fullest capacity to create things that matter. […] Depth generates a life rich with productivity and meaning.
The best moments in our lives are not the passive, receptive, relaxing times… The best moments usually occur if a person’s body or mind is stretched to its limits in a voluntary effort to accomplish something difficult and worthwhile.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Definitions
The neurological argument for deep work: Our brains construct our worldview based on what we pay attention to. Your mind’s limited cognitive resources are leveraged toward a richer, more meaningful experience by focusing intently on high-quality activities.
Story
Winifred Gallagher decided to focus on the good things in life – like sunsets and martinis – when diagnosed with a serious illness. This selective attention made her life feel pleasant despite the circumstances. She later wrote “Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life” to explain how who we are is the sum of what we focus on.
Takeaways
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s research on “flow” found we are happiest when totally absorbed in an activity that challenges our abilities. Passive leisure, in contrast, does not produce the same feelings of satisfaction and meaning.
Pregunta
Flow requires a clear goal, immediate feedback, and a challenge level just outside your current comfort zone. Structure your work habits to make flow states more likely. Block uninterrupted time, set an ambitious but achievable goal, constrain your tools to only what’s essential for the task, and maintain metrics to track progress.
Exercise
Craft a deep work purpose statement: Write a short aspirational summary of why depth matters to you professionally and personally. Post it somewhere visible. Use it to guide your weekly habit and ritual decisions, defending against the distracting shallows. Regularly reflect on how your deep work connects to a life well lived.
PART 2: The Rules
Rule #1: Work Deeply
To make deep work a regular habit, you must add routines and rituals to support it. These maximize your limited willpower by making starting deep work as easy as possible. Here are 6 key strategies:
Direct quote
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.
Great creative minds think like artists but work like accountants.
David Brooks
Definitions
These three philosophies are different ways to approach deep work:
The grand gesture: By leveraging a radical change to your typical environment, coupled with a significant investment of effort or money, all dedicated toward supporting a deep work task, you increase the perceived importance of the task, which reduces your mind’s instinct to procrastinate and delivers an injection of motivation and energy.
4DX (The 4 Disciplines of Execution) is a strategy to help you achieve your most important goals. It involves focusing on one or two key goals, taking actions that directly contribute to those goals, tracking your progress with a scoreboard, and regularly checking in with others to stay accountable and motivated.
Story
J.K. Rowling struggled to finish The Deathly Hallows in her home office with constant distractions and interruptions from family and obligations. She checked into Edinburgh’s 5-star Balmoral Hotel and finished the book in this luxurious “Deep Work Chamber”. The extreme commitment amplified her focus.
Takeaways
Scientist and novelist Catherine Asaro calculates she can write a novel in 75 days at a rate of 2,000 words per day. Anything less than that reduces her output far below this peak ability due to a “context-switching penalty”. Achieving this requires carefully structured depth rituals.
Pregunta
The possibilities are limitless: A location only used for deep work, like an office with all distractions removed. A regular “Deep Wednesday” ritual with fixed start and stop times. A specific set of rules for each session, like no internet and phone in airplane mode.
Exercise
Write out your ideal deep work ritual. Get as specific as possible about location, duration, rules, and any environmental factors that matter to you. Treat this like a serious appointment on your calendar. Something that cannot be skipped or shortened without consequence. Start small, perhaps 60-90 minutes at first. The more you practice it, the more your ritual will shift from a chore to a cherished time for focus.
Rule #2: Embrace Boredom
Intense concentration is a skill that must be trained. This is difficult in a world engineered for distraction. Beyond making deep work a habit, you must wean your mind from a distraction addiction. Here are three key strategies:
Direct quote
Once your brain has become accustomed to on-demand distraction, it’s hard to shake the addiction even when you want to concentrate.
To simply wait and be bored has become a novel experience in modern life, but from the perspective of concentration training, it’s incredibly valuable.
William James
Definitions
Attention Restoration Theory (ART): Spending time in nature can improve your ability to concentrate. Natural environments are filled with “inherently fascinating stimuli” that are moderately distracting and allow the mind’s attention resources to be replenished.
Story
Teddy Roosevelt would schedule his days at Harvard rigorously, removing any time spent on classes or socializing, then working the remaining time with blistering intensity, often getting the equivalent of a week’s worth of studying done in a day. This earned him excellent grades while still allowing him time to box, dance and enjoy a full college social life.
Takeaways
A study found people who walked in nature for 90 minutes showed reduced neural activity in an area of the brain linked to risk for mental illness compared to those who walked through an urban environment. Time in nature restores our ability to focus.
Pregunta
Common problems are social media, news sites, entertainment, and email. Replace with scheduled offline blocks. Regularly get into nature to give your brain a rest from overstimulation. Meditation also trains focus.
Exercise
Take a focused walk. Spend 5 minutes each day walking and focusing on a single problem you need to solve, training your ability to intentionally direct your focus and resist distraction. Increase to 15-30 minutes over time. Notice how this habit begins to bleed over into your daily work.
Rule #3: Quit Social Media
Treat social media tools like a craftsman treats tools. Adopt them only if their positive impact substantially outweighs their negative impact. Here are three key strategies:
Direct quote
If you service low-impact activities, you’re taking away time you could be spending on higher-impact activities. It’s a zero-sum game.
When it comes to social media, there are just times I turn off the world, you know. There are just sometimes you have to give yourself space to be quiet, which means you’ve got to set those phones down.
Michelle Obama
Definitions
The craftsman approach to tool selection identifies the core factors determining success and happiness in professional and personal life. Adopt a tool only if its positive impacts on these factors substantially outweigh its negative impacts.
Story
Certain types of video games leverage your brain’s reward circuitry to keep you playing. Gaming companies even hire psychologists to make games as addictive as possible. Someone who sets out to play games for “just a few minutes” can find themselves glued to their device for hours – not satisfying leisure.
Takeaways
The average American spends 4 hours per day watching TV and nearly 2 additional hours on social media. Almost a third of their waking hours. People claim this relaxation is needed to unwind after work, but studies show these low-quality activities breed apathy, not restoration.
Pregunta
Be ruthless in this self-evaluation. We often dramatically overestimate these tools’ necessity and the negative consequences of quitting them cold turkey. Letting go can be incredibly freeing when you realize how unessential most of these tools truly are to what really matters for your success and happiness.
Exercise
Perform a deep work detox. For 30 days, eliminate any website, app, or tool that you reasonably suspect harms your ability to focus and resist distraction. At the end of 30 days, for each tool, ask what tangible value it provides (not just “some possible benefit” but clear, quantified value). Only allow tools back into your life that pass this high bar. Odds are, few will.
Rule #4: Drain the Shallows
Shallow work is inevitable, but you must keep it confined to leave time for deep work. Here are four key strategies:
Direct quote
The shallow work that increasingly dominates the time and attention of knowledge workers is less vital than it often seems in the moment.
Simplicity boils down to two steps: Identify the essential. Eliminate the rest.
Leo Babauta
Definitions
Fixed-schedule productivity: Fix your firmly scheduled blocks of time dedicated to shallow work like meetings, calls and emails. Then, work backwards to find the maximum time dedicated to deep work. This flips the default of letting shallow work expand to crowd out deep work.
Story
Jason Fried, founder of 37Signals, moved his company to a 4-day workweek from May to October. The benefits of three-day weekends are obvious. But the changed schedule had one surprising effect: better work got done in four days than in five. The constraint forced the employees to cut out shallow work and be more productive with their limited time. Constraints breed depth.
Takeaways
Parkinson’s law says that work expands to fill the time available for its completion. Having less time for shallow activities forces you to be more efficient, innovative, and disciplined about your use of it. Without firm limits, fluff expands to crowd out what really matters.
Pregunta
Build a daily schedule template that allocates hours to your deep work and contains shallow work to small, highly circumscribed blocks. Review your template each morning and night to compare aspirations and reality. Over time, you’ll start trusting these efforts are more important than the false urgency of the shallows.
Exercise
Conduct a Deep Work Time Audit. For a full week, meticulously track how you spend each working hour of the day in 15 or 30-minute increments. Be honest and granular. At the end of the week, categorize tasks as deep work, shallow work, or neither. What percentage falls into each bucket? Set an ambitious but achievable target for increasing deep work, then attack the shallows aggressively to shift the balance.
Conclusión
The deep work hypothesis has two components:
From this premise, it follows that individuals and organizations who work hard to cultivate this skill will thrive.
Deep work is more important than ever for anyone looking to move ahead in a globally competitive information economy that tends to chew up and spit out those who aren’t earning their keep. You have a choice in facing this challenge: Are you willing to prioritise deep work and become one of the few to reap the rewards of this transformation? Or will you continue a frenetic and shallow existence, distracted from the deeper satisfactions that true craftsmanship and mastery can yield?
The deep life isn’t easy, but as Arnold Bennett said, it’s “the best kind there is.” In choosing to go deep, you’ll transform your working life, satisfaction, and value to the world. You’ll fulfil your potential – and likely astound yourself with the results your focused mind can produce.
To build your working life around the experience of flow produced by deep work is a proven path to deep satisfaction.
The pursuit of depth starts now. Every hour you spend staring at screens, monitoring inboxes, or chattering about shallow gossip is an hour not spent cultivating rare and valuable skills. Choose wisely. Choose depth. The focused life awaits.
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