Focus And Concentration Hacks

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  • View profile for CA Vanshika Giria

    CA | Strategy & Transactions | CFA Level 2 | Public Speaker | Robin Hood Army

    22,533 followers

    I wasn’t lazy. I was just distracted. (And I didn’t even realize it.) Tasks that should’ve taken 30 minutes dragged on for hours. Blank screens. Zero motivation. Endless scrolling. The problem wasn’t Time management. It was 𝗙𝗼𝗰𝘂𝘀 𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗮𝗴𝗲𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁. Then one day, I stumbled upon a 𝘔𝘦𝘥𝘪𝘶𝘮 article that listed a few unusual focus hacks. I tried them. Tweaked them to fit my life. Soon, I started showing up better. With clarity, not chaos. Here’s what worked for me - (If focus has been a struggle lately, this might just help.) 1. 𝗚𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝘄𝗼𝗿𝗸 𝗮 𝗳𝗮𝗰𝗲 We often chase vague goals — deadlines, KPIs, praise. But real energy comes when your work feels personal. One day, I was stuck on a complex analysis. No motivation. Then I pictured telling my mom what I did at work today. Her smile. Her pride. That image changed everything. Suddenly, it wasn’t just a task. It was something to be proud of. ➡ Ask yourself: “Who would I be excited to share this with?” Picture their face. Then start the work. 2. 𝗢𝗻𝗲 𝘀𝗼𝗻𝗴. 𝗢𝗻 𝗹𝗼𝗼𝗽. 𝗧𝗵𝗮𝘁’𝘀 𝗶𝘁. It sounds odd, but looping one instrumental track helps me zone in. I use Shri Hanuman Chalisa – Instrumental. No lyrics. Just rhythm. In no time, my brain quiets down. The repetition becomes an anchor: “You’re working now. Stay here.” ➡ Pick a calm, lyric-free track. Hit repeat. Let it ground your attention. 3. 𝗧𝗵𝗲 2-𝗠𝗶𝗻𝘂𝘁𝗲 𝗣𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗶𝗲𝘄 𝗧𝗿𝗶𝗰𝗸 Before starting a task, I set a 2-minute timer. No typing. No scribbling. Just look at the task. It’s like a warm-up for the brain. You’re letting your mind settle into the work, not crash-land into it. ➡ Try this tomorrow. Just 2 min of stillness before starting. You’ll be surprised how much smoother the task feels. 4. 𝗜 𝗯𝘂𝗶𝗹𝘁 𝗮 𝗙𝗼𝗰𝘂𝘀 𝗚𝗿𝗮𝘃𝗲𝘆𝗮𝗿𝗱 (𝘆𝗲𝘀, 𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗹𝗹𝘆) Every time I get distracted during work hours, I don’t fight it. I note it down in my phone’s Notes app. • An unfinished Udemy course • A half-watched YouTube video on AI agents • The novel I abandoned after Chapter 7 • A call I owe to a childhood friend It’s not about guilt — it’s about awareness. A quiet system that tells me: “This is not urgent. It can wait.” ➡ Create a “Graveyard” note. Every time your mind wanders, log it. Then return to your core task. The Result? I’m still a work in progress. But I’m sharper. Quieter. Less reactive. The Biggest Shift? Not in my schedule, but in how I protect my attention. REMEMBER - You don’t need more hours. You need fewer attention leaks. P.S. Which of these 4 hacks would you try first? 𝘐𝘧 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘧𝘰𝘶𝘯𝘥 𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘩𝘦𝘭𝘱𝘧𝘶𝘭 → 𝘳𝘦𝘱𝘰𝘴𝘵 𝘧𝘰𝘳 𝘺𝘰𝘶𝘳 𝘯𝘦𝘵𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘬. LinkedIn Guide to Creating #big4 #lifestyle #productivity #timemanagement

  • View profile for Daniel Pink
    Daniel Pink Daniel Pink is an Influencer
    427,068 followers

    The most underrated productivity hack? Taking breaks. But not just any break. Science says there’s a right way to do it. Here’s how to restore your energy (and do better work) in 5 proven steps: Rule 1: Something > nothing Even short breaks matter. Try the 20-20-20 rule: → Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds. You’ll reduce fatigue and give your brain a much-needed pause. Micro-breaks add up. Rule 2: Moving > stationary A walk beats a sit. Movement restores energy and improves mood. Just getting up and walking a few minutes can refresh your mind for your next task. Rule 3: Social > solo Breaks with people restore us more than breaks alone even if you’re introverted. Chat with a colleague. Call a friend. Grab coffee with someone you like. Connection is a powerful recharge. Rule 4: Outside > inside Nature boosts energy and creativity. You don’t need to hike a mountain just walk down a street with trees. Studies show even light exposure to green space can reduce stress and elevate performance. Rule 5: Detached > distracted A break isn’t scrolling Instagram. Leave your phone behind. Log off. Step away. Real breaks require real detachment. Let your brain breathe. Try this break formula: Every afternoon, take a 15-minute walk outside With someone you like Talking about anything except work Without your phone Do it daily. Schedule it like a meeting.

  • View profile for Dr. Carolyn Frost

    Work-Life Intelligence Expert | Boundaries + EQ to help you stay steady and respected under pressure (without burnout and exhaustion) | Mom of 4 🌿

    356,726 followers

    You don’t have a time problem. You have an interruption problem. Your day doesn’t disappear all at once. It gets chipped away. A message. A quick question. A meeting that runs over. And by the time you finally sit down to focus… your energy is already scattered. Here are 20 ways to protect your focus at work ⭐️ 1) Start with your most important task first ↳ Before checking messages or opening email 2) Keep a “distraction list” next to you ↳ Write down thoughts so you don’t switch focus 3) Turn off non-essential notifications ↳ Remove constant triggers 4) Close your email tab during focused work ↳ Don’t “half monitor” your inbox 5) Set a daily focus block on your calendar ↳ Protect at least 30–60 minutes 6) Put your phone out of reach ↳ Make distraction slightly harder 7) Batch your messages ↳ Check at set times instead of constantly 8) Use “Do Not Disturb” when doing deep work ↳ Even short windows help 9) Pause before responding ↳ Ask: does this need a reply right now? 10) Let calls go to voicemail ↳ Return them on your terms 11) Shorten meetings by 5–10 minutes ↳ Give yourself reset space 12) Set response-time expectations ↳ “I’ll get back to you this afternoon” 13) Work during your peak focus hours ↳ Protect your best energy 14) Use full screen when working ↳ Remove visual distractions 15) Limit the number of open tabs ↳ Fewer tabs = fewer pulls on attention 16) Group similar tasks together ↳ Reduce context switching 17) Take intentional breaks ↳ Prevent reactive ones 18) Decide what gets immediate access to you ↳ Not everything needs real-time attention 19) Notice what interrupts you most ↳ Then remove or reduce it 20) Remind yourself: busy ≠ effective ↳ Focus is what actually moves work forward Your day doesn’t feel hard because you have too much to do. It feels hard because your attention never settles. Protect that… and everything changes. -- 🔖 Save this for the days your focus feels off ♻️ Repost to help someone protect their time 🔔 Follow me Dr. Carolyn Frost for more on focus, boundaries, and performing without burning out

  • This is the list I wish I had years ago. Here are 20 mindset rules for thriving at work without burning out: 1. Manage energy, not just time ↳ Track what tasks drain you versus what energises you ↳ Schedule high-energy work during your peak hours 2. Take micro-breaks ↳ Step away for 2–3 minutes each hour ↳ Stretch, breathe, look away from screens to prevent fatigue 3. Think in "cycles," not constant highs ↳ Work has natural peaks and valleys ↳ Prepare during quiet periods instead of scrambling when busy 4. Create a "minimum viable day" ↳ Define the bare minimum to feel productive ↳ Use this on low-energy days to maintain momentum 5. Treat time off as non-negotiable ↳ Schedule your vacation and sick leave in advance ↳ Rest is essential for sustained performance 6. Design your life, then your calendar ↳ Block personal priorities first ↳ Let work fill the remaining space, not the other way around 7. Use time blocking ↳ Assign each chunk of your day a specific purpose ↳ What's not scheduled often disappears 8. "Eat the frog" first ↳ Tackle the hardest task early in your day ↳ This reduces anxiety and creates immediate momentum 9. Do one thing at once ↳ Turn off notifications and batch similar work ↳ Multitasking depletes your mental resources 10. Adopt the 80/20 rule ↳ Focus on the 20% of work that creates 80% of results ↳ Identify and eliminate or delegate the rest 11. Build a "no list" ↳ Decide what you won't do this season ↳ Protect your focus and energy by saying no deliberately 12. Drop the need for perfection ↳ Aim for excellence, not perfection ↳ "Good enough" saves hours of unnecessary stress 13. Create a daily shutdown ritual ↳ Review priorities and close tabs at day's end ↳ Mentally say "off" to signal your brain it can rest 14. Don't work where you sleep ↳ Keep work and rest spaces physically separate ↳ This prevents your brain from staying in "on" mode 15. Set clear digital boundaries ↳ Turn off notifications outside working hours ↳ Avoid checking work messages during personal time 16. Don't take things personally ↳ View criticism as feedback about the task, not your worth ↳ Detach emotions from work outcomes 17. Separate work from identity ↳ Remember you're more than your job title ↳ Reconnect with hobbies and spaces where you just exist 18. Communicate clearly and early ↳ Speak up when overwhelmed or can't meet a deadline ↳ Early honesty prevents future crises 19. Ask for help before you're drowning ↳ Request support at 70% capacity, not 150% ↳ Waiting until you're overwhelmed makes recovery harder 20. Build a support network ↳ Connect with colleagues and mentors regularly ↳ You can't build a meaningful career in isolation Thriving at work isn't about pushing harder. It's about building systems that let you show up consistently.       💾 Save or print this post as a reminder 🙋♀️ Follow Lauren Murrell for more like this

  • View profile for Mike Soutar
    Mike Soutar Mike Soutar is an Influencer

    LinkedIn Top Voice on business transformation and leadership. Mike’s passion is supporting the next generation of founders and CEOs.

    46,818 followers

    Taking breaks is part of the job. If you plough straight from task to task, stress builds and focus drops. I'm often guilty of this. I get absorbed by a challenge or an opportunity, dive in and find that three hours have passed before I know it. Microsoft ran EEG tests on people in back-to-back 30-minute meetings. measuring what happens in their brains. They found that short pauses prevented stress from accumulating, boosted engagement, and smoothed the stressful “gear-change” between meetings. In other words, breathers help you do better work. Here are three ways I make breaks count: 1. The pre-task pause Before a tricky task, I go out and take a five-minute walk - even if it's pouring! - then start. Beginning with a breath of fresh air calms the transition and stops me white-knuckling through the first half hour. 2. The one-song reset I turn up the volume on a three-minute track (currently something by Post Malone) stand up, stretch my wrists, look at something out of the window very far away. Then I refill my glass with cold water, and sit back down as the song ends. The music is my timer, so there’s no alarm faff - and I always come back on cue. 3. The park-it technique I end a deep-work stint by writing two lines on the notepad by my keyboard: “what I did” and “what I’ll do next”. Then I step away. Writing down the next step eases my fear of losing momentum, so I can pick it up again the next day. If, like me, you get absorbed and let hours disappear, try one of these this week. What’s your most reliable reset?

  • View profile for Drishti Sharma

    Building @Like Mind Tribe | Content Creator, Mindset & Growth Educator, TEDx Speaker | Creating for an audience of 600k+ on YouTube, 250k+ on Instagram | Better known as Drishtiispeaks

    59,878 followers

    I used to feel I never had enough time! 24x7x365 seemed less. But the biggest productivity killer wasn’t time, it was my lack of – FOCUS. Distractions were everywhere:  my phone, my environment, and even my own thoughts. Here’s my biggest productivity hack that helped me take back control – cutting distractions at their source. // Phone notifications: I keep it far away from my workspace. Out of sight, out of reach, out of mind. // Entertainment apps on laptop: I use screen timers.  Follow the Pomodoro technique (25 mins deep work, 5 mins rest.) You can modify it as per your focus (eg., 40 mins deep work, 10 mins rest.) // Family interruptions: I set clear boundaries by creating an exclusive, work-friendly space, and specific "do-not-disturb" hours. // Procrastination: Sooner or later, I have to do the work. So why delay the inevitable? This simple reminder keeps me accountable. // Mental clutter: I start each day by writing my top 3 priorities and stick to them, one at a time. // Random thoughts while working: I keep a notepad nearby to jot down and revisit them after my focused work block. Productivity isn’t about doing more. It’s about cutting out what holds you back. What’s your biggest distraction currently? #drishtiispeaks #productivity #hacks #distraction #growth #selfdevelopment

  • View profile for Mallika Rao

    Executive Coach for Leaders in Transition | Calm Clarity Under Pressure | Trusted by 1100+ Leaders at Google, Salesforce, IBM & more

    34,779 followers

    7 Neuroscience-Backed Ways to Master Your Energy (Not Just Your Time) Most people obsess over time management, but the most successful leaders focus on energy management. Because no matter how well you plan your day, if your mental, emotional, and physical energy is drained, productivity suffers. Here are seven neuroscience-backed ways to optimize your energy and operate at a higher frequency: 1. Start Your Day with Dopamine, Not Distraction. Your first hour sets your brain’s tone for the day. Scrolling social media depletes dopamine. Instead, move, breathe, or visualize your day to prime your brain for focus and motivation. 2. Master the 90-Minute Ultradian Rhythm Your brain works in 90-minute cycles of peak performance, followed by a natural dip. Work in 90-minute sprints, then take a 10-15 minute recharge break (walk, stretch, deep breathing) to sustain focus. 3. Move Your Body, Move Your Mind Exercise isn’t just for fitness—it boosts neuroplasticity (brain adaptability), increases BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), and enhances problem-solving. Even a five-minute movement break can reset your energy. 4. Regulate Your Nervous System with Breathwork and Cold Exposure Deep diaphragmatic breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting you from stress to clarity. Cold showers or splashing your face with cold water also reset your nervous system, increasing alertness. 5. The Power of Intentional Recovery Your brain doesn’t distinguish between work stress and emotional stress. Mindfulness, meditation, or even a 20-minute nap helps clear mental fog and improves cognitive performance. 6. Eat for Cognitive Clarity Blood sugar spikes lead to energy crashes. Focus on protein, healthy fats, and fiber to sustain brain power. Hydration is also key— even one percent dehydration reduces focus by ten percent. 7. Align Your Work with Meaning and Flow Energy isn’t just physical—it’s emotional and spiritual. Purpose-driven work activates the brain’s reward system, releasing more dopamine. The more aligned you are with your work, the less it feels like work. Your energy is your most valuable resource. Don’t just manage time—elevate how you show up in the time you have. ♻️ Repost to help you network master emotional intelligence. 🔔 Follow for strategies on High Performance and Wellbeing. #leadershipdevelopment #mindfulness #highperformance #emotionalintelligence #worklifeharmony

  • View profile for Jerome Hardaway

    Founder, Vets Who Code | Building AI systems that close the opportunity gap for veterans and government

    6,035 followers

    As a software engineer juggling ADHD and PTSD, I've had to get creative with my work habits. Here's a peek into the strategies that keep me productive. 👨💻🎧 🔊 Loud Music for Laser Focus Forget lo-fi — give me that high-energy beat to lock in my concentration and keep my mind from drifting. 🖥️ Single Screen, Singular Focus Despite the popularity of multi-monitor setups, a single screen minimizes distractions and maximizes my coding flow. 🚫 Strategic Meeting Minimization Meetings can be a significant flow disruptor. I now schedule a dedicated four-hour block for uninterrupted coding, significantly boosting my output. 📴 Phone Coffin: Out of Sight, Out of Mind My phone goes into a literal coffin, and my watch gets docked. If it's urgent, Slack or Teams is the way to reach me. 🔕 Do Not Disturb: My Silent Ally DND mode is non-negotiable during my focused coding blocks to keep those pings and dings at bay. ⏲️ The Countdown Timer Technique A physical timer sets the boundary for my work sprints, helping me stay on track and reminding me when to take a break. 🤖 AI Tools: My Secret Sauce From scheduling with Motion to note-taking with Notion, AI tools help me stay organized and in the zone. And Copilot? It's my co-coding companion that lets me stay in my editor longer. These are my adjustments to keep me coding at my best. If you're navigating similar challenges or seeking focus-enhancing tips, I hope these insights inspire you. Stay productive, and keep coding! #CodingWithADHD #ProductivityHacks #SoftwareDevelopment #MentalHealthAwareness

  • View profile for George Stern

    Entrepreneur, CEO, Speaker. Ex-McKinsey, Harvard Law, elected official. Volunteer firefighter. ✅Follow for daily tips to thrive at work AND in life.

    380,283 followers

    12 steps to protect your focus - And develop a deep work routine: (5 and 6 are so important) 1) Prioritize ↳Before you begin, pick just 1 task you want to work on (no multitasking) ↳Choose your "frog" - the important item you've been putting off 2) Protect the time ↳Find a window of at least 1 hour (2-3 is even better) and block it on your calendar ↳Experiment to find the time when you're most productive and focused 3) Find a space ↳Choose a location where you can close the door and limit distractions ↳Ask others not to interrupt you when you're in there 4) Prepare ↳Download files and gather resources you'll need to complete the work ↳Go to the bathroom, grab a water, and anticipate any other needs 5) Put your phone away ↳Switch your phone to airplane mode and put it out of reach ↳Do NOT look at it until you're finished - that friend's text can wait 6) Shut apps  ↳Close anything on your computer that has notifications, like email and Slack ↳X out of any distracting tabs like news sites or social media 7) Grab a pen and pad ↳It's impossible to stop to-dos and other thoughts from popping into your head ↳Simply write them down when you think of them and then move on 8) Use headphones ↳If you're particularly sensitive to sound, try noise-canceling headphones ↳Find what's best for you: playing nothing at all, white noise, or music without lyrics 9) Clear your mind ↳When everything is ready, pause before diving in to briefly relax ↳You can simply close your eyes and breathe, or do a 1-minute meditation 10) Use a timer ↳Set a timer so you don't have to worry about watching the clock ↳Experiment with techniques like Pomodoro to work and break in intervals 11) Improve ↳After every time you do deep work, reflect on what helped and hurt your focus ↳Make improvements each time to consistently enhance your productivity 12) Handle the basics ↳Exhaustion, hunger, and lack of exercise can be even worse for focus than your phone ↳Get adequate sleep, eat well, and move your body every day Just two hours of deep work can beat a full day of distracted work. Use this checklist to focus deeply on your most important tasks, And turbocharge your productivity. P.S. I'm always curious to hear: When do you get your best deep work done? --- ♻ Repost to help your network be more productive. And follow me George Stern for more. If you want the high-res PDF of this sheet, sign up here: https://lnkd.in/gpe6Q3V6

  • View profile for Muhammad Mehmood

    Operations Leader | COO / Head of Operations | Multi‑Site Growth & Digital Transformation Specialist

    14,275 followers

    What if the secret to sharper decisions lies not in your strategy, but in your surroundings? We spend much of our leadership energy on strategy and systems. Yet the physical environment we work in...the light, the noise and the temperature shapes our ability to think clearly and make good decisions. Researchers note that exposure to light not only governs vision but also influences alertness, cognition and mood. Bright light reduces sleepiness and improves neuro behavioural performance. Conversely, high levels of noise, particularly irrelevant speech, diminish cognitive performance more than temperature. In one study, researchers observed optimal cognitive performance at a moderate temperature with noise levels around 55 dB. I saw this play out when we refreshed the back office of a restaurant I was overseeing. The team had been working under harsh fluorescent lights and constant background chatter from the kitchen. People were tired, mistakes crept in and tensions rose. After reading about the effects of the environment, we replaced the lighting with softer, brighter bulbs, opened blinds to let natural light in and set up a quiet area away from the busiest machines. Within days, the mood lifted. Staff reported feeling more alert and less stressed. For leaders looking to harness the environment, here are a few considerations: 1. Let in the light. Where possible, increase exposure to daylight or use bright lighting. Evidence suggests that this helps maintain alertness and reduces sleepiness. 2. Control noise. Background chatter and irrelevant speech can impair concentration. Aim for moderate noise levels and quiet zones if your space allows. 3. Mind the temperature. Studies have found that cognitive performance peaks at moderate temperatures and falls when rooms are too cold or too hot. 4. Observe and adjust. Walk through your workspace at different times. Notice where people seem energised or drained. By managing light, sound and comfort, we give ourselves and our teams a better platform to perform. Have you made any changes to your environment that improved focus or morale? I would be keen to hear what worked for you.

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