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Deep Work

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Deep Work

Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World

Grand Central,

15 minutes de lecture
10 points à retenir
Audio et texte

Aperçu

You don’t succeed by answering emails quickly. You succeed by regularly practicing deep work.

Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Professor Cal Newport presents a multipart argument for deep, concentrated work. He explains that work that demands your full focus is intrinsically valuable and rewarding. You need to be able to handle “deep work” to succeed in an information economy. Yet people face increasing distractions or social pressure that drive them toward shallow work. Newport develops his ideas with a blend of formal research, stories and personal accounts about the challenges and rewards of deep work. He provides tips for arranging your life to support deep work, which he sees as valuable, productive and rare. He makes his case persuasively and even poetically. getAbstract recommends his guidance to knowledge workers and anyone else who is seeking flow, creativity or focus.

Summary

“Deep Work” and Why It Matters

Deep work is professional work that requires complete focus and full concentration. Deep work pushes your creative and analytical abilities to their limits. For real achievement in art, science, business or other fields, you must work deeply. To understand deep work, compare it to ordinary, “shallow work.” Shallow work is work you can do while you’re distracted. It doesn’t ask much of your mind, and contributes little that’s new or valuable.

Current trends push you – and the rest of the world – toward shallow work. This push to network, tweet, respond quickly and multitask can fill your days with shallow work. But, that’s dangerous. Often, people automate shallow work or skip it. Putting shallow work at the center of your professional activity puts your career at risk. Shallow work has limited value; deep work offers profound value. Being able to do deep work is becoming increasingly important.

Technology places new demands on workers, and many struggle to keep up. Among other challenges, technology is splintering and restructuring the economy. This eliminates some jobs, but rewards others. Firms need “high-skilled workers” who ...

About the Author

Cal Newport teaches in Georgetown University’s computer science department. He also wrote So Good They Can’t Ignore You: How to Win at College.


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    K. S. 8 months ago
    Seven years after the first read in 2016, Cal Newport's Deep Work Principles have stood the test of time for me. They are timeless - and one of the most important future skills in the 21st century.
    There is no access limit to age, education, background, however, one must make a decision. To begin the Deep Work journey, one must make a decision, make a commitment with oneself - and invest time and diligence. It is worth it.
    Good luck!
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    M. K. 8 months ago
    good
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    M. S. 12 months ago
    Very insightful. Without deep work, I get drowned with menial tasks and find it hard to accomplish more important ("big fish") work. Funny, even while I was reading this summarized version - I got distracted �� <br><br>Practice practice practice!

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