Deep Work - Great book for software professionals

It was a nice winter day at Balmoral hotel. The writer of Harry Potter series J.K. Rowling left a signed statement on a marble bust of Hermes in her room which read: “J.K. Rowling finished writing Harry Potter and The Deathly Hollows in this room (552) on 11 January 2007.

Yes, you have read it right. J.K. Rowling wrote the final book of Harry Potter series in a hotel. Because, she needed undistracted concentration to produce a world class work. Not only her, but also Bill Gates did require such uninterrupted attention to complete the first version of “basic” in 1974 which laid the foundation of a billion dollar company “microsoft”.  He used to close himself up in a separate room most of the time for 8 weeks to produce such a program. Mark Twin, Rabindranath Tagore and so on also had similar patterns. So, what were they actually doing! What is it called?

Deep Work by Cal Newport 

Author Cal Newport, an MIT graduate and Georgetown professor has named this as “deep work” and explained this phenomenon in his book “deep work”. He also claimed that, this deep work helped him to double the output of his research papers while raising a family, writing the book and teaching fulltime in a prestigious university.

Now, you might think that, they were some extreme examples or privileged people to do so. But the author shows us some way of how we can manage to do deep word despite busy or daily schedules of other works. Before this, you should know why we need deep work because we all don’t want to be Bill Gates or J.K. Rowling.

According to the author only 3 types of people are going to be successful in the upcoming tight economy.

  • People who have large capitals to invest in companies

  • People who are very good at technologies

  • People who are very good at what they do

 For most of us, the first two are usually not possible, but we all can manage to attain the third quality. That’s where deep work becomes significant. Neuroscientists have found that intense level of focus in isolated fields of work caused “myelin” to develop in relevant areas of the brain. Myelin is a white tissue that develops around our neurons  and allows brain cells to fire faster and cleaner. So in a sense, when we practice deep work, we upgrade our brains and allow specific brain circuits to fire more effortlessly and effectively. It also allows us to rapidly connect ideas and uncover creative solutions. It helps us to produce something standout amongst the noise and avoid being forgotten by the flood of information that we deal on a daily basis.

Shallow work vs deep work

Shallow work are such works that allows distractions like talking to colleague, listening to music, replying texts etc. We also call them multitasking. It decreases our productivity and wastes our time. Whereas, deep work is totally the opposite. Deep work increases our thinking capacity and increases concentration that boosts productivity and makes our work hard to replicate. The shallow work that we do today will be replaced by automation in near future and more people will be willing to do it in lesser payment since that’s easy to do with other tasks.

Attention Residue

Suppose, you are writing a novel with 100% attention. Suddenly, the phone beeps and you reply your friend. Then when you come back to the novel, you can come back with 70/80% of your attention. Rest of the attention stays with your phone. The more you multitask or get distracted, the more you lose your attention to the particular task and in the end, you can’t give your 100% which leads to an average output.

Four methods of deep work

Monastic deep work

Here, we completely separate ourselves from the daily or distracting environment and focus on our work. We have to isolate ourselves from the world until our goal is achieved.

Bimodal deep work

Here, we can conduct deep work for a particular period and live our usual life for the rest of the time. For example- J.K. Rowling used to separate herself into a hotel and for writing all day long and by the evening she used to join the regular world.

Rhythmic deep work

Here, we can fix a particular period (couple of hours) for deep work such as morning of the day to work without distraction and do our rest of the works at a regular basis.

Journalistic deep work

Here, people who are very busy with their schedule, can prepare themselves in such a way that whenever they get free time, they use it for deep work. Peter Shankman can be a great example for that: the author needed some distraction free isolated environment in his very busy schedule to write a manuscript for his book, he bought a round plane trip business ticket from USA to Tokyo. He got 30 hours without distraction in the air to complete his work. Here, he paid some expense but the output that he got, outweighed the expense.

We also need proper food and sleep for the brain to keep focusing on our work. Deep work requires serious will and patience to accomplish. And the result is always something special. So, if we want to be successful in this modern world where unemployment and overpopulation will take over the job sectors, deep work can lead us to the way of success and make you the best version of yourself at your work.

Here’s a quick book summary in Bangla…