http://www.internetnews.com/commentary/article.php/3793561
Work Ethic 2.0: Attention Control
Commentary: A person who works with total focus has an enormous advantage over 
a workaholic who's "multi-tasking" all day, answering every phone call, 
constantly checking Facebook and Twitter, and indulging every interruption.    
 

December 29, 2008
By Mike Elgan: More stories by this author: 

The industrial revolution didn't arise out of nowhere, and it didn't arise 
everywhere. It was made possible by the emergence of a set of personal values 
that came to be known as the "work ethic." 
The idea behind this meme -- inconceivable 400 years ago -- is that 
hard work is good for its own sake. Hard work makes you a better person. With 
hard work, our parents told us, we could grow up to become anything. Work hard, 
and we
 could get good grades, elite-school acceptance and scholarships. We could 
invent things, launch businesses and change the world. "Genius," Thomas Edison 
told us,
 "is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration." 
This industrial-age work ethic has its variants, including the "Protestant work 
ethic," the "American work ethic," and the "Asian work ethic" to name a few. 
The success or 
failure of regions, nations and subcultures has been massively influenced by 
the degree to which populations embrace the value of hard work. And that's why 
the
 idea is hammered into kids in school, and lauded and rewarded in the 
workplace. 
When the "information age" started replacing the "industrial age," hard work 
seemed more important than ever. Until the 1980s, to use a computer was to 
program it. Silicon 
Valley corporate culture, from tiny startups to the massive Googleplex, 
emphasizes long hours and feverish work. 
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   For more stories on this topic:
  
But since the turn of the new millennium, the nature of work has 
evolved to the point where hard work is becoming less important to a successful 
work ethic than another, more useful value: attention. 
The New Work Ethic 
Columnist David Brooks, commenting in the Dec. 16th New York 
Times about Malcolm Gladwell's latest book called "Outliers," made a statement 
as profound as it was accurate: "Control of attention is the ultimate 
individual power," 
he wrote. "People who can do that are not prisoners of the stimuli around 
them." 
But why is that truer now than ten or twenty years ago? Why 
will it be truer still ten or twenty years from now? As I wrote in May, 
Internet distractions evolve to become ever more "distracting" all the time -- 
like a virus. Distractions now "seek you out." 

Distractions mask the toll they take on productivity. Everyone finishes
 up their work days exhausted, but how much of that exhaustion is from real 
work, how much from the mental effort of fighting off distractions and how much 
from the 
indulgence of distractions? 
Pundits like me are constantly talking about Facebook, Twitter, 
blogs and humor sites, not to mention old standbys like e-mail and IM. One gets 
the impression that we should be "following" these things all day long, and 
many do.
 So when does the work get done? When do entrepreneurs start and manage their 
businesses? When do writers write that novel? When do IT professionals keep the 
trains running on time? When does anyone do anything? 
The need for "attention," rather than "hard work," as the centerpiece of the 
new work ethic has arisen along with the rise of distractions carried on the 
wings of Internet 
protocol. In one generation, we've gone from a total separation of "work" from 
"non-work" to one in which both work and play are always sitting right in front 
of us. 
Now, we find ourselves with absolutely nothing standing between
 us and a universe of distractions -- nothing except our own abilities to 
control attention. Porn, gambling, funny videos, flirting, socializing, playing 
games, shopping -- it's
 all literally one click away. Making matters worse, indulging these 
distractions looks just like work. And it's easy to work and play at the same 
time -- and call it work. These new, increasingly compelling distractions get 
piled on to older ones -- office pop-ins, e-mail, IM,
 text messages, meetings and others. 
Kids now grow up with the whole range of distractions, from big-screen TVs to 
video games to cell phones to PCs in their rooms. They're addicted to screens 
before they even start high school. Their attention spans have been whittled 
down to seconds, and their 
expectations for constant amusement are highly developed. 
In a world in which entire industries bet their businesses on gaining access to 
our attention, which value leads to better personal success: hard work or the 
ability
 to control attention? 
A person who works six hours a day but with total focus has
 an enormous advantage over a 12-hour-per-day workaholic who's "multi-tasking" 
all day, answering every phone call, constantly checking Facebook and Twitter, 
and 
indulging every interruption. 
It's time we upgraded our work ethic for the age we're living in, not our 
grandparents' age. Hard work is still a virtue, but now takes a distant second 
place to the new 
determinant of success or failure in the age of Internet distractions: Control 
of attention. 
Hard work is dead. Are you paying attention? 
In addition to writing for Datamation, where this column first 
appeared, Mike Elgan is a technology writer and former editor of 
Windowsmagazine. He can be reached at mike.elgan+datamat...@gmail.com or his 
blog: http://therawfeed.com. 

TAGS: e-Mail, social networking, productivity, Twitter, information overload 




5 Comments (click to add your comment)
ByTheProductGuy   January 9 2009 12:32 PMPDT
Dare I be the wisea** and say that reading your full blog post was 
also...technically...a distraction of sorts (though one I enjoyed!).

You're right. You can't lack dicipline. Had to force myself 
away from twitter (@nbajzek) and put other social stuff in the background. It's 
all necessary to follow, but you can't let yourself get sucked in.

And, for your own sanity's sake, don't do twitterberry. 
Your pocket will be vibrating all night.

Catch me at www.housingzone.com/blogs 
Reply to this comment
Bymjkelley, D.Phil.   January 12 2009 12:23 PMPDT
in my university teaching on cognition, I use a lot of Internet 
news articles about scientific findings and assertions, because the stories are 
typically very readable; but also I also ask the students to specifically look 
within the
 article for a citation of a peer-reviewed academic journal about the presumed 
finding, so as to make a distinction between whether the news content is only 
the opinion of the 
author or based upon scientific research.

Reply to this comment
ByBrent Haeseker   January 18 2009 2:14 PMPDT
Nice article Mike. I can't tell you how many times I have left work 
exhausted but not sure of how much work I really got done. Focusing long enough 
to handle one task at a time is a concept that has gotten lost in today's 
multi-tasking 
world. I'd rather have 10 things completed than 20 things half-way done. 
Reply to this comment
ByTubbytat   January 31 2009 4:52 AMPDT
This is very true, i see it happening all around me. More focus 
to the task in hand. quicker and more accurate results. nice article
http://www.topofthetubes.com 
Reply to this comment
Bymduchesn   February 2 2009 9:23 AMPDT
Since I've started working, back in the early 80's, I was used to be 
a typical multi-tasking / multi-projects fellow. I was proud to be able to 
manage (?) ten projects at a time, having tens of new ideas a day, etc.
Then, in the late 90's, I've got the chance to move to Germany,
 where I worked for 4 years for a US company. I was one of the many 
"foreigners" in a 60-people team. Due to my positions there, I had to get 
things done, quickly enough
 to resist the competition and make us visible.
When I left, back in 2003, I was no more a multi-tasking guy. I learned
 the German way: first thing first, one step at a time, the process is the 
process. It is the only way to be successful. See the Germany' s economy...

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