Over 97% of people objectively lose productivity when switching context, even when subjectively believing they are handling it well.
And can anyone really be good at it? Our capacity to juggle several tasks at once is among the most important capabilities of ...
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. We have been told that multitasking is good for work productivity, but we intuitively know constant multitasking makes us stressed out.
If you can juggle more, faster, you must be performing well. The problem is that this belief feels productive—but it isn’t.
We live in a world filled with buzzing notifications, tab overload, and constant demands for attention. Multitasking feels like a survival skill-juggling emails during Zoom calls or scrolling through ...
From checking emails while on a call to cooking dinner and helping with homework, we all operate through multitasking. But new research suggests that our ability to juggle multiple tasks isn't a ...
Twenty thousand productivity articles under the sea all offer the same advice: Don’t multitask. It’s ineffective, it wastes time, it puts bags under your eyes, it burns you out, and only a ...
As a CEO, I know that one of the best things to come out of the past year is the accelerated acceptance of a hybrid work model. Employees have done a remarkable job balancing the typical distractions ...
Does this describe you? While you are on a teleconference call you are writing up your quarterly report, checking your email, and texting your friend about where you are meeting for lunch. You would ...