January 14, 2010 โ When a problem you are working on forces you to wait, do you wait or switch tasks?
For example, if you are uploading a bunch of new web pages and it's taking a minute, do you almost instinctively open a new website or instant message?
I used to, and it made me less productive. I would try to squeeze more tasks into these short little idle periods, and as a result I would get less done.
Doing other things during idle times seems like it would increase productivity. After all, while you're waiting for something to load you're not getting anything done. So doing something else in the interim couldn't hurt, right? Wrong.
While you're solving one problem, you likely are "holding that problem in your head". It takes a while to load that problem in your head. You can only hold one important problem in your head at a time. If you switch tasks, even for a brief moment, you're going to need to spend X minutes "reloading" that problem for what is often only a 30 second vacation to Gmail, Facebook, Gchat, Hackernews, Digg, etc. It's clearly a bad deal.
If you're doing something worth doing, give it all of your attention until it's done. Don't work on anything else, even if you're given idle time.
Human intelligence is overrated. Even the smartest people I know still occasionally misplace their keys or burn toast. We are good at following simple tasks when we focus, most of the time. But we are not built for multitasking.
Can you rub your head clockwise? Can you rub your belly counterclockwise? Can you say your ABC's backwards?
Dead simple, right? But can you do all three at once? If you can, by all means ignore my advice and go multitask.
If what you are doing is easy or mundane, multitasking is permissible because loading a simple problem like "laundry" into your head does not take much time. But if what you are doing is important and worth doing, you are obligated to give it your full attention and to wait out those "idle times".
If you switch tasks during your idle times, you're implying that the time to reload the problem is less than the time gained doing something else. In other words, you are implying what you are doing is not worth doing. If that's the case, why work on it at all?