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16 Easy Ways To Improve Your Focus

<img style="float:right;" src="http://static6.businessinsider.com/image/53987d4969beddba69e9535a-480-/goldfish-4.jpg" border="0" alt="goldfish" width="480" style="float: right;" />

Americans have about an eight-second attention span.

That's less than a goldfish.

But we can improve our powers of concentration by, for example, finding clever ways to eliminate distractions, hacking our workflows, or working on our mindsets.

To that end, here are a few takeaways from recent Quora threads that tackled attention.

1. Invest in your sleep. Not sleeping enough makes people distracted, fat, and unethical, so be sure to get your rest. While everybody's needs are different, it's generally between six to nine hours. And invest in some nice sheets. -Yishan Wong

2. Exercise your body. Harvard Medical School has found that exercise improves your memory and concentration. You don't have to be a Channing Tatum, but it's important that your body is an asset, not a liability. -Achintya Prakash

3. Exile your distractions. Close email, Facebook, Twitter. Put your phone on airplane mode. Turn off anything that blinks, dings, buzzes, or vibrates. Don't even give yourself the chance to multitask - since it erodes your attention span. -Bill Hall

4. Keep a routine. If you sleep, work, and relax at irregular intervals, you'll spend unnecessary energy trying to organize your time. Like French novelist Gustave Flaubert said, "<span>Be regular and orderly in your life</span><span>, so that you may be violent and original in your work." -Frederick Javalera<span class="rep">

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<span class="rep">5. Use the Pomodoro technique. Taking its name from a Pomodoro timer, which runs for 25 minutes, the Pomodoro technique is a practice of focusing intently on something for 25 minutes and then taking a five-minute break to get coffee, go to the bathroom, whatever. -Selene Chew<span class="rep">

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<span class="rep">6. Wake up at the same time every day. The regularity lets your hormones get into a rhythm, giving you the most energy, clarity, and focus through the morning. -Michal Ugor</span>

<span class="rep">7. Take a stance on email. Is your job to be on top of things - to respond to everything as quickly as possible? Or does it require long hours of studying and concentration? If the latter, email might remain urgent, but it's not important. So only check it a few times a day. -Xi Cheng</span>

<span class="rep">8. Know what your life goals are. If you don't know what they are, read a good book on the subject (BI's favorite: "Flow" by <span></span><span class="author notFaded" data-width=""><span class="a-declarative" data-action="a-popover" data-a-popover="{"position":"triggerBottom","name":"contributor-info-B000AQ1KVM","allowLinkDefault":"true"}">Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi). Because w</span></span>hen you know what you want to do, it's easier to not do everything else. -Rolfe Dlugy-Hegwer<span id="__w2_CkYxFD0_link">

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<span class="rep">9. Do things you enjoy focusing on. It takes "emotional labor" to do work that you don't engage with, so try to arrange your work day around that engagement, and hack it when it's not there. -George Mortimer </span>

<span class="rep">10. Write out your obituary. It helps you identify what you actually need to get done. -Dan Webster</span>

11. Take a break when you're making awesome progress on a task<span style="font-size: 15px; line-height: 1.5em;">. You'll come back to it quicker and with more energy. Like Ernest Hemingway said, always "</span>leave some water in the well<span style="font-size: 15px; line-height: 1.5em;">." -</span>Pratik Mhatre

<span class="rep">12. Put noise-canceling headphones on. Not only do they reduce noise, they signal to your colleagues that you're not to be bothered. -Dave Concannon</span>

<span class="rep">13. Find a partner in crime. Teaming up with a coworker will keep you accountable - if she's coding while you're checking Facebook, you'll feel foolish. -Krzysztof Kowalczyk</span>

<span class="rep">14. Read physical books. It will train you in paying attention to an object for an extended length of time - something the digital world doesn't provide very well. -Murali Veeraiyan</span>

<span class="rep">15. Listen to music. It helps you stay in your workflow, since the sound occupies the part of your brain on the lookout for "danger, food, sex, or shiny things." -Amir Baer<span class="rep">

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<span class="rep">16. Break large projects into smaller pieces. Then, instead of having vague goals, set clear deadlines. Execute against those to guide your focus. -Farsheed Atef</span>

<b>See Also:</b>

<ul><li>??How To Work 80-Hour Weeks And Not Burn Out?</li><li>10 Quotes From 'Silicon Valley's Self-Help Guru'</li><li>7 Psychology Tricks To Influence People And Get Exactly What You Want</li></ul>

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