Bill Gates' mastery of this productivity technique fueled his massive success
It was February 1975 and
Bill Gates, a Harvard sophomore who looked 15 years old at best, typed line
after line of code that would become the software behind Microsoft, which would
launch two months later.
Gates, his business
partner Paul Allen, and a Harvard math student named Monte Davidoff spent two
weeks in the school's Aiken lab. Gates was particularly relentless, forgoing
studying for exams to build the software.
As author Walter Isaacson
writes in a
2013 issue of the Harvard Gazette:
In the wee hours of the
morning, Gates would sometimes fall asleep at the terminal.
"He'd be in the
middle of a line of code when he'd gradually tilt forward until his nose
touched the keyboard," Allen said.
"After dozing an hour
or two, he'd open his eyes, squint at the screen, blink twice, and resume
precisely where he'd left off — a prodigious feat of concentration."
It's a perfect example of
"deep work," Georgetown professor and author Cal
Newport says in
his new book of the same name, and it's the reason why Gates had such a
remarkable rise to success while still in his early 20s.
Newport defines deep work
as "professional activities performed in a state of distraction-free
concentration that push your cognitive capabilities to their limit, [which
then] create new value, improve your skill, and are hard to duplicate."
Newport also quotes
Isaacson's 2014 book "The
Innovators" to bolster his point. "The one trait that
differentiated [Gates from Allen] was focus," Isaacson writes.
"Allen's mind would flit between many ideas and passions, but Gates was a
serial obssessor."
In
a 2014 Reddit Ask Me Anything interview, Gates writes that in his older
years as a philanthropist, he has channeled his obsessive nature primarily into
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and tempered it with a more
reasonable schedule, but that "20 years ago I would stay in the office for
days at a time and not think twice about it."
Newport argues that it's
not as simple as equating hard work with success. Rather it's about
understanding how — more than ever in the age of constant internet connectivity
— perpetual distractions threaten to limit our potential and minimize the
impact of our work.
You don't need to take it
to Gates' level and regularly work through the night at the office.
A dedication to deep work
requires setting aside stretches of time each week (of say an hour or two) when
you work with urgency and your concentration is not disrupted by
anything, not even a brief moment of daydreaming or getting up for a cup of
coffee.
It's about being
constantly aware of what work is considered "shallow" and what is
"deep," and ensuring that shallow work doesn't overtake your
schedule.
"A commitment to deep
work is not a moral stance and it's not a philosophical statement — it is
instead a pragmatic recognition that the ability to concentrate is a skill that gets
valuable things done," Newport writes.
"Deep work is
important, in other words, not because distraction is evil, but because it
enabled Bill Gates to start a billion-dollar industry in less than a
semester."
Source: Bill Gates Massive Success
0 comments:
Post a Comment