The Art of Productive Procrastination

The Art of Productive Procrastination

Making Trouble Volume 25
Saul Griffith

About four times a year I seem to be able to concentrate well for eight hours in a row — in fact, about 48 hours in a row — and I just let it happen. I don’t know when it will occur or why, but it’s typically when some manic inspiration strikes.

The rest of the time, I am rarely, if ever, doing what I should be doing. I’ve never been able to go straight down the to-do list, to the chagrin of friends and co-workers, yet still everything ends up getting done, and a little more. Since that seems to be the way I’m wired, I have found some simple ways to productively procrastinate. Here’s what works for me; maybe it will work for you.

I gave up on trying to do exactly what I was meant to be doing in favor of always doing something. Frankly, I’m not sure we’re designed to focus on only one thing for eight or ten hours in a row. I’ve always found that it’s useful to have something else to be doing when you’re too burnt out to face the next thing on your list. That way, flipping back and forth between the two projects prevents focus fatigue.

Now, the most important thing is to make sure your other project isn’t “browsing on YouTube” or “catching up on Facebook.” Make it a project that forces you to learn, because you want to.

Always have a learning project in mind. For me, it’s typically learning some new tool, some new math, some new physics, or some new programming skill. It doesn’t really matter what it is, just have something on the back burner. It helps if it’s a skill you might need in your next project.

Then figure out something fun that requires that skill, like making a Sierpinski-triangle chopping board. Make sure you need your new skill to complete your weird and fun new project. The desire to finish the project will force you to learn the skill, and that skill will be available to you when you tackle a more serious project in the future.

I’ll illustrate this with my most recent example. I have projects in the future where I know I’ll need to do a lot of data visualization. I also have projects where I want to use more algorithm-based design. Christmas is coming up, and I want to give my friends who have children something cool and handmade, so I decided to make an alphabet book completely algorithmically: a computer program wrote, typeset, and produced the entire thing.

Making Trouble 25 Pullquote

Why? I’ve always had a passion and fascination with fonts. And I need more day-to-day MATLAB skills. It’s not something that needs to be done immediately — I can do it in the hours between other projects and work, and at the end of it I’ll be a better programmer, understand fonts, colors, and visualization- and algorithm-based design better, and I’ll have an awesome gift for my kid and others.

I’ve been at it for about three weeks now, spending maybe an hour a day (more when on airplanes, less when at home). It looks close to being finished. Magically, I’ve learned a whole bunch of skills that had always avoided me because I wasn’t motivated to learn them — because I found a way to motivate myself. That’s like a full-semester programming course finished in three weeks while skill-building and distracting me just enough from real work to make my real work more productive. (The next question is, what should I be doing while I avoid writing my MAKE column?)

I love Clay Shirky’s concept of cognitive surplus, and the fact that there are more people with more time to contribute to more cool things than ever before, and that we can share all this learning and doing because we now have the web. I’ll be able to share my book and my code with the world. Someone will improve the code, or change it, or find a creative link or nugget in it, and the world is improved. Everyone’s a winner.

Harness your procrastinating self by fooling yourself into being motivated. Find recipes for your own ideal procrastination projects. Keep a list of them handy. You’ll never find yourself zombie-eyed in front of a video game ever again. You’ll be creating something new instead.

Saul Griffith is a new father, entrepreneur, and regular columnist for MAKE magazine. otherlab.com

This column is excerpted from MAKE Volume 25, page 13.

Check out MAKE Volume 25:
MakeV25_cover_300x425.jpg
MAKE Volume 25: Arduino Revolution
Give your gadgets a brain! Previously out of reach for the do-it-yourselfer, the tiny computers called microcontrollers are now so cheap and easy to use that anyone can make their stuff smart. With a microcontroller, your gadget can sense the environment, talk to the internet or other hardware, and make things happen in the real world by controlling motors, lights, or any electronic device.

» BUY or SUBSCRIBE

14 thoughts on “The Art of Productive Procrastination

  1. Anonymous says:

    Two words: Nested procrastination. I have projects that distract me from other projects that were distracting me from other projects… Somewhere I’ve forgotten what I was supposed to be doing in the first place. On the plus side, I’ve had some cool ideas. Now if I can only focus long enough to complete one. Hmmm.

  2. Tim Harris says:

    me: Instead of doing my homework, I would much rather be on wikipedia.

    my opinion: Just because you aren’t doing what you are supposed to be doing doesn’t make it a good thing. There is no excuse for a lack of discipline, even if it is clothed in other overall good activities.

  3. Michael Colombo says:

    My work ethic is very similar to what he described. What I find is that focusing my attention on minor “fun” projects actually recharges the mental batteries for the larger projects that may be at a process point that’s more drudgery than enjoyment. When the job is on the line, I’ll push through and get something finished, but turning attention to other things that are still productive, but perhaps not as “important”, will make other projects come out better. Joni Mitchell is a genius songwriter, and a pretty darn good painter. She uses those skills with and against each other in much the same way Saul describes.

  4. Anonymous says:

    This is great support for 3M’s famous “15% time”. They actually track successful inventions that have come out of this downtime, and it adds up to $Billions. I love your recipe for harnessing the need for distraction.

  5. Carpet Cleaning Kendall says:

    Useful information shared..I am very happy to read this article..

  6. Some articles I’ve enjoyed recently | djul.me says:

    […] The Art of Productive Procrastination by Goli Mohammadi […]

  7. ダラダラしない方法 | ライフハック心理学 says:

    […] The Art of Productive Procrastination | MAKE […]

Comments are closed.

Discuss this article with the rest of the community on our Discord server!
Tagged

I'm a word nerd who loves to geek out on how emerging technology affects the lexicon. I was an editor on the first 40 volumes of MAKE, and I love shining light on the incredible makers in our community. In particular, covering art is my passion — after all, art is the first thing most of us ever made. When not fawning over perfect word choices, I can be found on the nearest mountain, looking for untouched powder fields and ideal alpine lakes.

Contact me at snowgoli@gmail.com or via @snowgoli.

View more articles by Goli Mohammadi

ADVERTISEMENT

Maker Faire Bay Area 2023 - Mare Island, CA

Escape to an island of imagination + innovation as Maker Faire Bay Area returns for its 15th iteration!

Buy Tickets today! SAVE 15% and lock-in your preferred date(s).

FEEDBACK