Graphic Arts Media

Your phone is making you worse at your job

Many of us have a love-hate relationship with our smartphones. We often experience overwhelming desires to pick them up, but we can’t understand why we feel so unfulfilled after we put them down. For many, an over-dependence on our phones affects our lives, and author Catherine Price explains why in her book How to Break Up With Your Phone.
Our desire to reach for our phones in times of anxiety or boredom is in direct response to the dopamine hit we get when we check  them, knowing that we’ll receive new information (conditioned like Pavlov’s dogs, we get a hit of dopamine just thinking about picking up our phones!) They’re designed to be addictive. Tristan Harris, former Design Ethicist at Google, likens smartphones to slot machines, which both deliver ‘intermittent rewards’ to keep us coming back for more while promoting compulsive behaviour.
Studies show that “…spending extended time on them has the power to change both the structure and the function of our brains – including our abilities to form new memories, think deeply, focus, and absorb and remember what we read.” Yikes! Below are two ways overusing of your phone can make you worse at your job, as well as what you can do about it. 

 

 
 

 
Here are some techniques to reclaim your time and attention from your smartphone:

Finally, there’s no need to give up your phone entirely. It helps you stay connected to clients, provides answers to nearly every question imaginable, and helps us to navigate the world. Also, there’s nothing wrong with mindless distraction as long you control of it – rather than passively experiencing it at the hands (and minds) of the developers in Silicon Valley.