Tip of the Week: Practical Ways to Make Your Smartphone Distraction-Free

July 1, 2015

b2ap3_thumbnail_no_distraction_celly_400.jpgMobile devices like smartphones and tablets are marketed as powerful productivity tools. However, some workers may find their device’s time-wasting apps to be more of a distraction than an aid to productivity. What’s a distracted smartphone owner to do?

According to a study by mConceirge, 90 percent of Americans actually use their smartphones for work purposes. This is why many businesses are adopting a Bring Your Own Device strategy so that personal devices can be used safely at work and for work. Unfortunately, not every worker has the willpower to forsake a mobile device’s time-wasting apps. For Jake Knapp, blogger and design partner at Google Venture, the struggle is real.

After spending time fighting a losing battle against the distracting power of his smartphone, Knapp began to look for a way out. He told of his experience on the sharing website Medium:

My iPhone made me twitchy. I could feel it in my pocket, calling me, like the Ring called Bilbo Baggins. It distracted me from my kids. It distracted me from my wife. It distracted me anytime, anywhere. I just didn’t have the willpower to ignore email and Twitter and Instagram and the whole world wide web. Infinity in my pocket was too much.

To remedy this problem, Knapp came up with a simple solution; dumb down his smartphone. According to his logic, if he got rid of the most distracting apps and only kept what’s absolutely essential, his phone would no longer have a hold over him. Here are four helpful tips that Knapp came up with in order to make his smartphone less distracting.

  • Disable Safari (or your phone’s Internet browser). For Knapp (and most of us), the Internet is one of the biggest sources of distraction because it’s, as he puts it, “a limitless universe of, y’know, everything.” Most smartphones don’t give the option to delete its Internet browser. However, you can disable it.
  • Delete the email app. Email on your desktop is distracting enough; having your inbox in your pocket is another level of distraction entirely. It’s the nature of email to not be the most urgent form of communication. For example, if someone truly needs an instant response from you, they would call you. Therefore, we think you can get by just fine by only checking your email on your PC.
  • Delete “infinity” apps. Knapp categorizes infinity apps as the apps that one can spend an “infinite” amount of time using. For example, all things social media and even games have a tendency to grab a hold of our attention and never let go. By deleting the worst time-wasting apps on your phone, you will find yourself spending less time glued to your tiny screen.
  • Only keep the apps that you need. Taking a minimalist approach to your smartphone is the best way to keep the distraction levels to a bare minimum. Accomplish this by only keeping apps that have practical value, like your GPS app, text messaging, calculator, etc. If there’s an app on your device that’s designed to waste time in any way, shape, or form, delete it for a happier, healthier, and more focused you.

Can you identify with Knapp’s smartphone addiction problem? What are some ways that you minimize your smartphone’s hold over your life. Share your thoughts in the comments.

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