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Focus As A Leadership Skill: The Pros And Cons Of Multitasking At Work

Focus As A Leadership Skill: The Pros And Cons Of Multitasking At Work

Forbes18-04-2025

Focus As A Leadership Skill: The Pros And Cons Of Multitasking At Work
In today's always-on workplace, one of the most overlooked leadership skills is focus. With attention spans shrinking and expectations growing, many leaders are being pulled in too many directions at once. According to a 2022 study from the University of California, Irvine, the average worker switches tasks every three minutes, and it can take up to 23 minutes to fully regain focus after each interruption. This environment encourages constant context switching and multitasking, often at the expense of deep work and strategic thinking. But, is multitasking always a bad thing?
Multitasking gets a bad reputation. It is frequently blamed for everything from poor memory to low-quality output. But in many workplaces, multitasking is not only expected, it is rewarded. And in some cases, it works. I know this firsthand. When I worked as an account executive for a bank, I was expected to make a high volume of sales calls every day. The company measured not just the number of calls, but how long I spent on the phone. I found that if I typed my notes as I spoke with each customer, I could both document details in real time and hit my call time targets. Some might call it attention switching. I thought of it as practical multitasking. And it helped me win awards.
Research shows that this type of multitasking, typing while talking, is more accurately described as dual-task processing. Because note-taking was a highly practiced skill, it did not take my attention away from the real-time conversation. It allowed me to reinforce memory and avoid duplicating effort. This highlights a valuable distinction: not all multitasking is created equal.
Why Multitasking At Work Has A Bad Reputation
Multitasking has been criticized by neuroscientists and productivity experts for years. Studies have shown that switching between tasks can lead to cognitive overload, reduced efficiency, and more mistakes. Dr. Daniel Levitin, author of The Organized Mind, has explained that task switching burns through the brain's glucose-based energy supply and causes mental fatigue. This kind of multitasking, trying to juggle multiple unrelated tasks simultaneously, can decrease productivity by up to 40%, according to research cited by the American Psychological Association.
But not all multitasking is the same. Context matters. So does the nature of the task and the individual's mental framework. Some types of multitasking are more about flow and integration, while others are more disruptive.
When Multitasking Works: Routine Tasks And Cognitive Pairing
In some situations, multitasking can actually improve efficiency. Dr. Friederike Fabritius, a neuroscientist and author I interviewed, emphasized the importance of understanding how the brain processes information. She explained that pairing a routine task with a cognitive one can help manage energy and attention. For example, listening to a podcast while organizing files or walking during a meeting can enhance mental engagement.
This aligns with what some call 'background multitasking,' where a low-effort, low-focus task runs alongside a more demanding one. These combinations allow people to use their time more strategically without overloading their brain.
The Cost Of Poorly Managed Multitasking In Leadership
The real danger of multitasking shows up when leaders take on too many high-focus tasks at once. It dilutes presence and weakens judgment. Dr. Frances Frei, a Harvard Business School professor I interviewed, noted that trust in leadership begins with presence. If a leader appears distracted, employees often interpret that as disinterest or dismissal, even if the leader believes they are being efficient.
When multitasking prevents leaders from being fully engaged in conversations, problem solving, or decision making, the result is a disconnect. It affects not only outcomes but relationships.
Multitasking, Attention Switching, And Energy Drain At Work
The difference between multitasking and attention switching is subtle but important. Dr. Daniel Z. Lieberman, a psychiatrist and author of The Molecule of More, explained when I interviewed him how dopamine drives our desire for novelty. The brain enjoys the thrill of switching tasks, but it comes at a cost. Every switch uses up cognitive resources.
This is why people often feel exhausted after a day filled with interruptions, even if the total workload was manageable. It is not just the number of tasks, but how fragmented the experience felt.
What Leaders Can Do To Set Better Boundaries Around Multitasking And Focus
Leaders set the tone for how focus is valued, or devalued, on their teams. If leaders are constantly checking their phones in meetings, responding to emails mid-conversation, or accepting every calendar invite, they model distraction.
When I interviewed Stephen White, Chief Operating Officer of Center for BrainHealth at The University of Texas at Dallas, he emphasized that creating space for focus is one of the most undervalued habits in leadership. He recommended leaders 'create clarity by protecting time for thinking, not just doing.' That includes carving out meeting-free hours, encouraging asynchronous communication when possible, and reinforcing that deep work matters.
Multitasking Vs. Being Efficient: How To Know The Difference
Being able to juggle multiple responsibilities is often seen as a strength. But there is a difference between being adaptable and being scattered. When leaders try to solve every problem at once or jump from meeting to meeting without reflection, they are more likely to react than respond.
To assess whether multitasking is helping or hurting, leaders can ask:
How To Lead With Focus In A Multitasking Environment
Modern workplaces are not designed for singular focus. Between Slack notifications, back-to-back meetings, and digital overload, leaders must learn to manage, not eliminate, multitasking.
Dr. Adam Alter, who I interviewed about technology addiction, emphasized that managing digital distractions requires intention. He recommended creating tech boundaries, like setting specific times to check email and disabling nonessential notifications. These micro-adjustments protect attention and reduce the cognitive tax of constant switching.
Leaders can improve by:
The Leadership Advantage Of Strategic Multitasking
The reality is, some multitasking is inevitable. Leaders wear many hats and juggle competing priorities. The key is to approach multitasking strategically, not reflexively. Knowing when it adds value and when it diminishes it is essential.
By embracing intentional multitasking, where compatible tasks are paired with purpose, leaders can boost efficiency without losing clarity. But when every ping, task, and conversation is treated as equal, leadership becomes reactive.
The best leaders know how to toggle between modes: when to integrate, when to sequence, and when to stop everything and focus.
Multitasking And Focus Are Both Essential When Used Intentionally
Multitasking is part of modern leadership, but it should be a conscious choice, not a knee-jerk reflex. When leaders understand how their attention works, they can use it more effectively, without sacrificing quality or connection. Some multitasking can support productivity, especially when it involves pairing practiced habits with active thinking. But it must have boundaries. The best leaders know when to slow down, give something their full attention, and guide their teams with intention.

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Clarence Thomas' Former Clerk Warns Trump Did Something 'Truly Outrageous'
Clarence Thomas' Former Clerk Warns Trump Did Something 'Truly Outrageous'

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Clarence Thomas' Former Clerk Warns Trump Did Something 'Truly Outrageous'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A law professor and former clerk to conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas called President Donald Trump's decision to publicly turn against the Federalist Society and one of its top figures, Leonard Leo, "truly outrageous." Trump critized the Federalist Society for "bad advice they gave me on numerous Judicial Nominations" after the U.S. Court of International Trade, which included a Trump-picked judge, ruled the emergency law invoked by Trump did not give him authority to impose sweeping tariffs on other countries. Trump also called Leo a "sleazebag." "Why would President Trump turn his back on one of his greatest, if not his greatest achievements from the first term, appointing three justices," John Yoo told a Wall Street Journal Opinion podcast released Monday. Newsweek reached out to Yoo for comment via email and filed a contact request form with the Federalist Society on Wednesday. Why It Matters Last week Trump sharply criticized the influential legal group the Federalist Society and Leo, a co-chair of its board and former executive vice president, blaming them for court rulings that blocked his sweeping tariff agenda. During his first term, Trump took advice from the group in selecting judges, but in a social media post on Thursday, the president took a sharp turn against the group saying he used to trust them "but then realized that they were under the thumb of a real 'sleazebag' named Leonard Leo, a bad person who, in his own way, probably hates America, and obviously has his own separate ambitions." Trump has repeatedly targeted judges and lawyers who oppose him or impede his agenda, including calling for the impeachment of U.S. District Judge James Boasberg after he temporarily blocked deportation flights to El Salvador in March. At the same time, Trump has had a lasting impact on the judiciary, helping to shape a conservative-leaning bench through his appointments. What To Know In Monday's episode of the Wall Street Journal Opinion podcast, Potomac Watch, Yoo said it was "truly outrageous to accuse Leonard Leo, one of the stalwarts or the conservative movement, of being something like a traitor and using judicial appointments to advance his own personal agenda." University of California Professor John Yoo poses for a portrait in downtown San Francisco, California on Fri. April 15, 2016. University of California Professor John Yoo poses for a portrait in downtown San Francisco, California on Fri. April 15, 2016. Michael Macor/San Francisco Chronicle via AP The University of California at Berkeley law professor and constitutional scholar who authored the 2020 book Defender in Chief: Donald Trump's Fight for Presidential Power, reiterated that not only did he find Trump's decision to call out Leo and the Federalist Society "outrageous," but noted that "on a larger political and legal level, I don't understand it." Trump's Truth Social post calling out Leo and the group, read, "I am so disappointed in The Federalist Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous Judicial Nominations," followed a ruling on Wednesday from the U.S. Court of International Trade striking down many of his administration's sweeping tariffs. The three judges on the panel, which ruled that the tariffs went beyond the president's power, included one who was appointed by Trump during his first term—Judge Timothy Reif. However on Thursday, a federal appeals court temporarily suspended the lower court's order, allowing the White House to continue collecting import levies for now. Leonard Leo, co-chariman of the Federalist Society board of directors, speaks at the Cambridge Union on March 11, 2025 in Cambridge, U.K. Leonard Leo, co-chariman of the Federalist Society board of directors, speaks at the Cambridge Union on March 11, 2025 in Cambridge, The Cambridge Union Yoo continued: "Why would President Trump turn his back on one of his greatest, if not his greatest achievements from the first term, appointing three justices. You named them, Paul, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, which reinforced Justices Alito and Thomas on the Supreme Court in building a really solid regionalist majority, not a conservative majority, not politically Republican majority, but a majority that believes in interpreting the Constitution based on its original meaning." The Supreme Court's conservative majority has played a pivotal role in recent decisions, most notably the 2022 ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark case that had protected abortion rights for nearly 50 years. Leo is a key financial backer of the New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA), which filed a legal challenge against Trump's tariffs. A longtime leader at the Federalist Society, Leo used his networks to help Trump nominate conservative Supreme Court Justices Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Coney Barrett. Yoo has been outspoken against Democratic politicians including former President Joe Biden and spoken favorably about Trump, having previously called for Republican district attorneys to prosecute Democrat officials who had, in his opinion, wronged Trump and his allies, as well as saying Biden's suggested Supreme Court reforms were a "political ploy" that revealed "how radical some of the ideas that Kamala Harris and Joe Biden now are pressing." What People Are Saying Mike Davis, founder of the Article III Project, told The Hill: "They [the Federalist Society] abandoned President Trump during the lawfare against him. And not only did they abandon him — they had several FedSoc leaders who participated in the lawfare and threw gas on the fire." Leonard Leo told The New York Post in late May: "I'm very grateful for President Trump transforming the Federal Courts, and it was a privilege being involved. There's more work to be done, for sure, but the Federal Judiciary is better than it's ever been in modern history, and that will be President Trump's most important legacy." Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy, responded to last Wednesday's ruling on X: "The judicial coup is out of control." Raúl Torrez, the attorney general of New Mexico—one of the states who sued over the tariffs—said in a statement to Newsweek after the ruling: "This ruling is a major victory for our communities, our businesses, and our economy. The Court's decision confirms what we have long argued: these tariffs were imposed unlawfully and will cause real harm to working families, small businesses, and local industries." What Happens Next The plaintiffs in the case that led the Court of International Trade to strike down tariffs have to file their papers with a federal appellate court by June 5. The government must reply by June 9. In the meantime, the U.S. is expecting several final offers from trade partners over individually negotiated deals.

Tesla protesters claim a victory as Elon Musk leaves Trump's side
Tesla protesters claim a victory as Elon Musk leaves Trump's side

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Tesla protesters claim a victory as Elon Musk leaves Trump's side

Advertisement 'That first one on Feb. 15 was me and like 50 people,' Donovan said. 'And then the next week it was a hundred more people and then a hundred more after that, and it's just grown.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Tesla Takedown has since expanded into an international movement, staging demonstrations at Tesla factories, showrooms and other locations in countries including Australia, Britain, France and Germany as well as across the United States. The campaign's U.S. growth has been fueled in large part by anger over Musk's leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency, which has slashed government spending and dismissed tens of thousands of federal workers while gaining access to sensitive personal data. Musk departed the administration after his involvement in politics hurt his companies, especially Tesla. 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'You see a lot of adults, grandparents, kids. I'm energized by it.' This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Here's how dependent each UC campus is on international students
Here's how dependent each UC campus is on international students

San Francisco Chronicle​

time6 days ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Here's how dependent each UC campus is on international students

With tens of thousands of students from other countries studying at University of California campuses, UC officials say they are 'very concerned' about President Donald Trump's targeting of international enrollment, which could put a dent in colleges' budgets, slow research and harm the state economy. On Thursday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the Trump administration will 'aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students.' Also this week, Trump paused new student visa interviews, and he dangled the idea of a 15% cap on international enrollment. About 41,000 international students study at UC's 10 campuses, about 13% of systemwide enrollment. Nearly a third of UC graduate students, 31%, are from another country, while 9% of undergraduates are from outside the U.S. China accounts for the greatest share of international students at UC by far — 43%. 'Our international students and scholars are vital members of our university community and contribute greatly to our research, teaching, patient care and public service mission,' the university said in a statement. Officials at major private universities in California expressed concern as well. At Stanford, where ratios of international students are similar to UC's, President Jonathan Levin said it was 'self-defeating to send away young people with so much potential to contribute to the country.' A spokesperson for Caltech, where international students include 14% of undergraduates and 47% of graduate students, credited 'foreign talent' with helping American innovators develop 'extraordinary new advances,' from AI, to smartphones, personal computing and sequencing the human genome. Trump's actions 'undermine the stability of our country's research, education and innovation enterprise, a system that has ensured U.S. leadership and global competitiveness in the advancement of science, the development of new technologies and the prosperity of our communities,' said Caltech spokesperson Shayna Chabner. The Trump administration's efforts to reduce the presence of international students is part of an 'America first' policy, Rubio said, adding that the restrictions will focus especially on students 'with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields.' He did not say how the administration would determine which students have connections with the Chinese government or what fields are considered critical. But the crackdown is already causing deep concern among international students and those hoping to study in the U.S. Roughly 1.1 million international students study at U.S. universities — 6.6% of college students, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's ' Study in the States ' webpage. International enrollment increased by a record 7% last year, according to the Open Doors report cited by the department. International students don't qualify for federal student aid, so the vast majority pay full tuition. That's a lucrative source of revenue for many universities, especially UC campuses, where taxpayers and the university help subsidize the tuition of state residents. Nonresidents pay three times the in-state rate. But the research university system says it also depends upon foreign students for a robust exchange of ideas — academic and cultural. 'The University of California is very concerned about the U.S. State Department's action to pause new interview appointments for applicants for student and exchange visas and the direct impact it will have on our international students, scholars and faculty,' UC officials said through a spokesperson. Sharply reducing the flow of international students is Trump's latest attempt to wrest control of American universities, which he and his allies see as centers of liberal bias. Last year's widespread campus protests against the war in Gaza helped to fuel a claim of systemic antisemitism on campuses. His administration is investigating numerous universities, including UC campuses, seeking evidence to bolster that idea. Trump has also unsuccessfully tried to revoke existing student visas. A Bay Area federal judge blocked that effort last week. Trump has aimed much of his ire at Harvard — including by trying to block new international students from enrolling there — after Harvard's President Alan Garber rebuffed his attempt to take over decision-making powers there last month. Harvard sued twice and won a temporary restraining order. On Thursday, a federal judge extended the order. Now Trump has turned the effort to campuses everywhere. At the White House on Wednesday, he said that American students 'can't get in' to universities 'because we have foreign students there' that take their slots, Bloomberg reported. Trump then suggested that international students should be capped at 15%. 'How did he come up with that number?' asked Shaun Harper, a professor at the University of Southern California's Rossier School of Education. As for international students crowding out U.S. students, 'if that were a problem, I certainly would know,' said Harper, a past president of the Association for the Study of Higher Education. 'It's only suddenly a big problem because Donald Trump has declared it so, as part of his larger war on Harvard University.' Citing college enrollment numbers at the U.S. Department of Education's data site, Harper noted that Harvard's enrollment of foreign students sits at 14% of undergraduates, while schools typically enroll a smaller ratio than that, including UC Berkeley's 12%. At Stanford, 16% of undergraduates are international students. John Aubrey Douglass, senior research fellow at UC Berkeley's Center for Studies in Higher Education, called the halt on international students 'shortsighted and vindictive.' 'We are witnessing an unraveling of a century of a partnership between the federal government and universities and colleges that helped build the world's premier mass higher education system built in part on attracting talent internationally,' he said. In 2017, UC imposed a cap on undergraduate non-state residents, including international students, as it faced a backlash by students and lawmakers who said the university was admitting increasing numbers of nonresidents — who pay full price — at the expense of many Californians. Douglass said this is how the process is supposed to work. 'Let the states decide,' he said. 'And allow independent private schools to make their own enrollment decisions.' On Wednesday, the nonprofit Presidents' Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration said that international students contributed nearly $44 billion to the U.S. economy last year, and supported over 378,000 jobs. The new crackdown on international students is part of a 'growing climate of fear, volatility, and uncertainty' in the country, the group said in a statement, as it urged the Trump administration to reverse its decision.

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