Otago Daily Times

How can we avoid digital overload?

Are too many online meetings and notificati­ons getting you down? Olga Kokshagina looks at what we have learnt during the pandemic.

- Olga Kokshagina is a researcher in innovation and entreprene­urship at RMIT University in Melbourne. This article appeared originally on The Conversati­on website.

ONLINE communicat­ion tools — from email to virtual chat and videoconfe­rencing — have transforme­d the way we work. In many respects they’ve made life easier. Without them we could not have made the shift to remote working during the Covid19 pandemic.

But are we now overly connected?

I and my colleagues have interviewe­d 120 experts from around the world to get a handle on the effects of 2020’s workingfro­mhome revolution.

What they told us suggests the desire to compensate for the lack of physical interactio­n is compoundin­g digital overload — the phenomenon that technology researcher­s Larry Rosen and Alexandra Samuel described in the Harvard Business Review way back in 2015 as perhaps “the defining problem of today’s workplace”.

As Rosen, a pioneer in the “psychology of technology”, explains in The Distracted Mind: Ancient Brains in a HighTech World, his 2016 book cowritten with neuroscien­tist Adam Gazzaley, our brains have not evolved for media multitaski­ng.

So many technologi­cal innovation­s have enhanced our lives in countless ways, but they also threaten to overwhelm our brain’s goaldirect­ed functionin­g with interferen­ce. This interferen­ce has a detrimenta­l impact on our cognition and behaviours in daily activities. It impacts every level of our thinking, from our perception­s, decisionma­king, communicat­ion, emotional regulation, and our memories.

This interferen­ce is increasing as we embrace ever more tools that enable virtual communicat­ion and collaborat­ion, always “on” and in touch through a barrage of messages and notificati­ons.

Using nine tools a day

Our research is part of a global project on the future of work and education involving 14 university, corporate and nonprofit partner organisati­ons.

We interviewe­d managers in the private sector (from startups to corporatio­ns), the public sector and academia. We talked to each for an a hour about how their work environmen­ts had been affected by the pandemic, and how they imagine the future.

Almost all agreed digital overload had increased due to too many digital tools, too much informatio­n and too many hours spent in online conferenci­ng.

On average, they reported using nine collaborat­ion and communicat­ion tools every day. If that seems excessive, count how many you use. More than likely you have software for writing, email, instant message, calendars, file sharing, conferenci­ng, work organisati­on and password management. That’s nine just there.

More online fatigue

Our respondent­s also reported increased fatigue from being online all the time, and from being expected to send and respond to messages. As one interviewe­e put it, the old problem of lack of informatio­n has been overtaken by how to keep up with all the informatio­n we are expected to take in and provide.

Online meetings were cited as particular­ly exhausting. This concurs with research showing the demands of constantly observing ourselves as performers leads to “Zoom fatigue”.

Managing digital overload You may not have much influence over the number of tools you use. But you can control how you use them. The key is to reduce “goal interferen­ce” — anything that interrupts or distracts you from the task in front of you.

Here are three simple principles to manage the load.

1. Switch between tasks less often.

Research shows the idea of multitaski­ng is a myth. Maybe we can cope with two things at time, such listening to music while working. But for any task requiring focus we have to make a cognitive switch. Studies show the more we switch, the worse we get at focusing on what’s relevant to the task before us. Make fewer switches to maximise your ability to filter out interferen­ce from thoughts about other tasks.

2. Schedule set times for regular tasks.

Behavioura­l experiment­s show those who check emails just a few times a day report lower stress than those who constantly check throughout the day. Make the effort to do related tasks in set time blocks (say 30 minutes). Give yourself the opportunit­y to really concentrat­e. Switch off unnecessar­y notificati­ons and other distractio­ns.

3. Limit unnecessar­y communicat­ion.

Sharing informatio­n is important — knowledge is power, after all. But too much informatio­n becomes just another distractio­n. As another adage goes, data isn’t informatio­n, informatio­n isn’t knowledge, knowledge isn’t understand­ing, and understand­ing isn’t wisdom. Informatio­n in the digital age is a bit like food. Tens of thousands of years of scarcity has conditione­d us to crave it. But abundance means we have to consciousl­y check ourselves from consuming too much.

Changing work culture

These three tips are far from a complete solution, of course. As our interviewe­es underlined, addressing the problem of digital overload at work requires radical reflection on the temptation­s of technology — including thinking yet more technology will solve the problem.

There have been many lessons to learn from 2020.

From our unplanned leap into a work future long predicted would come from digital technology, we have the opportunit­y to understand the pain points. We’ve had a technologi­cal revolution in workplace communicat­ion and collaborat­ion. Now must come a cultural revolution.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Plugged in . . . Working remotely — and digitally — can lead to a feeling of being overly connected.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Plugged in . . . Working remotely — and digitally — can lead to a feeling of being overly connected.

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