Y12W07VC Deep work as competitive advantage

Pick the last five people whose professional work you've genuinely admired. Now ask what their working lives probably looked like. Almost certainly, they spent serious time alone, uninterrupted, on difficult material. The capacity to concentrate like this is becoming rarer — and, according to Cal Newport, more valuable. This week's article examines what deep work actually is, and why it's increasingly the foundation of high-quality output.

Core Vocabulary

sustained

/səˈsteɪnd/|sus·tained

adj

Continued steadily over a prolonged period without interruption.

Word Breakdown: sus- (under, Latin) + tain- (hold)

Word family: sustain (v.), sustaining (v.), sustainability (n.)

Synonyms: continuous, prolonged, unbroken

Collocations: sustained focus, sustained concentration, sustained period

Example: They produced it during the kind of sustained concentration that, in modern professional life, is becoming genuinely rare.

In the articleThey produced it during the kind of sustained concentration that, in modern professional life, is becoming genuinely rare.

compounding

/kəmˈpaʊndɪŋ/|com·pound·ing

adj

Accumulating at an accelerating rate; increasing in effect or magnitude over time.

Word Breakdown: com- (together, Latin) + pound- (place/combine)

Word family: compound (v./n.), compounding (v./adj.), compounded (adj.)

Synonyms: accumulating, intensifying, multiplying

Collocations: compounding effect, compounding problem, compounding advantage

Example: The cost isn't just time; it's what Mark calls attention residue, with compounding effects on focus.

In the articlePart of your mind stays on the previous task after you've moved on to the next one, degrading performance on the new task until the residue clears.

residue

/ˈrezɪdjuː/|res·i·due

n

What is left behind after something has passed or been removed; a remaining trace.

Word Breakdown: res- (remain, Latin) + id- (related to remain) + -ue (noun form)

Word family: residue (n.), residual (adj.), residually (adv.)

Synonyms: remainder, trace, leftover

Collocations: attention residue, mental residue, residue clears

Example: In her research, participants who switched between tasks under time pressure showed meaningfully worse performance on subsequent tasks compared to participants who had been able to complete the previous task first, leaving residue.

In the articlePart of your mind stays on the previous task after you've moved on to the next one, degrading performance on the new task until the residue clears.

fragment

/ˈfræɡmənt/|frag·ment

vb | [fragments, fragmented, fragmenting]

To break into pieces or separate into disconnected parts.

Word Breakdown: frag- (to break, Latin) + -ment (the result)

Word family: fragment (v./n.), fragmenting (v.), fragmented (adj.), fragmentation (n.)

Synonyms: break apart, splinter, divide

Collocations: fragment your day, fragmented attention, fragment the work

Example: The modern workday systematically fragments your time into small, interrupted pieces.

In the articleThe typical modern workday, structured around frequent interruptions and multiple concurrent channels of communication, is almost precisely optimised to prevent the kind of sustained concentration that good cognitive work requires.

cognitively

/ˈkɒɡnɪtɪvli/|cog·ni·tive·ly

adv

In terms of thinking, mental processes, or the operations of the mind.

Word Breakdown: cog- (know, Latin) + -nit- (knowing) + -ive (relating to)

Word family: cognition (n.), cognitive (adj.), cognitively (adv.)

Synonyms: mentally, intellectually, in thought

Collocations: cognitively demanding, cognitively taxing, cognitively challenging

Example: The ability to focus without distraction on cognitively demanding tasks is becoming both rarer and more valuable.

In the articleNewport's central claim: the ability to focus without distraction on cognitively demanding tasks is becoming both rarer (because the modern information environment erodes it) and more valuable (because genuinely good work increasingly requires it).

pertinent

/ˈpɜːtɪnənt/|per·ti·nent

adj

Relevant and appropriate to a particular situation or matter.

Word Breakdown: per- (through, Latin) + tin- (hold/relate) + -ent (characterized by)

Word family: pertinent (adj.), pertinence (n.), impertinent (adj.)

Synonyms: relevant, applicable, appropriate

Collocations: pertinent question, pertinent research, pertinent information

Example: The supporting research, pertinent to Newport's argument, draws on several empirical traditions.

In the articleNewport's argument draws on several empirical traditions, and understanding what they actually show is worth the space.

romanticise

/rəʊˈmæntɪsaɪz/|ro·man·ti·cise

vb | [romanticises, romanticised, romanticising]

To make something appear more appealing or idealized than reality supports; to invest with romantic qualities.

Word Breakdown: romant- (romance) + -icise (to make)

Word family: romanticise (v.), romanticised (adj.), romantic (adj.)

Synonyms: idealise, glorify, embellish

Collocations: romanticise the process, romanticise deep work, romanticise isolation

Example: A related concern is that people may romanticise deep work routines, turning the practice into performance.

In the articleWhen the signalling of focus becomes more important than the focus itself, the original point has been lost.

diminish

/dɪˈmɪnɪʃ/|di·min·ish

vb | [diminishes, diminished, diminishing]

To reduce in amount, value, or importance.

Word Breakdown: di- (down, Latin) + min- (small) + -ish (to make)

Word family: diminish (v.), diminished (adj.), diminishing (v./adj.)

Synonyms: reduce, lessen, decrease

Collocations: diminish through practice, diminish the urge, diminish with time

Example: The urge doesn't disappear through willpower; it diminishes through practice, as the mind adjusts to longer stretches of single-channel attention.

In the articleThe urge doesn't disappear through willpower; it diminishes through practice, as the mind adjusts to longer stretches of single-channel attention.

Technical Terms

deep work

/diːp wɜːk/|deep.work

noun phrase

Newport's term for focused, uninterrupted work on cognitively demanding tasks that requires sustained concentration.

Synonyms: focused labor, cognitively demanding work, intense concentration

Collocations: deep work blocks, deep work practice, deep work capacity

Example: A researcher achieves deep work when she spends four uninterrupted hours analyzing data without checking email.

In the articleThe ability to focus without distraction on cognitively demanding tasks is becoming both rarer and more valuable.

shallow work

/ˈʃæloʊ wɜːk/|shal·low.work

noun phrase

Routine, easily-interrupted work requiring less cognitive effort, typically responsive in nature.

Synonyms: administrative tasks, responsive work, low-cognitive-demand labor

Collocations: shallow task work, shallow work blocks, mix shallow work

Example: Answering routine emails and attending status meetings are examples of shallow work because they require minimal sustained mental effort.

In the articleThe student who does two hours of concentrated study followed by a real conversation with a friend, followed by some physical movement, followed by a bit of shallow task work, is probably doing better than either the student who does eight hours of attempted deep work (mostly poorly) or the student who never attempts any.

attention residue

/əˈtenʃən ˈrezɪdjuː/|at·ten·tion.res·i·due

noun phrase

Leroy's finding that prior-task attention persists after task-switching, impairing performance on the new task until it clears.

Synonyms: cognitive carryover, task-switching penalty, mental lag

Collocations: attention residue clears, attention residue effects, attention residue research

Example: When you switch from writing an email to analyzing a spreadsheet, attention residue causes your concentration to dip for the first few minutes.

In the articlePart of your mind stays on the previous task after you've moved on to the next one, degrading performance on the new task until the residue clears.

context switching

/ˈkɒntekst ˈswɪtʃɪŋ/|con·text.switch·ing

noun phrase

The cognitive cost incurred when changing between different types or contexts of work.

Synonyms: task-switching cost, attention shift, mental transition penalty

Collocations: context switching cost, context switching penalty, frequent context switching

Example: Each context switch from deep work to checking notifications carries a substantial cost to your focus and productivity.

In the articleMark's research, conducted largely by observing knowledge workers across a day, consistently finds that people switch tasks far more often than they realise — often every few minutes — and that each switch carries a cost.

flow state

/floʊ steɪt/|flow.state

noun phrase

Csikszentmihalyi's concept of absorbed, focused engagement in a task, typically requiring the uninterrupted conditions that deep work provides.

Synonyms: absorption, optimal engagement, complete immersion

Collocations: flow state conditions, reach flow state, in flow state

Example: A programmer enters flow state when working on a complex problem without interruption, losing all sense of time and performing at peak ability.

In the articleA mind that reaches for a phone every time boredom arrives loses the ability to sustain attention when the work demands it.

Figurative Phrases

the cost of distraction

The figurative price paid for divided attention or interruptions; what is lost in quality or time through distraction.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor; distraction has a "cost" as if it is currency spent—time and cognitive energy are the price.

Synonyms: the price of interruption, the toll of divided attention, what distraction takes from you

Example: She didn't notice the cost of distraction until she compared a morning spent phone-free to one spent checking notifications every few minutes.

In the articleMark's research has documented what actually happens when people try to work in typical modern office conditions.

chop up your day

To fragment your time into small pieces; to divide the working day into disconnected segments.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor; time is like a loaf chopped into pieces—fragmentation reduces usefulness.

Synonyms: fragment your day, break your day into pieces, slice up your schedule

Example: Constant interruptions from group chats had chopped up his day into segments too short for any serious thinking.

In the articleThe typical modern workday, structured around frequent interruptions and multiple concurrent channels of communication, is almost precisely optimised to prevent the kind of sustained concentration that good cognitive work requires.

carve out time

To create or reserve dedicated space in a schedule for a specific purpose.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from sculpting; to carve out time is to shape and create a dedicated space in a schedule.

Synonyms: set aside time, block out time, protect time

Example: She carves out two hours each morning before anyone else in the house is awake for focused writing.

In the articleSchedule blocks of time — ideally ninety minutes to several hours — in which you work on a single cognitively demanding task, with no access to email, messaging, social media, or other interruption-prone channels.

get in the zone

To reach a state of complete focus and engagement; to enter a state of optimal concentration.

Etymology/Type: Idiom; the zone is a psychological state where deep work becomes possible and distractions fade.

Synonyms: reach a state of flow, achieve deep focus, hit your stride

Example: It takes him about fifteen minutes to get in the zone — so he sets his phone to silent before sitting down.

In the articleThe capacity to concentrate like this is becoming rarer and, according to Cal Newport, more valuable.

head down

Focused work with minimal distractions; the figurative posture of concentrated effort.

Etymology/Type: Idiom; the posture of a person focused on work, figurative for concentrated effort with minimal external attention.

Synonyms: focus in, knuckle down, get to work

Example: With the deadline approaching, she kept her head down for three solid hours and finished the draft.

In the articleThey didn't produce the admired work in fifteen-minute windows between meetings.

tune out the noise

To ignore distractions and mental clutter; to filter out irrelevant information or interruptions.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from radio; to tune out means to filter and ignore irrelevant information or distractions.

Synonyms: block out distractions, filter out the clutter, shut out interruptions

Example: Learning to tune out the noise of a busy household was the skill that changed his study results the most.

In the articleIn a Year 12 where the difference between students is often not raw ability but the depth at which each of them is capable of actually engaging with material, the practice of sustained focus is among the most leverage-heavy investments you can make.

Confusing Words

sustained vs. sustaining

These are different grammatical forms of the same root word—one describes a state that has been achieved, the other describes an ongoing action.

  • Sustained means continued steadily over time in an unbroken state — the team achieved sustained competitive advantage through five years of relentless improvement.
  • Sustaining means maintaining or keeping something going through active effort — the daily habits that are sustaining his long-term success require discipline.

Ask: Is this describing a state that has been reached? Use sustained. Is this describing the action of keeping something going? Use sustaining.

compounding vs. compounded

These different forms mark a crucial time distinction—one describes the ongoing accumulation process, the other describes the completed result.

  • Compounding describes an effect that is still accumulating and intensifying — the compounding impact of missed deadlines began to erode team morale.
  • Compounded describes the outcome after effects have already accumulated and combined — the loss was compounded by the unexpected market shift.

Ask: Is the effect still building and intensifying right now? Use compounding. Has the effect already accumulated and combined? Use compounded.

romanticise vs. idealise

These near-synonyms differ in the kind of emotional framing used—one emphasizes noble emotional idealization, the other emphasizes perfection and absence of flaws.

  • Romanticise means to make something appealing through emotional or poetic framing that emphasizes beauty and nobility — writers often romanticise the hardship of artists as a necessary path to genius.
  • Idealise means to imagine something as perfect or without flaws, stripping away messy reality — we tend to idealise our childhood memories, forgetting the boredom and conflict.

Ask: Is the distortion about making something seem noble and emotionally beautiful? Use romanticise. Is the distortion about imagining something as flawless and perfect? Use idealise.