31 Oct2016
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It’s a real biological process, with a large and growing body of research dedicated to figuring it out what makes it work.
Fortune spoke to Steven Kotler author of a new book called The Rise of Superman: Decoding the Science of Ultimate Human Performance in which he takes on the latest research on flow through the lens of action and adventure athletics. See edits below from the conversation.
To see the full article from Fortune Magazine click here
Flow is an optimal state of consciousness where we feel our best and perform our best. Here’s what you need to know: Flow is a spectrum of experience, like any emotion. There are 10 conditions that describe flow psychology, and they include concentration, the loss of self, and the dilation of time — or when everything slows down or speeds up. You can be in “micro-flow,” where there’s only a couple of those things, or you can be in “macro-flow.”
When we talk about people at work getting into flow, they’re usually getting into micro-flow. If you’ve ever lost an afternoon to a great conversation, or gotten so sucked into a work project when everything else goes away, that’s flow. The experience goes from there up to these sort of quasi-mystical experiences.
Yes. Flow research started probably in the 1800s. What has happened in the last couple years is that we’ve gotten very good at measuring the neurobiology. That’s partially because George Bush declared the ’90s the “Decade of the Brain,” and money flooded into neuroscience.
So for example, when it feels like your sense of time slows down or speeds up, and your sense of self vanishes — those sound like new-agey sensations. But we know now that what actually goes on in the brain is something called transient hypofrontality. Transient means temporary, hypo is the opposite of hyper — it means to slow down or deactivate. And frontality is your prefrontal cortex; it’s the part of your brain that houses all your higher executive function.
So the old idea about optimal performance is, “Oh, we only use 5% of our brain, and flow must be all of our brain functioning at a maximal level.” Turns out that’s totally backwards. In flow, huge portions of your prefrontal cortex are turning off. Parts of it start to wink out so you can no longer separate past from present from future. Why does your sense of self vanish? The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex that houses your inner critic — that voice of doubt and disparagement that’s always there — it shuts off in flow.
And this concept of becoming one with everything? You hear surfers talk about, “Oh I was one with the wave,” and it sounds like absolute nonsense. No, it turns out there’s a part of your brain called the right parietal lobe that helps you figure out where you are in space. It helps us separate self from other. In deep flow states, energy goes elsewhere and the right parietal lobe shuts down. So, from a neurological perspective, at that point the brain actually does believe it’s one with everything.
A study conducted by McKinsey found that the average person spends about 5% of working hours in flow. But if you could increase that to 20%, they estimate that overall workplace productivity would double. That’s incredible. That’s a crazy statistic.
There are 15 flow triggers that are covered in The Rise of Superman. For example, you want a very specific challenge-to-skills ratio. The challenge needs to be 4% greater than the skills you bring to the table. We took that number and ran with it, and tried to test it in various scenarios, and we have found it’s very effective.
A rich environment is another trigger. A rich environment is a fancy way of saying lots of novelty, lots of complexity, and lots of unpredictability. Google is great at this. They talk about 10x improvement and not 10% improvement. When you’re asking for 10x improvement, you’re throwing out all the existing assumptions, and you have to start radically new. You’re massively increasing the amount of novelty, complexity, and unpredictability in your employees’ work life.
Risk is also a flow trigger, which is obvious for athletes. But it’s not just physical risk. What you’re really trying to do is get the brain to release dopamine, which happens when we take physical risk — as well as an emotional, social, intellectual, or creative risk. Silicon Valley has an advantage here because it gives people space to fail and take those risks.
There’s no easy answer, and we always say this is not self-help. I will say that the people who are really good at this, they don’t just go for flow at work, they want flow in their off-time, too. You’re training the brain, and the more flow you get, the more flow you get.
Sure. And creative projects are great — painting, writing, all that stuff. Creative side projects are really important because they’re very common flow triggers. Playing sports helps, and not just action sports. But it’s important to remember these neurochemicals are potent and addictive, and this can be dangerous stuff. It’s not a quick fix. And it’s not guaranteed.
You can build your environment around these 15 flow triggers, but flow is still a happy accident when it happens. All we can do is make you more accident-prone.