HomeNewsOpinionWhy ‘attention’ is the most underrated skill of our time

Why ‘attention’ is the most underrated skill of our time

Globally, organisations are facing an unspoken crisis where ‘distraction’ has become institutionalised and ‘attention’ is no longer protected as a strategic resource. These enterprises risk becoming like a treadmill where enormous effort is made to move forward without any real movement

June 19, 2025 / 11:50 IST
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attention
attention

As co-authors and leading professionals with over fifty combined years of experience in dealing with Indian and global organisations over the past three decades, we understand attention not just as an abstract concept, but as a billable and instantly perishable resource.

Where you place your attention determines who you become. We live in an “attention economy” where every single business is competing to get the attention of its customers. And every single influencer wants every other human to listen to them.

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In a world dominated by distractions, attention is the greatest skill organisations can cultivate to enable meaningful and productive work. There are so many distractors that we encounter on a daily basis that wire our brains to fragmented focus. Out of 16 waking hours in a day, an average human being spends at least 12–14 hours staying distracted, which means there is significant attention currently being placed at being distracted for most part of the day.

While individuals continue to suffer usual distractors such as phone, WhatsApp, social media and gossip at the workplace, the bigger distraction epidemic is at organisation level. In any typical office environment, a good portion of the day is consumed by activities masquerading as productivity. Internal meetings drag on with ‘little’ to ‘no’ output. Training programmes are designed and executed without alignment to actual capability gaps. Endless email loops offer the illusion of communication from the top management but deliver more confusion than clarity to the organisation. Senior executives, too often, find themselves reacting to the noise of the day, rather than steering the organisation toward its long-term north star. This slow decay of time and attention is among the most under-acknowledged threats to institutional effectiveness in India Inc.