Bengaluru CA thought multitasking made her productive. One simple change boosted her output

Bengaluru CA Meenal Goel discovered that her perceived multitasking superpower was a productivity trap, leading to longer workdays and decreased quality. By shifting to finishing one task at a time, her output significantly improved without extend...

Meenal Goel shared her experience on social media, reflecting on how handling everything at once seemed impressive but came at a hidden cost. (Istock- Representative image)
In the chaos of modern work, we often wear multitasking like a badge of honour—answering emails while hopping on calls, juggling meetings, and scrolling messages. But for Bengaluru CA Meenal Goel, this “superpower” quietly became a productivity trap. What felt like efficiency was slowly eroding her focus, dragging down the quality of every task she touched, and making her workdays longer without real results.

Meenal Goel shared her experience on social media, reflecting on how handling everything at once seemed impressive but came at a hidden cost. Tasks began taking longer, errors crept in, and moments of deep concentration disappeared entirely. Research supports her experience: multitasking can slash productivity by nearly 40 per cent, as the brain constantly resets instead of entering a focused flow.

The breakthrough came when Meenal stopped juggling and embraced finishing one task at a time. Suddenly, her output improved noticeably, and she didn’t need to extend her hours. What once looked like unstoppable multitasking was replaced by the quiet power of focused work—proving that real progress isn’t always flashy, but it moves the needle in ways that frantic busyness never can.



Internet reacts

Netizens weighed in with reflections on the productivity dilemma, highlighting how easy it is to confuse busyness with real effectiveness. Many pointed out that depth and focus create tangible value, while constant distraction simply generates activity. They emphasised that multitasking often feels like momentum, but in reality, it splits attention, reduces quality, and gives the illusion of progress. The real transformation happens when tasks are approached one at a time—output improves, and the brain gets a chance to reset between activities, boosting both efficiency and clarity.
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