January14 , 2026

TO PRODUCE TOP QUALITY BIDS, TRY
UNI-TASKING INSTEAD OF MULTI-TASKING

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Have you ever had the
demoralising experience of
being engaged in a phone
conversation with someone who
suddenly starts shuffling papers, filing
or (worse still) reading and responding
to an unrelated email?
If you were sufficiently forward
as to protest and the other party
sufficiently ignorant as to persist with
his or her other activity, he or she
would no doubt have given you the “I
can multi-task” line. But I’ll wager it
was obvious to you that, at best, your
“multi-tasking” conversation partner
was hearing only sporadic sound bytes
of your end of the conversation.
It’s a neurological fact that the
brain can focus on only one matter at
a time. It might flit between subjects,
issues and conversations . . . but it can
concentrate properly on only thing in
any given moment.
In his recent best-seller, ‘The
Organized Mind’, neuroscientist
Daniel J. Levitin produces evidence
to underscore how minimising the
attention devoted to any one thing
(the natural consequence of trying
to spread one’s concentration
amongst several things) dramatically
decreases the quality of attention
both to that and to everything else
on that individual’s plate. Conversely,
conceptual and critical thinking, along
with insight and ingenuity, Levitin
stresses, happen only when
we screen out distractions
and properly focus.
Already, it’s pretty
obvious how the
nonsense practice
of “multi-tasking”
negatively impacts
not only the quality of
critical submissions,
but every process
that feeds into their

Have you ever had the
demoralising experience of
being engaged in a phone
conversation with someone who
suddenly starts shuffling papers, filing
or (worse still) reading and responding
to an unrelated email?
If you were sufficiently forward
as to protest and the other party
sufficiently ignorant as to persist with
his or her other activity, he or she
would no doubt have given you the “I
can multi-task” line. But I’ll wager it
was obvious to you that, at best, your
“multi-tasking” conversation partner
was hearing only sporadic sound bytes
of your end of the conversation.
It’s a neurological fact that the
brain can focus on only one matter at
a time. It might flit between subjects,
issues and conversations . . . but it can
concentrate properly on only thing in
any given moment.
In his recent best-seller, ‘The
Organized Mind’, neuroscientist
Daniel J. Levitin produces evidence
to underscore how minimising the
attention devoted to any one thing
(the natural consequence of trying
to spread one’s concentration
amongst several things) dramatically
decreases the quality of attention
both to that and to everything else
on that individual’s plate. Conversely,
conceptual and critical thinking, along
with insight and ingenuity, Levitin
stresses, happen only when
we screen out distractions
and properly focus.
Already, it’s pretty
obvious how the
nonsense practice
of “multi-tasking”
negatively impacts
not only the quality of
critical submissions,
but every process
that feeds into their

switching from one task to another
(i.e. than those who stay focused on
one activity until it is satisfactorily
completed).
Potentially, there’s also evidence
that multi-tasking lowers one’s
IQ. A University of London study
found participants who multi-tasked
during cognitive tasks experienced
compromised IQ score declines similar
to what might be expected had those
individuals smoked marijuana or
stayed up all night.
Coming back to bidding. When
you’re otherwise throwing everything
at a must-win, high-stakes bid, why
go at it with diffused mental energy?
To do so argues with every claim you
make – to yourself, to your bid team
colleagues, and to the potential client –
as to the importance of victory. â– 
production. As a bid strategist and
coach, here are just two of the key
processes that I regularly witness
being adversely affected:

  • Participants in strategy workshops
    insisting on reading and responding to
    emails and text messages . . . switching
    off to the thread of fast-moving, group
    conversations and thus forgo-ing their
    understanding of, and input into, the
    evolving bid strategy.
  • Section authors and other
    writers interrupting their flow of
    writing inspiration to answer emails
    and their own incoming phone calls.
    (If professional authors feel the need
    to shut themselves away in order to
    place their full and uninterrupted focus
    on the piece they’re working on, why
    would someone who doesn’t write for
    a living feel they can produce a quality
    written output while “multi-tasking”?)
    Aligning with my cynicism over the
    concept of “multi-tasking” proficiency,
    Stanford University researchers have
    found that “multi-taskers” (a) have
    difficulty organising their thoughts
    and filtering out irrelevant information,
    and (b) are actually slower at
    IT’S A
    NEUROLOGICAL
    FACT THAT THE
    BRAIN CAN FOCUS
    ON ONLY ONE
    MATTER AT A TIME
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