You Don’t Need More Willpower. You Need a Better Environment.
This is part seven of our Productivity Playbook series. Watch the full series here and read part one here.
Context switching can cost you up to 40% of your productive time. Not because the tasks are hard, but because the switching itself is so expensive. That’s according to research from the American Psychological Association, and it explains something a lot of tour business owners know in their gut but can’t quite articulate: why they can work all day, feel completely exhausted, and look back having barely finished anything meaningful.
Think of it like closing and reopening applications on an older, slower computer. Each switch takes time. It reloads, it uses resources, it slows things down. And if you do it enough times throughout the day, the whole system gets bogged down.
That’s what’s happening in your brain when you jump from marketing to email to a guest question to a staffing issue and back again. The work itself might not be all that difficult, but the constant switching between different types of work is where your time and energy are actually going.
The Real Culprit Isn’t Discipline
When we talk about this inside our coaching program, the first reaction is almost always the same: “I just need to focus harder.” More willpower. More self-control. Stop looking at the phone. We hear it all the time.
But here’s the thing. A lot of studies have shown that willpower is actually a limited resource. Every decision you make throughout the day, every temptation you resist, every notification you ignore, it all draws from the same mental tank. And by mid-afternoon or early evening, that tank is running low. That’s when you reach for the phone without thinking. That’s when you check email “for just a second” and come up for air an hour later, having spent the time responding and putting out fires.
You’re not weak. You’re depleted. And the fix isn’t to build a bigger willpower muscle. It’s not about gritting your teeth and trying harder. The fix is to stop requiring so much willpower in the first place.
A lot of us don’t think about willpower as a finite resource that we’re using up from the moment we wake up. But that’s exactly what it is. And if we burn through it on small decisions and constant distraction resistance all morning, we’ve got nothing left for the work that actually matters.
The problem isn’t how hard you’re working. We know a lot of you are hard workers because we’re coaching so many of you. The problem is how fragmented the work is.
Design Your Environment, Don’t Fight It
James Clear, the author of Atomic Habits and somebody who’s studied productivity extensively, makes this point clearly: “You don’t rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” If your system is constantly switching back and forth, you’ll always feel scattered no matter how hard you try.
Clear’s key insight is that winners and losers often have the same goals. The difference is their environment. People with great habits don’t have superhuman discipline. They’ve arranged their surroundings so that the right behavior is easy and the wrong behavior is hard.
If your phone is on your desk face up and it vibrates, you’re going to check it. If your email is open in a browser tab and new messages are coming in, you’re going to glance at it. If Slack is set to ping your phone, you’re going to respond. Not because you lack discipline, but because you’re human, and humans respond to their environment.
So the fix isn’t to resist temptation all day and think of it like some muscle you’re going to work out until your willpower is superhuman. The fix is to remove the temptation in the first place. Design the environment so that focus becomes the default, not something you have to fight for. This is a big unlock as you think about being more productive as a tour business owner.
One Space, One Purpose
One of Clear’s recommendations is to have a specific place where you do your most important and deep work, and only that work. It could be a particular chair in your home or office, a specific corner of a coffee shop, or a home office with the door closed. The location doesn’t really matter so much as the consistency.
When you sit in that spot repeatedly, your brain learns: this is where we go to focus. Over time, just being in that space puts you into work mode. There’s no warm-up period. There’s no negotiation with yourself about whether to check your phone or knock out a few emails first. The environment does a lot of the heavy lifting for you.
We know a tour operator who does all of her important creative and strategic work at one specific cafe. She never checks her email there. She never does any admin there. You can’t reach her on her phone there. That cafe is just for creative and important work only. When she sits down, her brain already knows what’s happening. No negotiation required.
The key distinction is that this is different from how most of us use our workspaces. Yes, you can go and work in different environments. But when you choose this one specific spot, it’s different: no email, no admin, no busy work. Ideally, no going there to watch YouTube or scroll Instagram either. This is your dedicated focus space, and your brain starts treating it that way.
Get the Phone Out of the Room
Not on silent. Not face down. Not somewhere in your field of view. Physically out of reach.
A study from the University of Texas found that just having your phone visible, even if it’s completely off, reduces your cognitive capacity. Your brain is spending energy not checking it. And just look at the way so many of us use our phones: the dependency, the reliance, the way we reach for them almost unconsciously.
Try putting your phone in another room during those focus blocks. Put it in a drawer, in a bag. Make it inconvenient to check, inconvenient to reach for. That’s normal. After a few days, you won’t even think about it. This is going to be a key part of your environmental design.
Clean Up Your Digital Workspace
So many of us are working from laptops or computers, and we’re often in a web browser with dozens of tabs open. If you’re working on your tour pricing or on a business development project, you don’t need your inbox open. You don’t need Slack open. You don’t need an OTA dashboard or your booking software dashboard sitting there in the background.
Close everything except what you’re working on right now. One task, one screen. Remove all of those visual triggers that pull your attention. Use the focus mode on your computer too, not just on your phone. Most operating systems have this feature built in, and it makes a real difference.
These changes are small, but they are not minor. They’re the difference between fighting your environment all day and having your environment work for you.
How Themed Days Support Your Environment
If you’ve been following this productivity series, you might notice how these strategies are complementary. Having themed work days, like a Marketing Monday for example, doesn’t just reduce context switching. It also means you’re going to be using the same tools all day. Your marketing tools are open, maybe your brand guidelines are pulled up, maybe you’re viewing marketing copy and doing some creative work. That focus benefits from not having to switch between totally different software, different documents, and different mental modes.
Your environment stays clean and organized around one type of work, and that consistency helps you get into flow and stay there for longer stretches.
The Grand Gesture for Big Projects
Cal Newport introduces this idea in his book Deep Work, and it’s worth considering for those projects that could truly change your business. When you have something that’s really significant, something that really matters and requires serious focus, sometimes you need to do something dramatic to match the importance of the work.
Book a hotel room for the day. Go to a library in another town. Rent a cabin for a weekend. Take your laptop somewhere you’ve never worked before. The grand gesture works because it signals to your brain that this is different. This matters. We’re not going through the motions today. We’re not doing the normal work.
The investment of money, time, and effort also creates psychological pressure to make it count. You don’t book a hotel room and then go there and scroll Instagram for three or four hours. Or at least, hopefully you wouldn’t.
You don’t need to do the grand gesture that often. But for the projects that can have a massive impact and could be life-changing for you, your family, or your business, sometimes the normal environment isn’t enough. Going somewhere that matches the significance of the work can be worth the investment.
Putting It Into Practice
Pick a dedicated focus spot, a chair, a room, a specific cafe, and use it only for your most important, focused work. No email there, no admin, no busy work.
During your next focus block, put your phone in another room. Not on silent, not somewhere in your field of view, but physically out of reach. Notice how different it feels.
Try day theming for a particular week if you aren’t already. And for your next big project, try making one of Cal Newport’s grand gestures. Get that hotel room or drive 30 to 40 minutes just to put yourself in a new environment and break the old rhythms.
So many of us stick to the same workplaces, or we just fall into habits that are eroding how productive we can be. The common thread here is this: stop relying on willpower and start designing your environment for focus. It’s a much more reliable system, and it’s where the real productivity gains live.
Watch the full video for the complete breakdown, and if you want personalized guidance on how to structure your work environment and your week, book a free strategy call with our coaching team. We’d love to help you do your best work consistently, week after week.
Want help creating more engagement (and stellar reviews) for your tours? Book a free 45-minute strategy call with us today!

