


People that are familiar with productivity techniques for sure know this. I have no clue how familiar this technique is in general. It's really hard to pull off 10+ pomodoros on boring work, It all depends on you, how much you have to do, and how fun the work is. It's a way to organize your work, convenient for things you postpone or when you start to procrastinateįor the number of pomodoros per day: 12+ is a really good day. Every four Pomodori, you take a longer break of fifteen minutes. You set your Pomodoro timer (which counts down from twenty-five minutes to zero minutes like an egg counter), and when time is up, an alarm sounds.Īfter one Pomodoro, you usually take a short break of five minutes, and then you start the next Pomodoro of twenty-five minutes. So four hours of work equals around eight Pomodori.

That's the period a human brain can easily keep focus. With this technique, you divide those four hours into Pomodori. Let's say you need to service a watch, and you estimate that will take around four hours. especially annoying onesĪt its core, the Pomodoro Technique is simple. But new complications or a new complication variation? That's been a while.įor those who are heroes in procrastination, read on!įor years I've been a fan of the " Pomodoro technique". Looking around in the world of Horlogerie, I see a lot of technical innovation and craftsmanship like the Horage K2 movement and the Louis Vuitton Tambour Carpe Diem.
