In our Monday Ledger, we explored the “Open Tab Fallacy.” This is the psychological weight of unfinished tasks that reside in our digital and mental peripheries. While a messy browser is a personal productivity drain, the enterprise equivalent is a silent profit killer.
The real problem is that leaders often view productivity as a volume game, which translates into more tools, more data, and more meetings. However, the data indicates that focus is actually the scarcest unit of enterprise value. Every “open tab” in your organisation, from uncoordinated AI tools to manual “glue” work, carries a measurable price tag. This is the unit economics of focus.
“Interruptions as short as five seconds can triple error rates on complex tasks,” reports the American Psychological Association. This is about lost time and the degradation of work quality. When focus is fragmented, the likelihood of strategic errors increases, and these errors can be further damaging because they are the foundation for other errors.
Focus is a soft skill and it is a hard asset. When you manage the unit economics of focus, you stop paying the “Open Tab Tax” and start driving real enterprise value.
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The $15,000 Per-Person Tax
Context switching is the primary driver of focus depletion. Research through 2026 confirms that the average knowledge worker switches between applications over 1,200 times per day. This behaviour results in a loss of 45 to 90 minutes of productive output every single day. When you translate these minutes into dollars, the impact is high. Reclaiming just one hour of focused time per day per employee delivers a productivity gain of approximately $15,000 annually. For a mid-sized organization of 1,000 employees, the “Open Tab Tax” is an $18.75 million annual drain.
“Interruptions as short as five seconds can triple error rates on complex tasks,” reports the American Psychological Association. This is about lost time and the degradation of work quality. When focus is fragmented, the likelihood of strategic errors increases, and these errors can be further damaging because they are the foundation for other errors.
Focus is Your Most Expensive Asset
If you treat focus as a unit of value, your strategic priorities change. Organisations typically track the unit economics of a customer or a transaction, but they ignore the unit economics of their internal capacity. A “unit” of focus is a block of deep work where a decision is made or a complex problem is solved. When an organisation is riddled with manual “glue” work, those repetitive tasks required to move data between disconnected systems. It is effectively burning its most expensive asset.
Consolidation Over Complication
AI is often marketed as a productivity booster, but if implemented poorly, it becomes another “open tab.” Fragmented AI tools that require manual oversight and lack integrated data foundations create more work, not less. The goal of AI strategy in 2026 is consolidation. An AI strategy moves an organisation toward a unified workflow where data is accessible and definitions are consistent, allowing business teams to focus rather than context-switch between activities. This is where data fluency becomes critical. Data fluency is the ability of your team to work with data and AI naturally in their daily roles. It is about having the confidence to use data to eliminate manual work and focus on strategic outcomes. Without data fluency, consolidation efforts often fail because people revert to the fragmented “manual” ways of working they know.
Auditing Your Operational “Glue”
To improve your unit economics, you must identify where focus is leaking. Start by auditing the “glue” work in your core processes.- Count the Switches: How many different platforms must a salesperson touch to generate a single quote?
- Identify the Manual Bridges: Where are your employees manually copying and pasting data from one system to another?
- Measure the Refocus Time: It takes an average of 23 minutes to fully return to a task after a significant interruption. How many interruptions are your teams facing per hour?


