Colour can boost your productivity

Boost Your Productivity with Colour

Your brain notices colour quickly. With a simple system you can use it to improve focus, memory and task switching without creating visual clutter.

Colour is most helpful when it organises information, signals priority and lowers mental load. The goal is clarity, not decoration.

What different colours can do

Blue for focus and clarity

Use blue for deep-work tasks, documentation or careful reading. Cool tones feel calm and keep distractions down.

Yellow for ideas and creativity

Use yellow for brainstorming notes, mind maps and sticky labels. A little goes a long way.

Red for urgency and recall

Save red for deadlines, blockers and key formulas that must stand out. Too much red can feel stressful.

Green for balance and progress

Use green for checklists, completed items and finance or admin categories. It is calming when used as an accent.

Build a simple colour system

  • Choose three or four colours. Give each one a clear meaning such as Focus, Ideas, Urgent and Done.
  • Keep the same meanings across your notes, calendar, files and labels.
  • Use neutral colours for body text so accents stand out.
  • Review your palette each week. If everything is marked urgent, nothing is urgent.
Template: Focus Ideas Urgent Done

Study tips that use colour

  • Mind maps: give each branch a different colour and add short keywords or a simple icon.
  • Notes: keep body text in dark grey or black. Use one accent for key terms and a second accent for formulas or dates.
  • Flashcards: use the card border or a small tag colour for the topic. Keep text high contrast.
  • Memory: write the hardest facts in a bold accent such as red, then review those first.

Ways to use colour at work

  • Calendar: blue for deep work, a neutral for regular meetings and red for firm deadlines.
  • Kanban or to-do: ideas in yellow, in progress in blue, done in green.
  • Email labels: client A in blue, finance in green, urgent in red. Keep the scheme consistent.
  • Dashboards: highlight exceptions only. Too much colour hides the signal.

Keep it readable

  • Contrast: use dark text on light backgrounds for long reading. Avoid neon on white.
  • Do not use colour alone to convey meaning. Add words or icons such as ✔︎, ! or ★.
  • Colour-vision friendly: pair red with a clear label such as URGENT. Blues and oranges are easy to tell apart.

Quick start: ten minute colour reset

  1. Pick your three or four colours and decide what each one means.
  2. Apply the same meanings to labels in your notes, calendar and task app.
  3. Recolour today’s tasks and this week’s deadlines.
  4. Create one mind map for your current topic with those colours.
  5. Review on Friday. Keep what helped and simplify the rest.
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The Career Academy
We are the team behind The Career Academy, a collective of industry experts and career coaches dedicated to your professional growth. Our blog shares practical insights on everything from online education trends and accredited course pathways to essential career tools like resume building and LinkedIn optimisation. We provide the strategies and resources you need to upskill, get hired, and succeed in the modern Australian workforce.