Zoe Read-Bivens - Flowtime Technique Creator
Creator of the Flowtime technique (also called Flowmodoro), an alternative to Pomodoro that allows variable-length focus sessions with proportional breaks, designed for more natural work rhythms.
Last updated: 2026-03-20 10:10
Background
Zoe Read-Bivens is the creator of the Flowtime technique, also known as Flowmodoro, a flexible alternative to the traditional Pomodoro technique that emphasizes working with natural flow states rather than against them.
Innovation
Problem Identified:
- Traditional Pomodoro forces breaks at arbitrary 25-minute intervals
- Interrupts flow states when concentration is strong
- Doesn't accommodate varying task demands
- Fixed structure doesn't match individual cognitive patterns
Flowtime Solution:
- Work for as long as focus naturally persists
- Take breaks only when concentration fades
- Break length proportional to work duration (divide by 5)
- Honors flow states instead of interrupting them
Philosophy
Read-Bivens' approach emphasizes:
Natural Rhythms:
- Cognitive capacity varies by task and day
- Flow states shouldn't be artificially interrupted
- Recovery needs scale with effort invested
- Flexibility produces better long-term sustainability
Self-Awareness:
- Learn to recognize when focus fades
- Understand your natural attention span ranges
- Adjust work duration to task complexity
- Build trust in your own cognitive signals
Key Principles
Variable Session Length:
- 20 minutes for challenging or boring tasks
- 45-90 minutes for engaging work
- Based on actual focus quality, not arbitrary timers
Proportional Breaks:
- 25 minutes work = 5-minute break
- 50 minutes work = 8-10 minute break
- 90+ minutes work = 15-20 minute break
- Rewards sustained effort with longer recovery
Impact on Productivity Field
Flowtime technique influenced:
- Recognition that rigid time management doesn't fit everyone
- Development of flexible focus apps (FlowMo, Customodoro)
- Acceptance of personalized productivity approaches
- Movement away from one-size-fits-all methods
When Flowtime Works Best
Ideal For:
- Creative work (writing, design, coding)
- Complex problem-solving requiring extended focus
- People who naturally enter flow states
- Those who find rigid timers stressful
- Variable energy level days
Less Ideal For:
- Procrastination-prone individuals needing external structure
- Quick, discrete tasks
- High-distraction environments
- Those who need firm time boundaries
2026 Context
As only 31% of workers achieve daily focus (February 2026 survey), Flowtime's emphasis on working with natural attention patterns rather than imposing rigid structures aligns with growing recognition that sustainable productivity requires flexibility.
Legacy
Read-Bivens contributed important alternative to dominant Pomodoro technique, expanding options for people seeking focus methods aligned with their cognitive patterns rather than fighting them.
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