The best sounds for planning and strategising
Finding the right background sound can transform your planning experience. This activity engages your Creative + Organisational + Big-Picture cognitive systems, which respond best to specific types of ambient sound.
Research says: Moderate ambient noise around 70 decibels enhances creative thinking compared to both silence and loud environments. The slight processing difficulty at this level pushes the brain toward abstract thinking.
— Journal of Consumer Research (2012)
Sonidos recomendados
coffee shop sounds
Planning requires abstract, big-picture thinking that the 70 dB cafe level enhances. You're connecting ideas, sequencing priorities, and visualising outcomes.
Recommended: 50-65 dBlofi music
For the execution side of planning — building timelines, filling in details, organising resources.
Recommended: 40-55 dBrain sounds
When planning becomes overwhelming, rain simplifies the acoustic environment. Fewer inputs = more cognitive space.
Recommended: 40-50 dBProbar ahora
Listen on Softly
Consejo pro
Plan in two phases with two sounds. Phase 1 (brainstorming, goal-setting) → cafe sounds at 60-70 dB. Phase 2 (scheduling, detailing) → lo-fi at 45 dB. The sound change signals the cognitive shift.
Preguntas frecuentes
What's the best environment for strategic planning?
Moderate ambient noise in a comfortable setting. The worst environment for planning is a quiet office with interruptions — you need sustained, unbroken time. Sound at 50-65 dB blocks interruptions while enhancing abstract thinking.
What does research say about sounds for planning?
Moderate ambient noise around 70 decibels enhances creative thinking compared to both silence and loud environments. The slight processing difficulty at this level pushes the brain toward abstract thinking. (Mehta et al., Journal of Consumer Research, 2012)
What volume should I use for planning?
For planning, set your volume to 50-65 dB. This range is based on acoustic research — loud enough to mask distracting noise, quiet enough to avoid auditory fatigue during extended listening.