“Productivity isn’t about
being a workhorse,
keeping busy or burning
the midnight oil... . It’
s
more about priorities,
planning, and fiercely
protecting your time.”
—Margarita Tartakovsky
Productive action transforms lives.
Putting together a life of extraordinary results simply comes down to getting the most out of what you do, when what you do matters.
Living for productivity produces extraordinary results.
If money is a metaphor for producing results, then it’s clear— a time-managing system’s success can be judged by the productivity it produces.
The most successful people are the most productive people.
“My goal is no longer to get more done, but rather to have less to do.”
—Francine Jay
Productive people get more done, achieve better results, and earn far more in their hours than the rest. They do so because they devote maximum time to being productive on their top priority, their ONE Thing. They time block their ONE Thing and then protect their time blocks with a vengeance. They’ve connected the dots between working their time blocks consistently and the extraordinary results they seek.
—Margarita Tartakovsky
Productive action transforms lives.
Putting together a life of extraordinary results simply comes down to getting the most out of what you do, when what you do matters.
Living for productivity produces extraordinary results.
If money is a metaphor for producing results, then it’s clear— a time-managing system’s success can be judged by the productivity it produces.
The most successful people are the most productive people.
“My goal is no longer to get more done, but rather to have less to do.”
—Francine Jay
Productive people get more done, achieve better results, and earn far more in their hours than the rest. They do so because they devote maximum time to being productive on their top priority, their ONE Thing. They time block their ONE Thing and then protect their time blocks with a vengeance. They’ve connected the dots between working their time blocks consistently and the extraordinary results they seek.
TIME BLOCKING
Most people think there’s never enough time to be successful, but there is when you block it. Time blocking is a very resultsoriented way of viewing and using time. It’s a way of making sure
that what has to be done gets done. Alexander Graham Bell said,
“Concentrate all your thoughts upon the work at hand. The sun’s
rays do not burn until brought to a focus.” Time blocking
harnesses your energy and centers it on your most important work.
It’s productivity’s greatest power tool.
When you time block
like this, you’re creating the most productive day possible in a way
that’s repeatable every day for the rest of your life.
Everything Else dominates your day!
If disproportionate results come from one activity, then you
must give that one activity disproportionate time. Each and every
day, ask this Focusing Question for your blocked time: “Today,
what’s the ONE Thing I can do for my ONE Thing such that by doing it everything else will be easier or unnecessary?” When you
find the answer, you’ll be doing the most leveraged activity for
your most leveraged work.
This is how results become extraordinary
Once you’ve done your ONE Thing for the day, you can
devote the rest of it to everything else. Just use the Focusing
Question to identify your next priority and give that task the time it
deserves. Repeat this approach until your workday is done. Getting
“everything else” done may help you sleep better at night, but it’s
unlikely to earn you a promotion.
Time blocking works on the premise that a calendar records
appointments but doesn’t care who those appointments are with.
So, when you know your ONE Thing, make an appointment with
yourself to tackle it. Every day great salespeople generate leads,
great programmers program, and great artists paint. Take any
profession or any position and fill in the blank. Great success
shows up when time is devoted every day to becoming great.
To achieve extraordinary results and experience greatness,
time block these three things in the following order:
1. Time block your time off.
2. Time block your ONE Thing.
3. Time block your planning time.
1. TIME BLOCK YOUR TIME OFF Extraordinarily successful people launch their year by taking time
out to plan their time off. Why? They know they’ll need it and they
know they’ll be able to afford it. In truth, the most successful
simply see themselves as working between vacations. On the other
hand, the least successful don’t reserve time off, because they
don’t think they’ll deserve it or be able to afford it. By planning
your time off in advance, you are, in effect, managing your work time around your downtime instead of the other way around.
You’re also letting everyone else know well in advance when
you’ll be out so they can plan accordingly. When you intend to be
successful, you start by protecting time to recharge and reward
yourself.
Take time off. Block out long weekends and long vacations,
then take them. You’ll be more rested, more relaxed, and more
productive afterward. Everything needs rest to function better, and
you’re no different.
Resting is as important as working. There are a few examples
of successful people who violate this, but they are not our role
models. They succeed in spite of how they rest and renew—not
because of it.
2. TIME BLOCK YOUR ONE THING
After you’ve time blocked your time off, time block your ONE
Thing. Yes, you read that right. Your most important work comes
second. Why? Because you can’t happily sustain success in your
professional life if you neglect your personal “re-creation” time.
Time block your time off, and then make time for your ONE
Thing.
The most productive people, the ones who experience
extraordinary results, design their days around doing their ONE
Thing. Their most important appointment each day is with themselves, and they never miss it. If they complete their ONE
Thing before their time block is done, they don’t necessarily call it
a day. They use the Focusing Question to tell them how they can
use the time they have left.
Similarly, if they have a specific goal for their ONE Thing,
they finish it, regardless of the time. In A Geography of Time,
Robert Levine points out that most people work on “clock” time
—“It’s five o’clock, I’ll see you tomorrow”— while others work
on “event” time— “My work is done when it’s done.” Think about
it. The dairy farmer doesn’t get to knock off at any certain time; he
goes home when the cows have been milked. It’s the same for any
position in any profession where results matter. The most
productive people work on event time. They don’t quit until their
ONE Thing is done.
“Day, n. A period of
twenty-four hours, mostly
misspent.”
—Ambrose Bierce
The key to making this work
is to block time as early in your
day as you possibly can. Give
yourself 30 minutes to an hour to
take care of morning priorities,
then move to your ONE Thing.
My recommendation is to block four hours a day. This isn’t a
typo. I repeat: four hours a day. Honestly, that’s the minimum. If
you can do more, then do it.
“Efficiency is doing the
thing right. Effectiveness is doing the right thing.”
—Peter Drucker
Normal business culture gets in the way of
the very productivity it seeks because of the way people
traditionally schedule their time (or are allowed to).
To experience extraordinary results, be a maker in the
morning and a manager in the afternoon. Your goal is “ONE and
done.” But if you don’t time block each day to do your ONE
Thing, your ONE Thing won’t become a done thing.
3. TIME BLOCK YOUR PLANNING TIME
The last priority you time block is planning time. This is when you
reflect on where you are and where you want to go. For annual
planning, schedule this time late enough in the year that you have a
sense of your trajectory, but not so late that you lose your running
start for the next. Take a look at your someday and five-year goals
and assess the progress you must make in the next year to be on
track. You may even add new goals, re-envision old ones, or eliminate any that no longer reflect your purpose or priorities.
Block an hour each week to review your annual and monthly
goals. First, ask what needs to happen that month for you to be on
target for your annual goals. Then ask what must happen that week
to be on course for your monthly goals. You’re essentially asking,
“Based on where I am right now, what’s the ONE Thing I need to
do this week to stay on track for my monthly goal and for my
monthly goal to be on track for my annual goal?” You’re lining up
the dominoes. Decide how much time you’ll need to achieve this,
and reserve that amount of time on your calendar. In effect, you
could say that when you time block your planning time, you’re
really time blocking your time to time block. Think about it.
In July 2007, software developer Brad Isaac shared a
productivity secret he reportedly got from comedian Jerry
Seinfeld. Before Seinfeld was a household name and still regularly
toured, Isaac ran into him at an open-mic comedy club and asked
him for advice on how to be a better comedian. Seinfeld told him
the key was to write jokes (hint: his ONE Thing!) every day. And
the way he’d figured out how to make that happen was to hang a huge annual calendar on the wall and then put a big red X across
every day he worked on his craft. “After a few days, you’ll have a
chain,
” Seinfeld said. “Just keep at it and the chain will grow
longer every day. You’ll like seeing the chain, especially when you
get a few weeks under your belt. Your only job is to not break the
chain. Don’t break the chain.”
What I love about Seinfeld’s method is that it resonates with
everything I know to be true. It’s simple. It’s based on doing ONE
Thing, and it creates its own momentum. You could look at the
calendar and be overwhelmed: “How can I commit to this for an
entire year?” But the system is designed to bring your biggest goal
to the now and simply focus on making the next X. As Walter
Elliot said,
“Perseverance is not a long race; it is many short races
one after another.” As you complete these short races and get a
chain going, it gets easier and easier. Momentum and motivation
start to take over.
There is magic in knocking down your most important
domino day after day. All you have to do is avoid breaking the
chain, one day at a time, until you generate a powerful new habit
in your life—the time-blocking habit.
Sound simple? Time blocking is—if you protect it.
PROTECT YOUR TIME BLOCK
For time blocks to actually block time, they must be protected.
Although time blocking isn’t hard, protecting the time you’ve
blocked is. The world doesn’t know your purpose or priorities and
isn’t responsible for them—you are. So it’s your job to protect
your time blocks from all those who don’t know what matters
most to you, and from yourself when you forget.
The best way to protect your time blocks is to adopt the
mindset that they can’t be moved. So, when someone tries to
double-book you, just say,
“I’m sorry, I already have an
appointment at that time,
” and offer other options. If the other
person is disappointed, you’re sympathetic but ultimately
unmoved. Extraordinarily results-oriented people—the very people
who have the most demands on their time—do this every day.
They keep their most important appointment.
The toughest part is navigating a high-level request. How do
you say no to anyone important—your boss, a key client, your
mom—who asks you to do something with a high sense of
urgency? One way is to say yes and then ask,
“If I have that done
by [a specific time in the future], would that work?” Most often,
these requests are more about an immediate need to hand a task off
than about a need for it to be done immediately, so the requester
usually just wants to know it will get done. Sometimes the request
is real, needs to be done now, and you must drop what you’re doing and do it. In this situation, follow the rule “If you erase, you
must replace” and immediately reschedule your time block.
Then there’s you. If you’re already feeling overbooked and
overworked, it can seem incredibly challenging to hold to a time
block. It can be hard to imagine how everything else will get done
when so much time is given to ONE Thing. The key is to fully
internalize the domino fall that will happen when your ONE Thing
gets done, and remember that everything else you might do or
have to do will be easier or unnecessary. When I first began to time
block, the most effective thing I did was to put up a sheet of paper
that said,
“Until My ONE Thing Is Done—Everything Else Is A
Distraction!” Try it. Put it where you can see it and others can see
it as well. Then make this the mantra you say to yourself and
everyone else. In time, others will begin to understand how you
work and support it. Just watch.
The last thing that can knock you off your time block is when
you can’t free your mind. Day in and day out, your own need to
do other things instead of your ONE Thing may be your biggest
challenge to overcome. Life doesn’t simplify itself the moment you
simplify your focus; there’s always other stuff screaming to be
done. Always. So when stuff pops into your head, just write it
down on a task list and get back to what you’re supposed to be
doing. In other words, do a brain dump. Then put it out of sight and out of mind until its time comes.
In the end, there are plenty of ways your time block can get
sabotaged. Here are four proven ways to battle distractions and
keep your eye on your ONE Thing.
1. Build a bunker. Find somewhere to work that takes you out of
the path of disruption and interruption. If you have an office,
get a “Do Not Disturb” sign. If it has glass walls, install shades.
If you work in a cubicle, get permission to put up a folding
screen. If necessary, go elsewhere. The immortal Ernest
Hemingway kept a strict writing schedule starting at seven
every morning in his bedroom. The mortal but still immensely
talented business author Dan Heath “bought an old laptop,
deleted all its browsers, and, for good measure, deleted its
wireless network drivers” and would take his “way-back
machine” to a coffee shop to avoid distractions. Between the
two extremes, you could just find a vacant room and simply
close the door.
2. Store provisions. Have any supplies, materials, snacks, or
beverages you need on hand and, other than for a bathroom
break, avoid leaving your bunker. A simple trip to the coffee
machine can derail your day should you encounter someone
seeking to make you a part of theirs.
3. Sweep for mines. Turn off your phone, shut down your email, and exit your Internet browser. Your most important
work deserves 100 percent of your attention.
4. Enlist support. Tell those most likely to seek you out what
you’re doing and when you’ll be available. It’s amazing how
accommodating others are when they see the big picture and
know when they can access you.
BIG IDEAS
1. Connect the dots. Extraordinary results become
possible when where you want to go is completely aligned
with what you do today. Tap into your purpose and allow that
clarity to dictate your priorities. With your priorities clear, the
only logical course is to go to work.
2. Time block your ONE Thing. The best way to make your
ONE Thing happen is to make regular appointments with
yourself. Block time early in the day, and block big chunks of
it—no less than four hours! Think of it this way: If your time
blocking were on trial, would your calendar contain enough evidence to convict you?
3. Protect your time block at all costs. Time blocking works
only when your mantra is “Nothing and no one has permission
to distract me from my ONE Thing.” Unfortunately, your
resolve won’t keep the world from trying, so be creative when
you can be and firm when you must. Your time block is the
most important meeting of your day, so whatever it takes to
protect it is what you have to do.
The people who achieve extraordinary results don’t achieve
them by working more hours. They achieve them by getting more
done in the hours they work.
Time blocking is one thing; productive time blocking is
another.
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