Saved by Mateo Balaña Paemen and
3 Time Management Tips That Will Improve Your Health and Productivity
Mateo Balaña Paemen and added
*The single most important change you can make in your working habits is to switch to creative work first, reactive work second. This means blocking off a large chunk of time every day for creative work on your own priorities, with the phone and e-mail off.**–*Mark McGuinness, [Manage Your Day-to-Day](https://jamesclear.com/book/manage-your-day-to-day... See more
James Clear • Never Check Email Before Noon (And Other Thoughts on Doing Your Best Work)
Mateo Balaña Paemen added
“How to 80/20 your work:
(1) Make a list of the 10 things you spend the most time on.
(2) Circle the two that truly drive your results. Do more of those.
(3) Look at the others. Eliminate ruthlessly. Automate or outsource what you can. Press pause on the rest.
(4) Repeat.”
(1) Make a list of the 10 things you spend the most time on.
(2) Circle the two that truly drive your results. Do more of those.
(3) Look at the others. Eliminate ruthlessly. Automate or outsource what you can. Press pause on the rest.
(4) Repeat.”
James Clear • 3-2-1: The 80/20 Principle, mastery, and the importance of asking questions
Isaac Feldman added
2- Plan for focused chunks of work. Instead of trying to multitask, define clear tasks and block time in your calendar to complete them.
Ness Labs • Cognitive bottlenecks: the inherent limits of the thinking mind
Keely Adler added
Greg McKeown, who wrote a phenomenal book on productivity called Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less, boils this down to one key concept: Schedule two hours each day (i.e., put an event in your calendar) to work on your top goal only. And do this every single workday. Period.
Alex MacCaw • The Great CEO Within: The Tactical Guide to Company Building
Finding Your Anchor Task
Doing more things does not drive faster or better results. Doing better things drives better results. Even more accurately, doing one thing as best you can drives better results.
Mastery requires focus and consistency.
I haven’t mastered the art of focus and concentration yet, but I’m working on it. One of the major improveme... See more
Doing more things does not drive faster or better results. Doing better things drives better results. Even more accurately, doing one thing as best you can drives better results.
Mastery requires focus and consistency.
I haven’t mastered the art of focus and concentration yet, but I’m working on it. One of the major improveme... See more
James Clear • The Myth of Multitasking: Why Fewer Priorities Leads to Better Work
Luc Cheung and added