Start typing to search
To Stop Insanity, It’s Not Just About Doing Things DifferentlyLessons Learned from Writing Gonzo CapitalismThe 5-Minute To-Do ListHow to Know What to Do NextA Collection of Productivity Advice That Is Actually UsefulBig News: GONZO CAPITALISM Is Out Today!Before Beginning, Prepare CarefullyThe Big Picture and the Small DetailsSurprising New Research Reveals Gap Between Inaction, Lack of ResultsWhen to Be Unremarkably AverageBeyond PerfectIntroducing Gonzo CapitalismWhat Does Capitalism Mean to You?The Man Who Worked 24 Hours a Day for a YearThe Specialist, the Generalist, and the Non-ConformistHow to Make a Personal RoadmapThe Busy Real Estate AgentDid You Do Everything You Could?“More” Is Not the Answer to Too MuchSlow-Motion Multitasking: The Crop Rotation TheoryWhat to Do About That Thing You’ve Been Putting OffFailure Is Always an Option: Three StoriesDeFi Kingdoms: The Billion-Dollar Blockchain Economy Built on a Video GameScholarships Available for Time Anxiety CourseHow the Quest for Productivity Fails UsFree Video Series for New “Time Anxiety” CourseHow to Get Better At Saying NoThe Great Resignation: If Your Job Sucks, Now Is the Time to Stop Doing ItBe Persistent and ImpatientWorking Hard at Something That Doesn’t MatterHow to Write a NovelWhy Ideas are Not Enough (OR: How to Sell Out Like Iron Maiden)168 Hours: What I’ve Learned Tracking Every 15 Minutes of my WeekDon’t Make Important Decisions Out of DesperationWhat is Your Personal Moonshot?Pandering Never Builds a LegacyMaking Money From More Than One Paycheck Can Help You Follow Your DreamsWhat If All Your Work Disappeared At the End of the Day?This “1-3-5 Rule” Can Completely Change Your To-Do ListThe Best Productivity Hack is to Care About What You DoThe Key to Productivity Isn’t More Rest, it’s IntentionalityHow Do You Know If Your Idea Is Worth Pursuing?9 Life Lessons From Starting a Daily PodcastAdvice for Students and Jobseekers: When Experience Comes Your Way, Take ItInstead of Manufacturing Hype, Just Start Doing Great WorkBuild a Business Where You Can’t Get Fired“I Write to Create Something That is Better Than Myself”: Reading Karl Ove KnausgaardBeing Able To Ask “What’s Next?” Is A Sign You Are Happy In Your WorkBe Careful of Telling Your Origins Story Over and Over“The Beauty is That it Could Fail”: A Real-World Story of RiskIs There a Hole in Your Bathtub?If Your Vision Isn’t Being Understood, Never Hesitate to Change Your TacticsShould You Perform For the Audience or Just Entertain Yourself8 Ways to Have More TimeCatch Pokémon For Fun and Money: Lessons in Paying AttentionThree Simple Actions to Increase Your Available Options3 Keys to Building a Successful Writing CareerJust Because it’s Supposed to Work Doesn’t Mean it Will“The Success I’m Having Now is What I Planned For Three Years Ago”Winners Give Up All The TimeImprove the Right Kind of Skills (They Probably Aren’t What You Think)When You Need to Escape, Build Your Own Countdown ClockHow to Start a Blog or Any Website For Less Than $5Why I Like Giving the Same Talk 30 Times in a RowHow to Win the Career LotteryJoy, Money, and Flow: The Three Qualities of Purposeful WorkEverything’s Great, But Could I Get That Breakfast I Ordered?The New, New Economy: How the World of Online Publishing Is Changing, and Why You Should CareMake Two Blockbusters for Every Arthouse Film2015 Annual Review: Lessons in Writing and Other Independent WorkThe Best Time Management Strategy: Don’t Find the Time, Find the WhyHow Much Is Your Time Worth? This Free Tool Will Show YouCreative Ways to Succeed in the Knowledge EconomyYou Don’t Have to Win at EverythingWaking Up at Night with Big IdeasThe Magic Button of Good DesignNot Sure of Your Next Career Move? Take a Trip.A Better Approach to “Never Check Email in the Morning”How Much Money Do You Need to Live Abroad? 13 Questions to Ask YourselfWhat If You Had to Work Only One Hour a Day?Prepare for Tomorrow by Doing One Thing Differently TodayImmerse Yourself in What You Want to BecomeStop Marketing to “Millennials” or Any Other GenerationHow to Run a Business and Still Care for Your FamilyWhy I Became An Entrepreneur 20 Years AgoChecking Your Bank Accounts Will Not Make More MoneyHow Valuable Were Your Last 40 Minutes?Service Is Free to Offer But Incredibly Valuable: Lessons from an Airport Shuttle DriverDo You Have to Take a Terrible Job Just Because You Went to College?The Craft of Editing a Very Short StoryWhy Artistic Compromise Makes for Better WorkThoughts on Working from the DrugstoreIf You Want to Write A Book, Go to a Boring PlaceDon’t Join the Popularity Contest: Make It Happen YourselfMost People Want to Work On Their Own (and It’s Not Just a Dream)Consider the DominoesThe Magic Happens BackstageJackson Pollock’s Overnight Success Was a Lot Like Most People’sThe ATM Machine on Your PhoneThe Magic of Making ThingsRisk Something to Gain SomethingThe CrunchBusiness OpportunitiesStarting in the MiddleReady Or NotPractical Ways to Burn the ShipsWorth It AllChanging the DefaultClimb the Right LadderLeading a Horse to WaterThe DIY Book TourA Tale of 9 StartupsA Challenging QuestionThe Audience Is Listening (Hopefully)Things Not to Worry AboutStarting a Business While Working a Full-Time JobThe Six-Step Plan to Establish a New IncomeFame vs. Community: The Small Army Model279 Days To Overnight SuccessThelonious Monk and the Search for ValueThe One-Page Career Cheat SheetHow to Write a BookThe Feeling of the Entire Day Unfolding Around You(Never) Save It for LaterQualificationsHow to Write 300,000 Words In 1 YearNotes from a Cold Bathroom Floor in South AfricaHow to Make Money on the InternetJust Because It Works … Doesn’t Mean It WorksThe Good JobRedefining Risk: On Disasters, Pre-Mortems, and Making Ideas HappenThe Starving Artist Solves the ProblemLower Your Standards and Keep GoingHumility, Three Lessons, and a BirthdayAccomplishing EverythingKilling TimeHow to Get Paid for What You LoveStarting OverHow to Conduct Your Own Business AuditGood Writing TipsHow to Be a Motivational SpeakerLuciano Pavarotti’s Secret for Online SuccessJim Collins and $100 Million Dollars“If they hadn’t been pushed, they never would have made the leap”Business, Blogging, and Broken WindowsCreating a Legacy ProjectThe Art of Radical ExclusionHow to Stand Out in Any Job
Share Post:

8 Ways to Have More Time

I’ve always wanted to be one of those people who needs only four or five hours of sleep a night. Unfortunately, I’m not—without a consistent minimum of 6-8 hours, and usually on the high side of that range, I don’t perform very well.

If you’re like me and need your sleep, and if you’re not otherwise superhuman, you may need to hack your way to greater time and productivity. Many of us are constantly looking for more time. These 8 tips might help.


1. Don’t let other people schedule your life

First and foremost, do everything you can to remain in charge of as much of your schedule as possible. Learn your most productive periods and schedule your work around them. If you do any kind of creative work, you need to find a way to reserve time and space for your projects in a comfortable environment and on the schedule that works best for you.

Sure, you probably don’t have complete autonomy over your life, but that’s okay. Wherever you do have autonomy, or wherever you can reclaim it, assert your independence and make your own choices.


2. Decide what’s important and do it first every day

In our modern age, there’s always one more thing that can be done. To battle against the limitless options, decide from the very beginning what’s most important. Then before you move on to everything else, tackle that task.

I usually choose 2-3 things that are “most important,” and I’ve noticed a recurring pattern: getting one of those things done is no problem. Getting two of them done is usually feasible. I can also get plenty of other things done throughout the course of any given day—but trying to do three big things is often a challenge for me.

I’m not sure why, but for whatever reason I work best with a combination of “two big things + other small stuff” every day. Since I know that about myself, I try to work with that combination as much as possible.


 

3. Pay close attention to what makes you happy

If you work on things you enjoy, you’ll complete them faster and be less tired. With the extra time, you can move on to other tasks—because there’s always more work to be done—or you can do something else.

Consider it bonus time! Oh, and you’ll also be happier.


4. Stop watching TV

I don’t actually think watching TV is terrible. If you have a favorite show on Netflix—no big deal. If you have six favorite shows on Netflix, however, that might be a problem.

Use TV or other entertainment as rewards for completing tasks. When you finish that big important thing on your day’s task list, spend half your lunch break watching an episode of that show. But otherwise, keep your head down.

We all make time for what’s important to us. What’s most important to you?


5. Schedule your breaks and enjoy them

Break time is important, and none of us can focus forever. If you don’t allow yourself to slow down, your body and mind will mutiny on you and force the slowdown. Better to be in control of the process, and better to enjoy the down time instead of just sitting in a slump and trying to plow through something that isn’t working.

Just as you give yourself a “most important” assignment every day, give yourself at least one long break or two short breaks every day.


6. Look through your calendar and cancel things you aren’t excited about

You know how sometimes you agree to something you don’t have a good feeling about? Whenever possible, avoid going through with it. This is a great way to free up hours, blocks of time, or whole evenings from your life.

Cancel that appointment or opt out of a group activity you’re dreading. Then, to avoid getting in these situations in the first place, see tip #1.


7. If you keep putting something off, just let it go

There are two great ways of dealing with that thing that you’re procrastinating over:

  • Just get it done (AKA “push through the pain”)
  • Give up

Either of these ways are preferable to the choice that many of us make: to just keep deferring the item, leaving it on our list or in our mind, taking up space and draining energy that could be put to much better use elsewhere.


8. Before you go to bed, decide on tomorrow’s most important action

Ask yourself, “What’s the big thing for tomorrow? If nothing else gets done, what’s the #1 action that will get me closer to my goals?”

The next morning, start working on that thing that you’ve prepared. Then when you watch Netflix later, or do whatever it is that serves as your escape, instead of feeling regret you’ll feel the satisfaction of having done something important.

And you’ll also have more time, even with sleeping at least 6-8 hours every night.

###

Images: 12345, & 6