25 Ways How to Be More ProductiveA Collection of Smart Productivity Tips (Crowdsourced) from Top Entrepreneurs

In this guide, we’re breaking down my best productivity tips and time-tested ways to be more productive, whether that’s in the context of work or in your personal life (no judgement here). These tactics and advice come from both myself and several of the world’s top entrepreneurs I’ve had the opportunity to interview.

25 Ways How to Be Productive (Intuitive Productivity Tips) icon

How big is your to-do list? If you’re anything like me, it’s probably huge and you’re looking for ways to be more productive. Enter: Productivity tips.

This year, my to-do list has turned into a growing mountain of “important” tasks that always seem to lead to something else (of course equally as important) that needs to be accomplished.

Over the past several months, I’ve been taking on more time-intensive projects than I ever have before… all at the same time as moving from San Francisco to Los Angeles. My to-do list has ballooned out of control. As a result, I’ve had to get very serious about how I utilize my time. I’ve had to become way more productive.

I’ve been doing a lot more experimentation, testing, and coming up with my own productivity tips to not only squeeze more time out of my workday, but to be more effective with that limited amount of time (which is what I believe productivity is really about).

The thing is, if you’re like most people, you can find extra time to do the things you truly want (and need).

It’s amazing how much time we waste in our average day if we’re brutally honest with ourselves. Ten minutes of checking Facebook notifications when you get to work, scrolling through Instagram for half an hour at lunch, reading up on the day’s news during the afternoon, the list goes on.

At the same time, while you may take pride in replying to every email as soon as you receive it, it does waste an awful lot of your time that could otherwise be used more effectively. That’s why today, I’m sharing my list of 25 surprisingly impactful productivity tips to help you be more productive in all areas of your life.

Disclaimer: Some of these productivity tips will sound like a no-brainer, but trust me… it’s the implementation, repetition, and discipline in sticking to them long enough to pay off, that’ll be most difficult.

In some cases, you’ll walk away from reading this post with an aha! moment, wondering why you haven’t always been leveraging a particular productivity tactic. And yet others might not be the best fit for you. In all reality, you probably won’t be able to use all of these productivity tips at once—it’s more about finding the ones that can give you the biggest return in your unique situation.

The common thread throughout all of these tactics to be more productive, is that they’re simple and straightforward. Anyone can pull them off with the right level of conviction. The difficult part of this process is changing habits and rewiring routines.

25 Ways to Be More Productive: Genius Productivity Tips (Crowdsourced) from Top Entrepreneurs

Now, in the name of being more productive, let’s jump straight into the heart of our content.

1. Wake Up at 4:30 am

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Set Early Alarm

I know many of you will read this suggestion and instantly drop down to tip #2. Some of you, I know, think it should only be birds and dairy farmers who wake up this early. However, this could be the most important way to be more productive of them all. My early wake-up allows me to get my most important work done in the early hours of the morning before other people are up and requesting my time for their needs. It is a true case of self-discipline leading to results—the definition of what I think of as a productivity tip.

If you can’t stomach the thought of a 4:30 am wake-up, then slowly work your way there in a gradual process. If you’re not naturally a morning person, maybe choosing a 7 am start will be a good first achievement for you. Once you’ve become used to this, set your alarm clock back another 15 minutes each week. Over time, repeat this process until you’re managing a genuinely early start, for this method of being more productive to really pay dividends.

2. Use a Wrist Vibration Alarm to Wake Up

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Use a Wrist Vibration Alarm to Wake Up

Instead of a blaring alarm waking me with a jolt each morning, I use the FitBit’s wrist vibration alarm feature to wake myself up more calmly. Again, this depends on how easy it is for you to wake up early. Some people need a screaming siren on the other side of the room, so they need to physically get out of bed to turn the alarm off.

Personally, I prefer FitBit’s more subtle approach to the morning wake-up, and it has the added benefit of your partner not being woken at the same early time as you.

3. Don’t Look at Your Phone in the First Hour of Your Day

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Dont Look at Your Phone in the First Hour of your Day

Give yourself permission not to be reactive with your phone. By starting your day from a place where you are in control of what you do and when you do it, you will free up more cognitive energy to focus on the activities that give you the highest return in your work day.

Of course, if you start your day at 4:30 or 5:00 am you are unlikely to receive many calls in that first hour anyhow (unless you are working with overseas colleagues or clients). Just try to resist reading any texts that people may have sent you overnight. It is unlikely to make any difference to the other person if you read them now or in an hour’s time.

Your first work hour is likely to be your most productive hour of the day. Keep it interruption and distraction-free.

4. Restrict Social Media Usage to 15 minutes Per Day

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Restrict Social Media Usage to 15 min a Day

We all know how it is. You just wanted to check an interesting Facebook status and the next thing you know you have become immersed in your friends’ statuses, tweeted a few times and watched a few YouTube videos. As great as social media is, it can be a tremendous time waster.

Use the Freedom App to block specific social media sites from your computer and mobile devices. Set limits for yourself and be more productive with extra hours in your day.

5. Seriously Limit Your Phone Usage

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Limit Your Phone Usage

Some of us love talking. We can spend many unproductive hours simply chatting away on the phone. It is not always our fault. In this mobile age, it is amazing how many people ring others at antisocial times and expect to be instantly spoken to. Even when people restrict their calling to office hours, it can seriously hinder your chances to work productively.

The Moment app can help you to track your phone usage throughout the day, set goals and get back to doing more of what you are best at—instead of procrastinating. Their website tagline says it all – “Put down your phone and get back to your life.”

6. Turn Off All Notifications on Your Phone

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Turn off All Notifications on Your Phone

Is it really the end of the world if you do not respond to that text or call immediately? Take control of when you read and respond to requests for your time.

Just because somebody else thinks their request is important, does not mean that it that important to you that you need to know about it this second. While you are at it, turn off most of the other notifications on your phone, tablet, and computer. Do you really need a notification that there is a new issue of some magazine you once read? About the only important notifications are those for meetings and appointments (and probably your partner’s birthday if you want a peaceful life).

7. Check Your Phone No More Than Once an Hour

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Check Your Phone No More than Once an Hour

Decreasing the frequency with which you look at your phone eliminates a major potential distraction that’s blocking you from being more productive. This will take time getting used to.

Since I believe discipline and willpower are way over-rated, building this habit will be much easier if you employ a set of triggers that reinforce the right behavior; in this case not looking at your phone more than once per hour.

I know that if my phone is next to my computer, I am probably going to look at it regularly. So to help myself build this habit, I physically place my phone out of sight when I am working. It goes into the top drawer of my desk (on vibrate mode) so that I will hear it vibrating if one of my ‘favorite’ contacts is calling me—which only happens when something urgent is needed. Otherwise, everyone I work with regularly knows that I check for texts about once an hour and emails twice a day. You set the boundaries, and people will respect that.

8. Use Do Not Disturb Mode on Your Phone During the Work Day

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Use the Do Not Disturb Mode on Your Phone During the Work Day

This one’s for all of my fellow work from home peeps out there and it goes beyond just turning off your notifications. By turning on Do Not Disturb (DND) during your work day, you will be taking your time off the table for every distraction, even phone calls—the ultimate life hack that’ll allow you to be more productive on a daily basis.

9. Ask People to Call You for Urgent Needs

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Ask People to Call You for Urgent needs

If you have an iPhone, add anyone who may need to get hold of you in a pinch (friends, family, children, school, co-workers, boss, and employees) as a Favorite so that their call will come through, even in DND mode. This means any potentially distracting (non-urgent) call will go straight to voicemail while only those whom you flag as important to you in your Favorites will be able to reach and interrupt you.

10. Remove Messages from Your Computer

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Remove Messages from Your Computer

If you have a MacBook, chances are you have turned on Messages so that any text or iMessage you receive on your phone will pop up as a notification on your laptop as well. This is incredibly distracting. You will be far more productive by removing these notifications as well.

Similarly, you can remove notifications of messages on a Windows 10 computer in the Action Center.

One of the worst offenders for sending you notifications on your computer is Google Chrome. You can deselect notifications from any website in Chromes’ Settings menu.

11. Schedule Time on Your Calendar for Emailing

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Schedule Time on Your Calendar for Emailing

When you decide when to respond to email, you are taking control of your time. Naturally, this will not work with every single job (it’s particularly effective with remote jobs where there’s a high level of autonomy), but have a conversation with your boss and see if you can reach an understanding about scheduling 2 x 30min or 1-hour blocks of time on your calendar every day to read and respond to email. The productivity gains you will get by unlocking more focused time to get results with your work will be worth the company’s investment.

12. Hide Your Email Inbox

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Hide Your Email Inbox

Eliminate the temptation of turning to your inbox and being reactive during the work day by installing the Chrome extension, Inbox When Ready (#79 on my list of 101 Essential Online Business Tools I’ve Used to Start a Profitable Website) to hide your email inbox from sight.

You will still have access to searching, writing and sending emails from within your inbox, without seeing your actual inbox or the number of unread emails. This will help you stay focused and be more productive even if you work with your email inbox frequently throughout the day.

13. Use a To Do List App

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Use a To Do List App

Your day will be much more productive if you perform your tasks in an organized fashion, focusing on clearing the most important tasks rather than spending all of your time on the easy or interesting tasks. This is where a to do app (like one of these to do list apps) can help you streamline your day. There are many great to do managers out there that you can choose from, including my personal favorite I’ve been using for over 6 years: ToDo by Appigo. Other options you should check out depending upon your goals and ideal workflows include Google Keep, Any.do, Remember the Milk, Habitica, Trello, and Todoist.

With Todoist, for example, you can split your projects into specific tasks, allocate them to set days, and then give them one of four priority levels. You can even delegate tasks to other people in your team if you can do that.  If you get into the habit of updating your To do list every morning and then focusing on the highest priority tasks each day, the extra productivity you gain will ensure that you always manage to finish those most important tasks (like testing new methods of learning how to drive traffic to your website).

14. Listen To Music (And Sing) While You Shower

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Listen to Music While You Shower

Let’s be honest. Most of us have sung in the shower at some point, and the singing is not always of the greatest quality. You might wonder why I include this suggestion in a list of productivity tips.

Well, it turns out that science now proves that singing in the shower gives us a whole lot of physical and mental health benefits. You may not remember it, but your mother probably sang lullabies to you as a baby. So when you sing it takes you back to what was a fundamental learning period of your life. Physically, singing leads to a higher immune competence, meaning you are less likely to catch bugs. People who sing also have lower cortisol levels, meaning less stress, and better hearts.

Singing also triggers the release of both oxytocin and endorphins in the brain – which further relieves anxiety and helps your heart health.

Regarding mental health, research shows that singing helps reduce sadness, anxiety, and depression, and has even been tied to improving chronic pain.

However, remember to be kind to your household, particularly if you have followed tip #1 and woken up at 4:30 am. Blasting your tune out at full volume at that time is probably not so good for your health, particularly if it wakes up unhappy family or housemates.

15. Take a Cold Shower

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Take a Cold Shower

It is probably best if you keep the water temperature right down if you sing in the shower. Scientists have surprisingly discovered that there are benefits of keeping your showers cold.

Not all of the benefits directly relate to your daily productivity, although they may have indirect long-term benefits. For instance, the scientists have discovered that your “brown fat” burns calories to keep you warm, so you lose weight in that cold shower. They also activate your immune system which strengthens your immunity and circulation.

More relevant to your daily productivity, cold showers increase your mood and alertness. Start the day with a cold shower and your blood will rush through your body, energizing you for the day.

16. Smile More Often

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Smile More Often

I bet you never realized that simply smiling would help improve your daily productivity. However, there are good scientific reasons why smiling is good for us.

For a start, smiling helps lower your heart rate, giving you all of the benefits of having a less-stressed heart. You are less likely to be stressed if you are smiling. Making a conscious effort to smile more is likely to reduce your stress levels.

You are far more likely to perform tasks more productively if you are happy and smiling, rather than worrying and being upset. That is why people try and bring humor to the workplace. Remember Steve Carroll’s Michael Scott in NBC’s The Office? His whole aim in life was to make his office happy, although he was usually spectacularly unsuccessfully in achieving this.

17. Commit a Random Act of Kindness in the First Hour of Your Day

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Commit a Random Act of Kindness in the First Hour of the Day

It is amazing how good helping others can make you feel. As we have seen above, the simple act of feeling happy can help your productivity. There is plenty of research to show that being kind to people makes you happier over time. Doing nice things for people improves your moods, increases your relationship satisfaction and decreases social avoidance if you are socially anxious. It even produces a hormone called oxytocin which reduces blood pressure.

Getting this jolt of positive energy in the first hour or two of your day will set you up for a mentally powerful day.

18. Write Distraction-Free From Your Computer

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Write Distraction-Free From Your Computer

If your work involves writing, you need to give it your full attention. It is easy to be distracted by other tabs and windows open on your screen (like when your CRM pings you with a new lead notification). For this reason, several programs give you a Distraction-Free option.

Most common writing programs, such as Microsoft Word or Google Documents, show you a huge variety of menus and options. These can be very distracting if all you want to do is write.

If you want to start a blog and focus in on your writing practice, one solution is to use Hemingway. Get your thoughts down on screen in Hemingway’s Write mode, and then use its Edit mode to correct and simplify your writing. Side note—I’ve seen Hemingway recommended as a writing aid in many of the world’s top blogging courses as a tool to help concentrate on converting your blog post ideas into actionable published content (that can help you eventually make money blogging).

Another option is to use the Writer add-on to Chrome. This is a simple, clean word processor for Chrome, with a minimalistic design that hides all of those unnecessary options the more sophisticated programs feature.

19. Put Together Your Outfit for Tomorrow Before Going to Bed

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Put Together Your Outfit for Tomorrow Before Going to Bed

I have already discussed the benefits of operating a To Do list. One benefit is, of course, ensuring you are organized, placing your focus on the most important tasks. Unless you sit at home in your pajamas writing or you operate out of a nudist colony, one of your most important tasks each day is to get dressed. Now as trivial as this may sound, it can be a great stress to people if they are rushing off to work and can’t decide which clothes to wear.

You might not have to think too hard about what you are wearing if you wear a uniform, but even then you still need to find all your clothing items each day and make sure they are clean.

Hunting down items of clothing at the start of the day is hardly a great start to a productive workday. You want a smooth-running, easy start, with as few decisions as possible. Save your brain for those really important decisions of the day. I have known people wear underwear with the days of the week printed on them, so they do not even have to think which pair to put on.

Your life will be so much easier if you have a before-bedtime routine. Lay out your outfit for tomorrow. It is a simple thing that saves you time in the morning, by being decisive at a less-productive time.

20. Set Deadlines for Accomplishing Every Goal (No Matter the Size)

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Set Deadlines for Accomplishing Every Goal

Note for my To Do List: Finish this paragraph … sometime.

A simple note like that is the kiss of death for any task for me. I accomplish nothing without having a deadline or it.

Without a deadline for a job, there will always be something more important. It will never jump up to your high priority task lists. Even if a task is not particularly time-sensitive, you still need to create a deadline. Otherwise, you are telling yourself that it is unimportant.

21. Write Down Your Goals, Plans and Deadlines

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Write Down Your Goals Plans and Dealines

Physically writing down your biggest personal goals will make them more real. However, don’t tell everyone about them. Our minds mistake the talking for doing.

Derek Sivers describes the process well in a TED talk. Although creating goals is very important to your success, talking about it isn’t. Repeated psychology tests confirm this. The good feeling you gain from talking about your goals does not flow through to you actually working towards achieving these goals. You are far more likely to work on goals that you have not signposted, than on those you have.

If you need to talk about your goals you can phrase it in a way that gives you no satisfaction, e.g. “I need to get that report written tomorrow. Give me a hard time if you see me surfing the net.”

You’ll only make it so far in life, driven by motivational quotes, business books, guides to make money online and caffeine only. Make your goals real, plan out how you’re going to accomplish them, and create deadlines that force you to deliver on those objectives—that’s how you’ll be more productive in the long run.

22. Schedule Check-Ins on Your Calendar to Monitor Progress Towards Goals

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Schedule Check-Ins on My Calendar to Monitor Progress Towards Goals

It is a good idea to make incremental check-ins to make sure your deadlines are realistic. If you are falling behind, ask yourself, why? Is it because a goal is unrealistic? What obstacles are you facing?

Are the obstacles things you can control yourself? If so, determine how you can change the goal, deadline, or tactic to achieve your desired result most quickly.

You should regularly monitor your progress towards your goals. Set aside some time each week, perhaps on a Sunday morning, to see how you have progressed and to spot any roadblocks you have encountered.

23. Use Inbox by Gmail

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Use Inbox by Gmail

I receive massive mental and productivity gains from getting down to a zero inbox every day. Inbox by Gmail is Google’s left-brain take on an email program. It works with your existing Gmail account but looks at it in a different way. It bundles similar emails together by their purpose.

For instance, it bundles all of your travel emails together. It highlights each email, so you can see the contents without opening it, and you can even see things like flight updates and reservations statuses without opening the emails. It includes a task manager so that you can set yourself reminders.

Another major benefit is the ability to ‘snooze’ emails which trigger them to resurface in your inbox at a pre-determined date & time. This makes you much more efficient at managing multiple projects at the same time because you can simply reschedule emails to pop back into your inbox (which means you need to address it) when it is a more suitable time to check it.

I do not waste time going to another To Do app to set a reminder—I use my inbox resurfacing as a cue to address needs.

24. Charge Your Phone Outside Of Your Bedroom

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack Charge Your Phone Outside Of Your Bedroom

Knowing myself, I am much more tempted to check Facebook, read Quora or scan my email inbox in bed while I am getting ready to go to sleep if my phone is nearby. To eliminate that distraction completely, leave your phone charging overnight in another room.

If you use your phone as an alarm, crank up the volume so that you will hear it from the other room—better yet, get a wrist vibration alarm like the FitBit or buy a cheap alarm clock to keep by your bed.

25. No Screen Time in Bed and For 30min Leading Up To Bed Time

Be More Productive: Productivity Hack No Screen Time in Bed and for 30 min Leading up to Bed Time

Having a no screen policy in bed—TVs, phones, tablets, computers and otherwise—will dramatically increase the quality of your sleep and allow you to be more productive during your work day.

Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute showed that exposure to light from computer tablets significantly lowered levels of the hormone melatonin, which regulates our internal clocks and plays a role in the sleep cycle. In the study, published in the journal Applied Ergonomics, the researchers had volunteers read, play games and watch movies on an iPad, iPad 2 or PC tablet for various amounts of time while measuring the amount of light their eyes received. They found that two hours of exposure to a bright tablet screen at night reduced melatonin levels by about 22%.

One of the best things you can do (for getting a better night’s rest) is to use a sleep calculator that’ll allow you to find the best time to go to bed and wake up in order to feel rested and avoid morning grogginess. The best calculators will let you select your age, the time you want to go to bed or wake up—and you’ll get three results to choose from, based on the number of sleep cycles you’ll get in.

And now I need your help…

I want to keep the momentum going, so I want to hear from you—what’s your best productivity tip?

Here are a few examples of my own personal productivity tips I’ve found to be most impactful these past few months:

1. Waking up at 4:30am

2. Charging my phone overnight outside of my bedroom, keeping it on do not disturb mode and only looking at it once an hour

3. Scheduling one hour each day on my calendar for emailing

And a dozen or so other tips like using the Chrome extension, Inbox When Ready to hide my email inbox whenever I’m in Gmail so that I can still send emails without seeing the new unread messages popping in every few minutes.

Now, I need your help.

I want to hear your favorite productivity tip, behavior, or change you’ve implemented to become more productive in your day.

Comment below, sharing with me…

1. Your #1 best productivity tip

And

2. How it helps you get more (or better) work done

Hi I'm Ryan Robinson

Blogger, podcaster and recovering side project addict. Head of Content at Close. Join me here, on ryrob.com to learn how to start a blog, make money blogging and grow a profitable side business. Be sure to try my popular free keyword research tool & AI article writer tool, as well. Somehow, I also find time to write for publications like Fast Company, Forbes, Entrepreneur, The Next Web, Business Insider, and more. Let’s chat on Twitter and YouTube about our feelings (and blogging, of course).

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86 replies to “25 Ways How to Be More Productive: Genius Productivity Tips (Crowdsourced) from Top Entrepreneurs”

  1. My personal hack is I wake every morning at
    2am.

    My phone is on silent from 9:30pm and I do not look or check if the building is burning down( I let the fire department deal with that)😊

    I meditate

    I listen to motivational tapes by Zig Ziglar or Les Brown.

    Just a few things I do to stay productive throughout the day.

    Reply
    • 2am?! That is INSANE.

      How many hours do you find you sleep on the average night? Also, do you do anything in particular to help get to bed early enough so that you can feel rested at 2am?

      Reply
      • I work in the field of global logistics so my up times in the morning can be wierd. I usually shut down between 9-9:30pm.Sometimes I’ll get around 4-5 hours sleep. I try not to eat anything after 7pm or if I do, it would be very light snack. And I would shut off all electronic communications about 30 mins to bedtime.

        Reply
    • I’ve been contemplating adding morning meditation into my routine, but I find I’m almost always just too ready to get working when I’m up in the morning… can you relate to that at all or do you get more energy from taking time to meditate first?

      Reply
  2. I have 3 to share.

    1. Plan out my week as much as possible on Sunday evening, and then schedule 15 minutes at the end of each work day to update my schedule for the next day – making adjustments as needed. The day is actually on my calendar in chunks – not a “to do” list.

    2. Wake up at 4 or 4:30am to read business or motivational books, meditate, prepare for day before getting my son up and off to school.

    3. Anytime I’m driving I listen to podcasts that keep me current on my business, or are just generally motivating (check out “The Three Month Vacation Podcast” by Sean D’Souza)

    Reply
    • I love this methodical approach, Dina. Especially using Sunday night as a time to schedule out the workweek—that’s something I’ve gotten a lot of value from too. Adding 15min re-adjustment periods toward the end of each day is a great idea.

      Reply
  3. I’m actually reading a book called Productivity Project by Chris Bailey.

    https://www.amazon.com/Productivity-Project-Accomplishing-Managing-Attention/dp/1101904038

    I’m still early into the book. What he did was make himself a human hamster for productivity techniques.

    I have done a few during a time I had to squeeze 16hrs of output based work for 4 months. It was crazy. It was addicting but you know you can’t keep up that long and not die early.

    I did a checklist. delegated. pushed off lesser ‘needed’ tasks. and negotiated :p

    It was a good run. Will I do it again. Hell yeah. But with just a 3-4 month period at most :p I refuse to have such life for the whole of mine.

    Reply
    • Sounds awesome but very intense, I’ll check this book out!

      This is a really interesting point you bring up about doing the more extreme “hacks” over just a short time period. I think productivity should be more about effectiveness than efficiency—that’s how I’d measure my own success, so it makes sense that productivity should back into your definition of success right?

      So for a definition, how about longer-term, sustainable changes that help you become more effective?

      Reply
  4. Hi my since I’m a Social Media Manager/Practitioner, I love using Auto-Scheduled Posting application… I’m not looking for a spare of time, I make a spare of my own time to learn and to gain more knowledge.

    for example:

    When road traffic comes along, I listen to audio talks, you tube tutorial videos instead of listening music or watching movies. I don’t entertain myself, I strive hard to gain knowledge and new skills.

    This is my life hacks.

    I hope this would be a great help for you.

    Thank you for the opportunity to invite me to make comments here. I hope you succeed.

    Reply
    • Thanks for sharing, Matt!

      Question for you—do you find there’s a mental limit of sorts, to how much educational content you can consume while commuting, etc? I usually hit a point where I need to stop consuming, and start executing on the ideas, strategies, tactics, techniques I listen to, watch, or read about.

      Reply
  5. Exercise is a key component to mental health and maintaining peak performance. I find going to the gym before work powers up my day.

    Hack: To make sure I get there, I either pay for classes or non-refundable personal training. The guilt of wasting money makes sure I’m out of bed early and at the gym.

    Reply
    • Amen to that!

      Love the idea of pre-paying for the individual sessions to help get moving in the morning too, otherwise it’s easy to let the “monthly” membership fee slip to the back of your mind as more of a sunk cost.

      Thanks for sharing, John! 💪

      Reply
  6. I use sticky notes to help me get things done because I have so much going on around me at work and my side hustle. So I have sticky notes at work for work issues, and at home to remind me what I need to get done in regard to my side hustle.

    Reply
  7. I use a fixed schedule approach to productivity and put concrete time limits on doing essential work. It forces me to prioritize and prevents nice but not necessary work to bleed in to my day. It takes ongoing refinement, but so far it’s been the most reliable approach.

    Reply
  8. My main ones:
    1. Eisenhower matrix, then:
    2. Schedule the tasks for the week.
    3. Maximise habits that increase energy levels and minimise those that reduce energy levels (limiting email and putting phone on “do not disturb” is included, nutrition, sufficient sleep, avoiding toxic “friends”, eliminating coffee, meditating are also included).

    Reply
    • I’m a HUGE fan of using the Eisenhower Matrix to prioritize tasks (to read/learn more: http://www.eisenhower.me/eisenhower-matrix/)

      And the focus on rewarding habits that increase your energy levels is smart too.. that’s something I’ve been experimenting more with doing, myself. What kinds of rewards/incentives do you give yourself to encourage those energy-creating activities?

      Reply
  9. I have a few!

    1. For whatever reason, I’m in the ZONE first thing in the morning, so right when I wake up (between 5 and 6am), I start grinding.

    2. I’m obsessed with optimizing my health. I’m never tired, always full of energy, and never sick. I won’t let anything compromise my health

    3. I’m always doing a little bit of work on 100 things. Some work out, some don’t, but I’m constantly putting out feelers and then patient enough to just wait and humble enough to know when to let go.

    Hope that helps!

    Reply
    • You sound like superwoman! 🙂

      What are some of the ways you focus on staying healthy/in good physical shape? I’m a big believer that keeping that part of your life/psyche in line will translate an incalculable number of benefits over to your ability to be more productive.

      Reply
  10. Well as graphics,animator and social media junkie I have a lot of small tasks to accomplish even some that come unscheduled for..
    To improve my productivity I always break my day into 3 parts, get my notebook and write down the tasks at hand plus an optimsitic time frame. I try to score at least between 70-80%
    Each tym…in that way I can finish various tasks in a short amount of time

    Reply
  11. Well, I wake up between 6 and 7 a.m., eat some fast carbs and head to the crossfit box. I try to focus on one main task for the day, so my day-plan is one major task, 3 less important tasks and several (usually 5-7) least important. That helps me focus on what’s most important during the day. I also organize my work in chunks – 40-45 minutes work, 15-20 minute breaks during which I just listen to music, or walk in the neighborhood. Evenings are usually for reading, or i just watch some sports – NHL/NFL.

    Reply
  12. My productivity hack is using Outlook as much as possible. Since my work is often team-based, I schedule Outlook meeting reminders for shared tasks — when we need to pull a list of customers, when team members should be phone banking, etc. — so we’re all aware of our shared project deadlines. I also use Outlook calendar to schedule in time to write or work on chunks of big projects. This way, I’m reminded of the deadline and I block off time that can’t get eaten up by a meeting. Lastly, I use reply flags in Outlook Inbox to follow up on tasks via email, so I can read through my emails quickly and then respond based on priority/deadline throughout the day/week.

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  13. Hey Ryan,
    The big game changer for me last year was turning off all notifications on my phone. That way, I have to manually go check things (such as email or social media) at a set time.

    I also put my phone out of site and only check it after the timer goes off if I’m using that method…I’ll set for 30 or 60 minute increments depending on what I’m working on.

    Starting and ending the day with at least 3 things to be grateful for has also helped tremendously!

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  14. Listening to business podcasts on my commute.

    I typically drive 1-3 hours each way to work each day (my day job). So using that time to get good ideas for blog posts, website revamps, and other ideas makes that time productive.

    Also it makes the time fly by when I’m in the “podcast zone” so that I don’t mind the commute as much as I would if I didn’t have that available to me.

    When I had a shorter 30 minute commute I would also listen to podcasts when I’d go on a run. I use the post it note app on my phone to jot down ideas as they come to me and then look them over later when I need them.

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  15. Hi Ryan,

    Mine would be to first schedule your free time. Then schedule everything around that. I do that because if you schedule your whole day to be productive, you are more likely to quit because it’s something you don’t want to do. If you schedule to have free time, you have something to look forward to. Also, I believe having at least a time to have a break is good for you to refresh and get back to being productive!

    Dustin P.

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    • Great tip, Dustin thank you for sharing!

      Scheduling free time (for us workaholics) may not sound intuitive, but it’s a great way to stay sane, eh? Good reward system too as you mentioned. 😊

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  16. Hi,

    If I have lot of tasks to do first thing I turn off my phone and hide it away from my sight so I don’t get distracted . I also make sure not to eat junk food or stuff myself with unhealthy meals.And I make sure to woke up super early in the morning.

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  17. I wake up at 5:10am everyday. Am that organized woman who never runs out of toilet paper. So if I say I have to do this today ,I make sure I keep up.

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