1195: Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina on Time Management & Batching for Efficiency episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 20, 2019 · 9 MIN

1195: Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina on Time Management & Batching for Efficiency

from Optimal Living Daily - Personal Development and Self-Improvement · host Justin Malik

Steve Pavlina shares how to triple your personal productivity. Episode 1195: Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina on Time Management & Batching for Efficiency Steve Pavlina is widely recognized as one of the most successful personal development bloggers on the Internet, with his work attracting more than 100 million visits to his website, StevePavlina.com. He has written more than 1300 articles and recorded many audio programs on a broad range of self-help topics, including productivity, relationships, and spirituality. Steve has been quoted as an expert by the New York Times, USA Today, U.S. News & World Report, the Los Angeles Daily News, Self Magazine, The Guardian, and countless other publications. He's also a frequent guest on popular podcasts and radio shows. The original post is located here: https://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2005/03/triple-your-personal-productivity/ Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Steve Pavlina shares how to triple your personal productivity. Episode 1195: Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina on Time Management & Batching for Efficiency Steve Pavlina is widely recognized as one of the most successful personal development bloggers on the Internet, with his work attracting more than 100 million visits to his website, StevePavlina.com. He has written more than 1300 articles and recorded many audio programs on a broad range of self-help topics, including productivity, relationships, and spirituality. Steve has been quoted as an expert by the New York Times, USA Today, U.S. News & World Report, the Los Angeles Daily News, Self Magazine, The Guardian, and countless other publications. He's also a frequent guest on popular podcasts and radio shows. The original post is located here: https://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2005/03/triple-your-personal-productivity/ Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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This is Optimal Living Daily, Episode 1195, Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina of Steve Pavlina.com And I'm just a molic, the guy that reads articles and blogs to you every single day. Sometimes even when I'm sick, like today, I've been under the weather since I got back from Orlando, so bear with me. And with that to preserve my voice, let's get right to it and start optimizing your life. Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina of Steve Pavlina.com Have you ever had the experience of looking back on your week with the sinking feeling that you didn't get as much done as you'd hoped?

When building a successful career or a business of your own, your time is perhaps your most valuable asset, and your income is a direct result of how you spend your time. You cannot buy any more time than you're given, and the clock is always ticking. A few years ago, I discovered a simple system that allowed me to nearly triple my productivity, and in this article, I'll share some very practical ideas you can apply right away to increase your effectiveness without working any harder than you do now. Keep a detailed time log.

The first step to better managing your time is to find out how you're currently spending your time. Keeping a time log is a very effective way to do this, and after trying it for just one day, you'll immediately gain tremendous insight into where your time is actually going. The very active measuring is often enough to raise your unconscious habits into your consciousness, where you then have a chance to scrutinize and change them. Here's how to keep a time log.

Throughout your day, record the time whenever you start or stop any activity. Consider using a stopwatch to just record time intervals for each activity. You can do this during only your working time or throughout your entire day. At the end of the day, sort all the time chunks into general categories and find out what percentage of your time is being spent on each type of activity.

If you want to be thorough, do this for a week and calculate the percentage of your total time that you spent on each type of activity. Be as detailed as possible. Note how much time you spent on email, reading news groups, web surfing, phone calls, eating, going to the bathroom, et cetera. If you get up out of your chair, it probably means you need to make an entry in your time log.

I typically end up with 50 to 100 log entries per day. You may be surprised to discover you're spending only a small fraction of your working time doing what you consider to be actual work. Studies have shown that the average office worker does only 1.5 hours of actual work per day. The rest of the time is spent socializing, taking coffee breaks, eating, engaging in non-business communication, shuffling papers, and doing lots of other non-work tasks.

The average full-time office worker doesn't even start doing real work until 11 a.m. and begins to wind down around 3.30 p.m. Analyze your results. The first time I kept the time log, I only finished 15 hours worth of real work in a week, where I spent about 60 hours in my office.

Even though I was technically about twice as productive as the average office worker, I was still disturbed by the results. Where did those other 45 hours go? My time log laid it all out for me, showing me all the time drains I wasn't consciously aware of, checking email too often. Excessive perfectionism doing tasks that didn't need to be done, over reading the news, taking too much time for meals, so coming to preventable interruptions, et cetera.

Calculate your personal efficiency ratio. When I realized that I spent 60 hours at the office, but only completed 15 hours of actual work within that time, I started asking myself some interesting questions. My income and my sense of accomplishment depended only on those 15 hours, not on the total amount of time I spent at the office. So I decided to begin recording my daily efficiency ratio as the amount of time I spent on actual work, divided by the total amount of time I spent in my office.

While it certainly bothered me that I was only working 25% of the time initially, I also realized it would be extremely foolish to simply work longer hours. Here's the formula, efficiency ratio equals time doing real work divided by time spent at work. Reduce your work hours to force and increase in efficiency. If you ever tried to discipline yourself to do something you weren't really motivated to do, you most likely failed.

That was naturally the result I experienced when I tried to discipline myself to work harder. In fact, trying harder actually demotivated me and drove my efficiency ratio even lower. So I reluctantly decided to try the opposite approach. The next day I would only allow myself to put in 5 hours total at the office, and the rest of the day I wouldn't allow myself to work at all.

Well, an interesting thing happened, as I'm sure you can imagine. My brain must have gotten the idea that working time was a scarce commodity, because I worked almost the entire 5 hours straight and got an efficiency ratio of over 90%. I continued this experiment for the rest of the week, and ended up getting about 25 hours of work done with only 30 hours total spent in my office, for an efficiency ratio of over 80%, so I was able to reduce my weekly working time by 30 hours, while also getting 10 more hours of real work done. If your time log shows your efficiency ratio to be on the low side, try severely limiting your total amount of working time for a day, and see what happens.

Once your brain realizes that working time is scarce, you suddenly become a lot more efficient, because you have to be. When you have tight time constraints, you will usually find a way to get your work done, but when you have all the time in the world, it's too easy to be inefficient. Gradually increase work hours while maintaining peak efficiency. Over a period of a few weeks, I was able to keep my efficiency ratio above 80% while gradually increasing my total weekly office time.

I've been able to maintain this for many years now, and I commonly get about 40 hours of real work done every week, while only spending about 45 total hours in my office. I've learned that this is ideal for me. If I try to put in more time at the office, then my productivity drops off rapidly. The interesting thing is that the system that allowed me to optimize my effectiveness at work, also created a tremendous amount of balance in all other areas of my life.

Even though I was able to use this approach to triple my business productivity, I still gained plenty of time to pursue personal interests. Time logging is the intelligent choice to ensure optimal productivity without increasing your hours. But time logging need only be done periodically to provide these benefits. I do it for one week every three to six months, and over the years it has made a huge difference for me.

I was providing me with new distinctions. If I go too many months without time logging, my productivity gradually drops as I fall back into unconscious time-wasting habits. You'll probably find the desire to do that your gut feelings about your productivity are closely related to how much real work you actually get done. When you feel your productivity is lower than you'd like, raise your awareness via time logging, measure your efficiency ratio, and then optimize your efficiency to boost your productivity back up where it belongs.

Time logging is a high leverage activity that takes very little time and effort to implement, but the long-term payoff is tremendous. You just listened to the post titled, Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina of StevePavlina.com. I'm gonna get some rest, hope you're feeling better than I am, and I'll see you tomorrow, where your optimal life awaits.

MG Show MG Show The MG Show, hosted by Jeffrey Pedersen and Shannon Townsend, is a leading alternative media platform dedicated to uncovering the truth behind today’s most pressing political issues. Launched in 2019, the show has grown exponentially, offering unfiltered insights, comprehensive research, and real-time analysis. With a commitment to independent journalism and factual integrity, the MG Show empowers its audience with knowledge and encourages active participation in the political discourse. Breaking News Show | eTurboNews Juergen Thomas Steinmetz News is relevant to the global travel and tourism industry, human rights and global issues.Breaking news when it happens and only from the source. Eat to Live Jenna Fuhrman, Dr. Fuhrman Our health is our most precious gift and smart nutrition can change your life. Each month, join Dr. Fuhrman and his daughter, Jenna Fuhrman as they discuss important topics in the world of nutrition. Eat to Live will change the way you eat and think about food. French Your Way Jessica: Native French teacher founder of French Your Way Boost your French listening skills and test your comprehension with this one of a kind series of podcasts. Get the chance to listen to a real conversation between native speakers talking at normal speed AND customise your learning experience through carefully designed sets of questions (2 levels of difficulty) available for download at www.frenchvoicespodcast.com. All interviews also come with the transcript. French teacher Jessica interviews native speakers of French from around the world who share a bit of their life and passion. Where else would you meet in one same place a French yoga teacher based in Melbourne, a soap manufacturer from Provence, or a couple cycling around the world?

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This episode is 9 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 20, 2019.

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Steve Pavlina shares how to triple your personal productivity. Episode 1195: Triple Your Personal Productivity by Steve Pavlina on Time Management & Batching for Efficiency Steve Pavlina is widely recognized as one of the most successful personal...

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