Chris Bailey. The Productivity Project: Accomplishing More by Managing Your Time, Attention, and Energy Better. Random House Canada. New York. 2016.
Bailey's work reinforces and expands on a seminar class from 2009 Einblau Associates (Manage Energy and Get Organized) and Loehr and Schwartz (The Power of Full Engagement: Managing Energy, Not Time, Is the Key to High Performance and Personal Renewal). Einblau's latest title: Gain Time by Managing Energy. Bailey adds in attention as a third key factor for productivity.
Bailey includes a brief takeaway point and estimated time-to-read at the start of each chapter to help us fit our reading into our schedules. We also find easy-to-apply exercises throughout the book to experiment with what Bailey has discovered. Another worthy reference book we can use to refine and tune our performance.
Ideas valuable for me:
- Accomplishment underlies productivity
- Accomplishment depends on how you use your attention and energy as well as your time
- Accomplishment depends on how you replenish your attention and energy
- Improving your productivity depends on connecting to your values
- Values drive goals
- Daily intention drives daily action
- "Would I regret doing more or less of "this"?
- Some of the tasks you need to do will lead you to accomplish more than others in the same amount of time
- Rate your tasks on meaningfulness for you and impact on your work
- We only get a limited amount of time to budget
- Rule of 3
- at the start of each day, visualize your answer at the end of the day to: "When the day is over, what three things will I want to have accomplished?"
- at the start of each week, check your anticipated answer to similar question for the week
- Manage our attention
- Understand our own personal "biological prime-time" (highest-energy time block)
- Reserve biological prime-time for high-impact tasks and protect that time from distractions
- Procrastination has triggering properties (minimize these)
- Boring
- Frustrating
- Difficult
- Ambiguous or Unstructured
- Lacking in personal meaning
- Lacking in intrinsic rewards (less fun or engaging)
- Create a procrastination list of tasks (take one from that list to substitute for the task you want to procrastinate)
- List the costs of putting off the task
- Remember any task we put off now gives our future self more tasks to do -- get familiar with our future self
- use an app to see our future face
- send a letter to our future self
- create a future memory - visualize a more productive version of ourself
- Control Internet distraction
- We must manage our energy and attention at least as well as we manage our time
- Managing our time becomes important only after we understand how much energy and focus you will have throughout the day and define what you want to accomplish
- Limit the time you allow for a task to boost how much energy and attention you invest in it
- Group your maintenance tasks to a single day and allow room for imperfection in these repetitive tasks
- Set strict limits on time for your support tasks
- Consider "How much would I be willing to pay in order to buy back one hour of my life?"
- Practice brain dumps (David Allen, Ready for Anything and Getting Things Done)
- Use lists to help
- worry list - items to worry about
- 'hot spot' list - J.D. Meier
- projects list, matched to 'hot spots'
- accomplishments list
- 'Tilt' our effort to adjust day to day, using key questions (10 question in total)
- What do we need to schedule or do next week?
- What are some unresolved issues we are having in each area?
- What obstacles will get in the way of our goals next week?
- Are we going in the right direction with all our commitments?
- Are there any commitments we need to add or remove? Expand or shrink?
- What did we knock out of the park last week?
- Example 'hot spots' groups
- Mind
- Body
- Emotions
- Career
- Finances
- Relationships
- Fun
- Use our brains in both brain modes for periods throughout the day or week: focus, wandering (daydreaming)
- Understand our attention
- Central Executive
- Focus
- Awareness
- Strengthen our attention
- single-tasking and simple daily meditation
- filter distractions intentionally
- distractions cost 25 minutes to recover
- Do just one thing, and notice when we wander
- work on tasks using pomodoro technique
- practise focusing on conference call during call
- practise listening when you are with others
- read books
- eat slowly while only eating
- Practise pausing to observe your breath at moments throughout the day, exercise 'microintentions' to pause 'autopilot', such as
- let our phone ring 3 times before answering
- pause when we finish writing our email before we send
- be present when walking between rooms
- Understand our own personal "biological prime-time" (highest-energy time block)
- Manage our Energy
- Mind our food and water
- Eat more unprocessed foods
- Notice when we are full and stop eating
- Drink enough water each day to feel well
- Remember that "caffeine borrows energy from later in the day" and "alcohol borrows energy from tomorrow"
- Sleep enough
- create a nighttime ritual
- limit our blue light in the evening
- use naps
- keep our sleeping areas neutrally cool, quiet and dark
- remember caffeine can take 8 to 14 hours to start leaving our bodies
- Physical activity replenishes our attention and energy -- our focus
- Mind our food and water
- Happiness and productivity are interlinked (9 ways to keep "happy"), such as
- take more breaks -- such as 15 minutes per hour
- journal daily about a positive experience we had
- ask ourselves for advice
- Remember everyone experiences negative self-talk and that it's fiction