00:00:00Hey friends, welcome back to the channel.
00:00:01So today we're gonna be talking about time management.
00:00:03Now time management is remarkably simple,
00:00:06but we tend to over-complicate it.
00:00:08And there are a handful of simple habits
00:00:10that you can incorporate into your life
00:00:12that will just save you absolutely gallons of time.
00:00:14And if you can consistently do these simple habits,
00:00:16you'll be amazed as to how quickly they can stack up.
00:00:18And then it almost feels as if you're playing a video game,
00:00:20but with the cheat codes turned on.
00:00:22And this is important, right?
00:00:23Because time is literally our single most valuable
00:00:25non-renewable resource.
00:00:27We can always make more money,
00:00:28but we can never make more time.
00:00:29Okay, let's start with the calendar.
00:00:31Now, back when I first started medical school,
00:00:33I didn't really use a calendar for anything.
00:00:35I would just sort of look at my timetable
00:00:37on the PDF or on my phone or whatever.
00:00:39And I'd know exactly what lectures I have
00:00:40or what supervisions I have.
00:00:41Now this was a real problem
00:00:42because I wasn't using a calendar.
00:00:43So I was just forgetting all of this stuff
00:00:45and I'd forget to look at the thing.
00:00:47I wouldn't have any notifications turned on.
00:00:49And that's basically like level zero
00:00:50where you don't use a calendar for anything.
00:00:52And then you graduate to level one
00:00:53where you start scheduling stuff into a calendar.
00:00:55If there is an appointment that requires you to be somewhere,
00:00:58you then put it in a calendar
00:00:59and you look at the calendar regularly
00:01:01to know what you've got scheduled.
00:01:02Now, immediately this level one of using a calendar
00:01:04immediately adds a lot of time management skills to your life
00:01:07because now you're not forgetting these things
00:01:09and you don't have to use your brain as a storage medium
00:01:11for these random events.
00:01:13You can just delegate the remembering of these events
00:01:15to the calendar on your phone, for example.
00:01:16And so that's very good.
00:01:17But then level two is really where a lot of the gains are had
00:01:19and level two is where you intentionally schedule things
00:01:22into your calendar,
00:01:23even if they're appointments with yourself.
00:01:25So for example, right now I've scheduled into my calendar
00:01:27that I've got a block for filming this video.
00:01:29That's an appointment with myself.
00:01:30And this is helpful because what it does
00:01:32is that it separates the planning
00:01:33of how we're gonna spend our time
00:01:35with the doing of how we spend our time.
00:01:37And I sometimes like to think of this
00:01:38as the pilot and the plane.
00:01:40The pilot is deciding kind of where the plane is going
00:01:42and then the plane is just executing and doing the stuff.
00:01:44And so usually at the start of the day
00:01:46or at the end of the week,
00:01:47I will time block my following week to figure out,
00:01:50okay, cool, in this upcoming week,
00:01:52where are the blocks that I wanna go to the gym?
00:01:53Where are the blocks I wanna film videos?
00:01:55Anytime an event comes in
00:01:56like dinner with some friends on a Tuesday night,
00:01:58it goes straight into the calendar
00:01:59because as long as I'm blocking the calendar
00:02:01in this level two mode effectively,
00:02:03it means I'm not gonna forget what's going on.
00:02:05And it means I'm also gonna be a little bit more intentional
00:02:07with how I use my time.
00:02:08And then the really fun aspect of the calendar habit
00:02:10comes at level three,
00:02:11where you start blocking out what does your ideal day
00:02:14or your ideal week look like.
00:02:16Now you might've seen me talk about
00:02:17this ideal week strategy before,
00:02:18but chances are you're still probably not doing it.
00:02:20And I get loads of emails almost every day from people
00:02:22being like, oh my God, I discovered your ideal week method.
00:02:25And then I tried it and it was actually really helpful.
00:02:27So if you're not yet doing the ideal week method,
00:02:29would 100% recommend it.
00:02:30Oh, and by the way, if you wanna get your own template
00:02:32for this ideal week thing, it's sick.
00:02:33I've got my free one linked down below
00:02:35in the video description.
00:02:36You just click the link and I'll send it to you for free.
00:02:38So check it out.
00:02:38But essentially the idea is you create a new Google calendar
00:02:41called your ideal week and you block out
00:02:43what does an ideal ordinary week in your life look like?
00:02:45And so where are the filming blocks in my case,
00:02:47like blocks for work?
00:02:48When do you wanna have lunch?
00:02:49When do you wanna wake up?
00:02:50When do you wanna go to the gym?
00:02:51When do you wanna do date night?
00:02:52When do you wanna see your friends?
00:02:53When do you wanna see your family?
00:02:55And then where are the empty blocks?
00:02:55Like if you wanna take guitar lessons or piano lessons
00:02:57or learn to code, where is that gonna fit in?
00:02:59And the way I think of this is that you can look
00:03:00at someone's ideal week to see what are their intentions.
00:03:03And then you can look at their actual calendar
00:03:05to see what's their reality.
00:03:06And managing a time effectively is bridging this gap
00:03:08between what we intend to do and what we actually do.
00:03:11And so whatever level you're at with your time blocking
00:03:13and with your calendar, I would suggest see what you can do
00:03:15to level up just a little bit.
00:03:17And if you can get to the point
00:03:18where you have your ideal week and broadly,
00:03:20it matches your actual week.
00:03:21Oh, now you've really supercharged your time management
00:03:24and unlocked a whole new level of meaningful productivity.
00:03:26All right, habit number two,
00:03:27I'm gonna call it the feel good productivity habit
00:03:29because that is the title of my new book,
00:03:31"Feel Good Productivity,
00:03:32"How to Do More of What Matters to You."
00:03:33That'll be linked down below if you wanna check it out.
00:03:35But really the core thesis of the book
00:03:36and this is really the habit that this whole book is about
00:03:39is how do I find a way to make my work generate energy
00:03:43rather than drain my energy?
00:03:44'Cause often when we think we have a time management problem,
00:03:47we don't actually have a time management problem,
00:03:49we have an energy management problem.
00:03:50Like if you think about your life,
00:03:51you probably do have some time
00:03:53that you're maybe not using intentionally,
00:03:54scrolling TikTok or Instagram
00:03:56or watching random YouTube videos, for example.
00:03:58And you're probably doing those things
00:03:59because there's something better you want to be doing
00:04:00while you're scrolling TikTok,
00:04:02but you feel like you don't have the energy.
00:04:03But a lot of us have to do things
00:04:04that we don't necessarily want to do.
00:04:06You might have a job, you might have studies,
00:04:07you might have kids that you have to look after
00:04:09and maybe in some moments you don't wanna do those things,
00:04:11but you have to do those things.
00:04:12And so the real challenge is how do we find a way
00:04:14to make everything that we do
00:04:15a little bit more energizing rather than draining?
00:04:18And there's a bunch of strategies I talk about in the book,
00:04:19but the top level broad one
00:04:21and why this book is called "Feel Good Productivity"
00:04:23is because there is so much evidence that feeling good,
00:04:25i.e. generating positive emotions
00:04:27is the thing that generates energy.
00:04:29And so the way I think of time management
00:04:30is like time management and like calendar blocking
00:04:33is like creating the container in my day.
00:04:36But then the energy is me filling that container
00:04:38with the stuff that I actually want to do.
00:04:40And if I have more energy
00:04:41because I've generated positive emotions
00:04:43in whatever I'm doing,
00:04:44then it means that I actually have the energy
00:04:45to be able to use my time
00:04:47in the most intentional way possible.
00:04:48Whereas I can time block the absolute living daylights
00:04:50out of my calendar.
00:04:51But if I don't have the energy,
00:04:52I'm not gonna do the thing.
00:04:53It's gonna be in the calendar,
00:04:53but I'm not actually gonna do it,
00:04:54which sort of defeats the purpose of the whole exercise.
00:04:56So if you're not asking yourself this question already,
00:04:58I would start asking it right now.
00:04:59What are the ways
00:05:00that you can make your work feel more energizing?
00:05:02Ask yourself, what is it that separates
00:05:04an energizing piece of work from a draining piece of work?
00:05:07And can you incorporate the energizers into the work itself?
00:05:10And this is exactly the strategies we talk about in the book.
00:05:14So you can check the book out if you like as well.
00:05:15By the way, if you're looking for another
00:05:16really effective strategy for managing your time,
00:05:18you might like to sign up to Morning Brew,
00:05:20who are very kindly sponsoring this video.
00:05:21And Morning Brew is essentially
00:05:22a completely free daily email newsletter
00:05:24that updates you on all of the interesting news
00:05:26in the world of business and finance and tech.
00:05:28And so if like me, you're interested in those topics,
00:05:30you might as well sign up to Morning Brew.
00:05:31It's free, it's really entertaining,
00:05:33and it gives you this news
00:05:34in an engaging and non boring way.
00:05:36For example, Morning Brew is how I'm personally
00:05:37keeping up to date with all the stuff going on with threads
00:05:40and figuring out like,
00:05:40is that a platform that we wanna get on?
00:05:42It's how I'm keeping up to date with the world of AI
00:05:44and seeing is there any interesting AI stuff
00:05:46that I can incorporate into my own business and my life
00:05:48to make me more productive, to help me use my time better?
00:05:50There's over 4 million professionals
00:05:52that read Morning Brew every single day.
00:05:54It is 100% free.
00:05:55It takes less than 10 seconds to sign up.
00:05:57And if you do sign up, it also helps support the channel.
00:05:59So there's no reason not to try it.
00:06:00So head over to the link in the video description
00:06:02or go to morningbrewdaily.com/ali
00:06:04and you can sign up completely for free
00:06:06and you can check it out.
00:06:06It's an absolutely sick newsletter.
00:06:08So thank you so much Morning Brew for sponsoring this video.
00:06:10But I wanna tell you now
00:06:10about my personal favorite way of doing this.
00:06:12And that is habit number three,
00:06:13which I call the adventure habit.
00:06:14Basically, the idea is at the start of every day,
00:06:17you wanna ask yourself,
00:06:18what is the most important task that I need to get done today?
00:06:22If you can focus your time and energy
00:06:23towards just that one important thing,
00:06:26it means that if you can do that 365 days of the year,
00:06:29you'll be absolutely sailing by the end of the year.
00:06:31And the key thing is to limit this thing to one,
00:06:33that there's only ever one important thing
00:06:35that you need to get done.
00:06:36And sort of the question in my mind is always like,
00:06:38okay, if I only accomplished one thing today,
00:06:41what is the thing that would make
00:06:42the biggest difference to my life?
00:06:43Now, sometimes this might be a work thing.
00:06:45It might be finishing a chapter of my book
00:06:46or it might be filming a video,
00:06:47but often it's not even a work thing.
00:06:49It's a life thing like calling my grandma
00:06:51or whatever the thing might be.
00:06:52But now I wanna tweak this slightly
00:06:53because that's sort of like old school,
00:06:55somewhat corporate terminology, the most important task.
00:06:57I don't really like thinking in terms of tasks
00:06:58'cause tasks make me feel as if I'm a slave to someone
00:07:01or actually I have control over my life.
00:07:02And even if I don't have control of my life,
00:07:04I prefer to think that I do have control over my life.
00:07:06And so instead of the way I phrase this is,
00:07:09what is today's adventure going to be?
00:07:11And in my mind, this phrasing of adventure is like the,
00:07:13oh, you know, this is the quest I've been barking on.
00:07:15This is like the cool thing I'm gonna do.
00:07:17What's today's adventure?
00:07:18And the first chapter of this book is called play.
00:07:20And it's all about how, you know,
00:07:22framing our work in the language of play
00:07:24actually brings out this whole positive emotion,
00:07:27this whole feel good vibe to our work.
00:07:29Even if, crucially,
00:07:30even if the work is really, really boring,
00:07:31you can convince yourself
00:07:32and you can sort of hack your mindset
00:07:34into believing that you're playing
00:07:36rather than you're sort of grinding away and working.
00:07:38So that's level one of doing this.
00:07:39Ask yourself, what's today's adventure gonna be?
00:07:41But then level two is where you give yourself
00:07:44a few optional side quests.
00:07:45But the idea is that like you can define your daily adventure
00:07:48and then up to three, ideally,
00:07:49we wanna limit it to three side quests
00:07:51that we wanna do that day as well.
00:07:53And so today, for example,
00:07:54my main adventure is filming this particular video,
00:07:56but then the side quests,
00:07:57I usually like to split up into work, health,
00:07:59and relationships just to make sure
00:08:00I've got a little bit of balance in my life.
00:08:02So my work side quest
00:08:03is I need to write an issue of my email newsletter.
00:08:05My health side quest is that I wanna go to the gym.
00:08:07And my relationship side quest
00:08:08is I've got date night with my girlfriend
00:08:09where we're gonna see Hamilton.
00:08:10It's gonna be good vibes.
00:08:12And that's it.
00:08:12Just doing those things.
00:08:13A, defining what's the most important task,
00:08:15which I like to frame as a daily adventure,
00:08:17but then B, defining three side quests
00:08:18in work, health, and relationships.
00:08:19But you can, you know, your mileage may vary.
00:08:21And on the days where I do that,
00:08:22I find like my time management is absolutely supercharged
00:08:25and I feel way more intentional with how I spend my time.
00:08:28But on days where it's like, I wake up in the morning,
00:08:29I rush into something,
00:08:30and I don't have that 10 minutes to think,
00:08:32to have a coffee and to think,
00:08:33what do I actually want to do with my time today?
00:08:35I find myself squandering all of my time.
00:08:38Next up, we have the focus habit.
00:08:39Now there was a really interesting study
00:08:40that I came across it in Harvard, Harvard Business Review.
00:08:43And it was basically a study where they looked at employees
00:08:46throughout their workday.
00:08:47And they found that employees on average,
00:08:49waste around 22 to 28% of their workday on distractions.
00:08:54And they found that the main reason they do that
00:08:55is through task switching.
00:08:57So for example, if you're working
00:08:58and you're trying to do a thing,
00:08:59but then you get a Slack notification
00:09:00or you get like a WhatsApp notification
00:09:02or someone interrupts you for a thing,
00:09:03it like takes ages to get back into the flow
00:09:05of what you were doing.
00:09:06And in an average workday for the average office worker,
00:09:09those interruptions make up like 22 to 28%
00:09:12of the actual workday.
00:09:13And that is significant.
00:09:14That means over the course of a year,
00:09:16we are wasting three months, an entire quarter,
00:09:18three months of our life on interruption.
00:09:20And over the course of 40 years, which is like a career,
00:09:23we are wasting a whole decade,
00:09:25wasting a whole 10 years of our life through interruptions.
00:09:28If you take the single study and extrapolate out,
00:09:29obviously with all the caveats associated with that,
00:09:31being able to focus without interruptions
00:09:33is an absolute superpower and is another massive lever
00:09:35that we can use to save tonnes and tonnes of time
00:09:37and to be way better at intentionally using our time
00:09:40and our energy.
00:09:40Now there are some interruptions that are obviously good.
00:09:42I call these welcome distractions.
00:09:43Again, I talk about them in the book,
00:09:44if you would like to check it out.
00:09:46I'm gonna stop plugging the book now.
00:09:47I call these welcome distractions.
00:09:49This is like, you know, when I was at university,
00:09:51I would always leave my door open
00:09:52because if a friend comes along and wants to interrupt me
00:09:55while I'm doing my work, honestly, I would rather they did.
00:09:57Like the point of university is to, you know,
00:10:00the friends you meet and the social experiences that you have
00:10:02and work is sort of a side effect.
00:10:03And so even if I was a little bit inefficient with my work
00:10:06and writing an essay, for example,
00:10:08it was a welcome distraction
00:10:09because I would rather my friend interrupted me.
00:10:11Similarly, I've had emails from parents who say that like,
00:10:13you know, when they're focusing on their work,
00:10:14if the kid interrupts you and wants to play,
00:10:16you play with the kid because at some point
00:10:19they're gonna stop wanting to play with you
00:10:20and you're gonna regret the time where, you know,
00:10:22they wanted to play, but you were like, no, I need to work.
00:10:24And so there are some distractions that are welcome,
00:10:25but the question I like to ask myself is,
00:10:27okay, how do I tune out the unwelcome distractions?
00:10:29While filming this video, for example,
00:10:31my phone is in my pocket, it's on a focus mode.
00:10:32I've turned off all the notifications on my computer
00:10:34so that I don't get derailed from filming this video
00:10:37by something that's popped up on Slack, for example.
00:10:39Similarly, back when I was writing my book,
00:10:40I would often go to a coffee shop
00:10:42because being in a coffee shop would ensure
00:10:44that my team is not interrupting me with stuff.
00:10:46It's nice, it's social vibes,
00:10:47we've got the team in the house right now,
00:10:48but it's hard to get any writing done
00:10:49when people are like around and then I feel like,
00:10:51ooh, Tintin's over there, let me just throw an idea at him.
00:10:54Again, there's a bunch of stuff around
00:10:55how changing our environment actually makes it feel
00:10:57more playful to do our work.
00:10:58So it's nice going to different coffee shops,
00:11:00but it means I'm not being interrupted by the team,
00:11:02which it means I can actually focus
00:11:04and get my deep work done.
00:11:05All right, habit number five is the rapid action habit.
00:11:07Now there's a really nice quote from Alex Hormozi,
00:11:09which is to the effect of intelligence
00:11:11is how quickly you can change your behavior
00:11:13given new information.
00:11:14And so one habit that we can use to save a lot of time
00:11:16is how quickly do we respond to new information
00:11:19and make changes in our life.
00:11:20Obviously this can go too far.
00:11:22You don't wanna be a sort of constantly going
00:11:24from one thing to the next, to the next, to the next,
00:11:25just because you get a new piece of information.
00:11:27But generally, more often than not,
00:11:28most people spend too much time being stuck
00:11:30in the actions that they've always done.
00:11:32And even if they do get a new piece of information,
00:11:34they will take ages to act on that new piece of information.
00:11:37I notice it's like I read a lot of books
00:11:38and listen to a lot of podcasts,
00:11:39and often I'll come across something that's interesting.
00:11:41And sometimes I'll act on that thing immediately.
00:11:44I feel the inspiration to, I don't know,
00:11:45start journaling, for example,
00:11:47if I've listened to an episode with Ryder Carroll,
00:11:49who's the inventor of the bullet journal method.
00:11:50I interviewed him, for example, on my podcast,
00:11:52and I felt super inspired to do bullet journaling
00:11:54in a more intentional way.
00:11:55And so I acted on that immediately.
00:11:56And that was great, that saved me so much time.
00:11:58And then that made a big difference to my life
00:12:00in terms of time management as well.
00:12:01But I've had so many other moments
00:12:02where I've listened to something in a podcast,
00:12:04I thought, "Ooh, I wanna do that thing."
00:12:06Or I've read something in a book and I thought,
00:12:07"Ooh, that's kind of interesting."
00:12:08And then I've waited, I've delayed action.
00:12:11And it's like the thing with the forgetting curve.
00:12:12I've talked about this in my videos
00:12:13about how to study for exams.
00:12:15We tend to forget everything
00:12:16over a sort of exponential half-life decay.
00:12:19And so you might have an idea,
00:12:20you might've listened to something in a podcast,
00:12:22but if you don't act on it there and then,
00:12:23or as soon as possible,
00:12:25or have a way to capture it into a to-do list
00:12:27or something that you actually follow,
00:12:28then that learning that knowledge
00:12:30ends up being completely wasted
00:12:31because you will completely forget
00:12:33that you've learned the thing.
00:12:34And so the habit here,
00:12:34and in a way this video is just notes to myself,
00:12:37stuff that I wanna try and incorporate more of
00:12:39into my own life.
00:12:40To have more of a bias to action.
00:12:42When I hear something or when I learn something
00:12:44or read something, to apply it to my life rapidly
00:12:46rather than really slowly.
00:12:47And that brings us on to habit number six,
00:12:49which is the experimental habit.
00:12:50Now, when you learn all these things,
00:12:51one of the great ways that you can use
00:12:53to be more intentional,
00:12:54again, with how you spend your time,
00:12:55is to treat these different things that you're doing
00:12:57as experiments in your life.
00:12:59And so for me, for example,
00:13:00I'm constantly looking for ways to experiment on myself,
00:13:02to find more ways of being more productive
00:13:04in a way that's meaningful and enjoyable and sustainable,
00:13:07to find better ways of organizing my life
00:13:08and managing my time and generating more energy.
00:13:10And every time I come across one of these things,
00:13:12I will think of it in my mind.
00:13:13I say, okay, I'm doing an experiment on myself
00:13:15and I'm gonna experiment with this productivity strategy
00:13:18like the ideal week.
00:13:19And I'm gonna experiment with it for a week or two
00:13:21and I'm gonna see how it feels.
00:13:23And the feeling bit is important here
00:13:24because like I think in this world of productivity bros,
00:13:26we can often ignore our emotions quite a lot.
00:13:29And this is something that I still struggle with.
00:13:31I'm actually seeing a therapist about this.
00:13:32We're trying to work out
00:13:33how I can connect more to my feelings.
00:13:34But generally, the stuff that makes us productive
00:13:36is the stuff that feels good.
00:13:37It is about feelings.
00:13:38It's not just about living in the mind.
00:13:39It's about being in the body and being the heart as well.
00:13:42And so if you find a strategy,
00:13:44you can A assess what difference did it cognitively make
00:13:47to how you're managing your time or how productive you are,
00:13:49but also how did it feel?
00:13:50And this is why I don't really like the narrative
00:13:51of discipline particularly,
00:13:52or the narrative of grit or like determination,
00:13:55persistence, all that kind of stuff.
00:13:57'Cause yes, I get intellectually the why it makes sense,
00:14:00but it doesn't feel particularly good.
00:14:01Like if I tell myself, I'm gonna go to the gym,
00:14:03even when I don't feel like it because I'm disciplined,
00:14:05it doesn't feel good.
00:14:06I get to the gym, I'm a bit miserable.
00:14:07And I'm like, you know, what am I doing?
00:14:09Like what the hell is the point?
00:14:10Whereas if I can find a way to do the gym thing
00:14:12in a way that feels good and run experiments on myself
00:14:15to be like, okay, how can I experiment
00:14:16with my workout at the gym?
00:14:17Can I experiment with low rep high weight
00:14:19and see how that feels?
00:14:20Can I experiment with CrossFit,
00:14:22which is something I'm trying?
00:14:23Can I join yoga classes and seeing if that feels good
00:14:25as a way of staying fit?
00:14:26Like, what are the experiments I can run in my life
00:14:28so that I can see how it can be more intentional
00:14:30with how I use my time,
00:14:31but also so that I can make sure
00:14:32that it actually feels good while I'm doing the thing.
00:14:34'Cause generally over the longterm,
00:14:36the stuff that we do consistently
00:14:37is the stuff that feels good.
00:14:39The stuff that we do inconsistently
00:14:40is the stuff that feels bad.
00:14:42And people ask me all the time, you know,
00:14:43with growing a YouTube channel or growing a business,
00:14:45Ali, how do you stay consistent with this stuff?
00:14:47And my answer is honestly, it's just like,
00:14:48find a way to make it feel good.
00:14:50If making videos or running your business
00:14:51or like learning to code or learning a language
00:14:53feels terrible and you're having to force yourself,
00:14:56you're having to use discipline every single time,
00:14:58unless you're David Goggins and you're freaking superhuman.
00:15:01- It never gets any easier.
00:15:02You gotta get harder.
00:15:04- It's just, it's not gonna work.
00:15:06Like, I don't know.
00:15:07Maybe it works for you, but I suspect probably not.
00:15:09So I'm all about this whole feel good stuff.
00:15:11Run experiments on yourself,
00:15:12trying to find a way to make stuff feel good.
00:15:14And if you can do that,
00:15:15then you'd be way better at managing your time
00:15:16because you'll be way more consistent with stuff
00:15:18because the thing actually feels good.
00:15:19Okay, apologies for the rant there.
00:15:21I feel very passionate about this feel good stuff.
00:15:23Some people would say I'm soft, but oh well.
00:15:25Next up we have habit number seven,
00:15:26which is the alignment habit.
00:15:28You know, if you imagine a car and you wanna get to,
00:15:30I don't know, let's say I'm in London right now
00:15:32and I wanna get to Cambridge,
00:15:33which is sort of like north-ish of London.
00:15:35If I start off in London and I'm like 5% deviated,
00:15:39I'm not gonna end up in Cambridge.
00:15:40I'm gonna end up in Oxford,
00:15:41which would be a really grim place to end up.
00:15:43And now that's a total waste of time.
00:15:44It's like I've driven and I might be driving really fast,
00:15:46but I'm in a direction that's misaligned
00:15:49with where I actually want to get to.
00:15:51And so the alignment habit is a fantastic way
00:15:53of being more intentional with how we use our time.
00:15:55And it essentially involves fairly regularly reflecting
00:15:58on what do you actually want?
00:16:00What goals do you have?
00:16:01What direction are you going in?
00:16:02What is the destination that you're aiming for?
00:16:04The way I personally do this is that every year
00:16:06I set some goals for the end of the year.
00:16:08I'm not fully wedded to the goals.
00:16:09I don't have to be wedded to ending up in Cambridge.
00:16:12But the point of setting a goal
00:16:13is that it creates a direction that you can start to move in.
00:16:16And then every quarter, every three months,
00:16:18I'll review those goals with my CEO coach.
00:16:20You can do this with a friend
00:16:21if you don't have a CEO coach, for example.
00:16:22But I review those goals every three months
00:16:24and then I decide A, is this still a goal that I want to have?
00:16:27And if so, B, what are the things I'm gonna do
00:16:29over the next three months to work towards that goal?
00:16:31On top of that, I also try my best to do a weekly review.
00:16:34This is my weekly review.
00:16:34So number one, review the previous week's accomplishments
00:16:37and challenges, which is nice.
00:16:38Look ahead to the next two weeks and see what's coming up.
00:16:40Three, revisit your goals to ensure they're still aligned
00:16:43with your priorities.
00:16:44This is the important one.
00:16:45This is the alignment one.
00:16:46So basically in my quarterly goals,
00:16:47I do it in just a single Google doc,
00:16:48which I have bookmarked on Chrome, the web browser.
00:16:51And when I'm doing my weekly review,
00:16:52I will just look at that Google doc
00:16:53and remind myself, oh yeah, these are the goals that I'd set.
00:16:56Are these goals still aligned with my priorities
00:16:58and how I'm choosing to spend my time and energy?
00:17:00I have review and update my to-do list, ensure I'm track.
00:17:02This is fun.
00:17:03I choose my top three outcomes for the upcoming week.
00:17:05If the week ahead was gonna be a great week,
00:17:06what would be the top three things I'd accomplish?
00:17:08And then I schedule time in my calendar
00:17:09to work towards those outcomes.
00:17:10And again, this speaks to habit number one,
00:17:12the idea that blocks of time in the calendar are containers
00:17:15and we can fill those containers with our energy,
00:17:17but we have to have those containers in the first place
00:17:19to do the things that we want to do.
00:17:20But it's really item number three and item number five here
00:17:22that are like the alignment ones.
00:17:24Item three in particular,
00:17:25because it's all very easy to set goals
00:17:27at the start of the year,
00:17:27or even at the start of the quarter,
00:17:29and then completely forget that we've set those goals.
00:17:31Now again, you don't have to have this all figured out.
00:17:33You don't have to know what your 50 year plan is
00:17:35to be able to align your actions with your priorities.
00:17:38All you need to do is ask yourself,
00:17:39within health and work in relationships,
00:17:41what are the three things,
00:17:43one to three things that I wanna do in the next three months?
00:17:45Like, what are they?
00:17:46Let me just make a list.
00:17:47I mean, you know what?
00:17:47Let me start working towards those things.
00:17:49And as I'm working towards them,
00:17:50I'm assessing how do I feel about the thing?
00:17:52And finally, we come to habit number eight,
00:17:54which is the delegation habit.
00:17:56Now this is another big one.
00:17:57It wouldn't necessarily apply to everyone,
00:17:59but I think everyone can benefit
00:18:00from learning about delegation.
00:18:02Essentially, what are the things that you're doing
00:18:04that A, you just don't need to do,
00:18:06and therefore we should just stop doing?
00:18:07Or B, what are the things that you're doing
00:18:09that could be delegated to someone else?
00:18:11Now in my case, I have a team and an assistant.
00:18:13And so I can in fact delegate things to people in my life.
00:18:16But even in your personal life,
00:18:17there are some things that you can think about.
00:18:18Like the way I think of delegation is
00:18:21what is my personal time worth
00:18:23in terms of like an hourly rate?
00:18:25And B, is there anything that I absolutely hate doing
00:18:28that I could delegate for less than that hourly rate?
00:18:31So back when I was working as a doctor,
00:18:32my hourly rate was about, I think like 14 pounds an hour.
00:18:35So if I bought something for three pound 50 on Amazon,
00:18:39but it would take me an hour out of my way
00:18:40to return the thing if I don't wanna keep the thing,
00:18:42is it worth me spending an hour to go to the post office
00:18:45to return this thing that cost me five pounds?
00:18:47Probably not because I value my time at 14 pounds an hour.
00:18:49These days, I value my time at way more
00:18:51than 14 pounds an hour.
00:18:52And so there's a huge amount of things that I can delegate.
00:18:54And actually my business ends up benefiting way more
00:18:56when the only things I'm doing are the things that A,
00:18:59I love to do, B, they give me energy,
00:19:01and C, that I'm really good at.
00:19:02Here's another big one, cleaning the house.
00:19:03Like again, depending, I'm gonna, caveat.
00:19:07All of this depends on how much disposable income you have.
00:19:09But assuming you have some amount of disposable income
00:19:12and you work a reasonably middle to high paying job,
00:19:15you can probably afford to hire a cleaner.
00:19:17And so, for example, we have a cleaner
00:19:18who comes in for two hours every week and it's amazing.
00:19:21And she cleans the whole house and it's so good
00:19:22because it means that I don't have to do it
00:19:23and my brother and his wife don't have to do it.
00:19:25And we've just unlocked an extra two hours of our life
00:19:27for the sake of, I think it's like 17 pounds an hour
00:19:30in her case.
00:19:30And people have weird thoughts about delegation.
00:19:32People are always like, you know, there's a lot of like,
00:19:34oh no, delegation is evil.
00:19:36But every time you go to a restaurant,
00:19:37you're delegating the cooking and the preparation of the meal
00:19:40to the chef in the restaurant.
00:19:41When you go to the doctor,
00:19:42you are delegating the managing of your health
00:19:44and the giving of advice to the doctor.
00:19:46What I'm saying is that you can in fact trade time for money.
00:19:49And the more money you have, the more you realize,
00:19:50oh crap, time is the most valuable non-renewable resource.
00:19:53And you can deploy your money towards saving your time
00:19:55through stuff like delegation.
00:19:56And if you're interested in learning more,
00:19:57there's a bunch of books I'd recommend.
00:19:59One is "Buy Back Your Time" by Dan Martell.
00:20:02And another one is "The E-Myth Revisited" by Michael Gober.
00:20:04These are two really good books around delegation
00:20:06in personal life, but also in work.
00:20:08Anyway, that brings us to the end of this video.
00:20:09If you're interested in learning more
00:20:10about the specific mechanics of how I incorporate
00:20:12some of these things into my life,
00:20:13check out this video over here,
00:20:15which is about the Trident method
00:20:16that I used to manage my calendar.
00:20:17And that'll have way more information
00:20:18about the ideal week thing,
00:20:19but also on my daily priorities thing.
00:20:21And you can see, along with a template,
00:20:22exactly how this works in my own life
00:20:24if you wanna incorporate it into yours.
00:20:25So thank you so much for watching
00:20:26and I'll see you hopefully in the next video.
00:20:27Bye-bye.