Transcript

00:00:00All right, so over the past 10 years,
00:00:02I have read basically all of the books
00:00:04around productivity and time management.
00:00:06And in that time, there are 10 things
00:00:08that I still use in my life, genuinely use
00:00:11to help make my time management more efficient.
00:00:13Let's talk about them in this video.
00:00:15Tip number one is that we absolutely own all of our time.
00:00:18Now, this is like a big one.
00:00:22When I first had this realization,
00:00:24my life genuinely changed
00:00:25because I used to think I don't have time to do stuff.
00:00:29And I don't know where I read it,
00:00:30but I came across this like,
00:00:32probably like a fortune cookie somewhere,
00:00:33which said something like at any given moment,
00:00:36you are doing what you most want to be doing.
00:00:38And that was a very empowering thing for me
00:00:40because I was obviously in need of empowerment.
00:00:42And it helped me realize
00:00:43that my time is entirely within my control.
00:00:45Like right now, I'm filming this video because I want to be.
00:00:48Earlier today, I spent six hours playing "World of Warcraft"
00:00:50because that's what I wanted to do.
00:00:52I could not have said I don't have the time
00:00:53to work out today.
00:00:54Instead, it was a case of I'm actively choosing
00:00:56not to make the time to work out today.
00:00:58And so when it comes to time management,
00:00:59like step one is always to recognize
00:01:01that we are always in control of our own time.
00:01:03Yes, you might have a boss.
00:01:05Yes, you might have parents telling you what to do,
00:01:06but fundamentally you are in control of your own time
00:01:09and you can choose to do whatever you want with that time.
00:01:11If you don't have the time to do something,
00:01:13that something is just not a priority, which is fine,
00:01:16but don't pretend like the reason you're not doing it
00:01:17is 'cause you genuinely don't have the time.
00:01:19Point number two is the title of this book by Derek Sivers,
00:01:21"Hell Yeah or No, What's Worth Doing?"
00:01:24Now the vibe here, "Hell Yeah or No,"
00:01:26it kind of says it all in the title.
00:01:27That when we're young and we don't have
00:01:29very many opportunities in our lives,
00:01:31we should probably say yes to the majority of things
00:01:33that are coming our way.
00:01:34But as soon as we get to a point
00:01:36where we're starting to get more inbound leads
00:01:38than we have time available,
00:01:40we start operating with a hell yeah or no maxim.
00:01:43And the idea there is something is either a hell yes
00:01:45or it's a no.
00:01:47And so if I get an email from someone saying,
00:01:48"Hey, do you wanna do this thing?"
00:01:49And I'm thinking, "Mm, maybe it sounds kind of all right,"
00:01:52then my default position is gonna be no.
00:01:54If I get an email from someone saying,
00:01:55"Hey, do you wanna do this thing?"
00:01:56And I'm like, "Hell yeah,"
00:01:57then I'm gonna do the thing.
00:01:59And I'm trying to get better
00:02:00at using this principle in my life
00:02:02because even now, my calendar is full of a lot of things
00:02:06where I'm like, "Oh yeah, kind of,"
00:02:08rather than, "Hell yeah, too,"
00:02:09and I always regret doing it when it comes down.
00:02:11So hell yeah or no,
00:02:12just learning to be okay with saying no to stuff
00:02:14is another really important principle of time management.
00:02:16Thirdly, there's a tip I picked up from this book
00:02:18called "Make Time" by Jake Knapp and John Zaratsky.
00:02:21And this tip is called the daily highlight.
00:02:23This is deviously simple.
00:02:24Basically, the idea is that every day,
00:02:26we decide this thing, this one thing,
00:02:28is gonna be my highlight of the day.
00:02:30This is the only thing I need to get done today.
00:02:33And on the days where I set a daily highlight
00:02:35and I try and do this every day,
00:02:36I always get the thing done
00:02:37and I'm always really happy at the end of the day.
00:02:39But if I have a day where I don't set my daily highlight,
00:02:42then I kind of drown in my to-do list
00:02:44and I have this just image in my head of like,
00:02:45"Oh yeah, I need to do this and this and this and that,"
00:02:48and it's a lot harder to get stuff done.
00:02:50Whereas on days where I have the daily highlight,
00:02:51I have that just one thing that I'm focusing on.
00:02:54This is the most urgent or the most satisfying
00:02:56or the most fun thing I have to do today.
00:02:58And then it just really, really helps
00:02:59with my time management.
00:03:00Tip number four for time management is to use a to-do list.
00:03:03And these days, I use a physical to-do list
00:03:06with this analog by Ugmonk.
00:03:07It's very nice.
00:03:09It's like you get these like note cards
00:03:11and then you get this like wooden thing
00:03:13and you like put the note card in the thing
00:03:14and it looks like this.
00:03:15And that means like every morning,
00:03:16once I figured out what my daily highlight is,
00:03:18I make a list of the other stuff
00:03:19that I have to do that day and I shove it on a list
00:03:22and then I tick them off and cross them off
00:03:23with physical pen as I go throughout my day.
00:03:26It doesn't really matter what system you use
00:03:27for a to-do list.
00:03:28But again, there's a general principle of productivity,
00:03:30which is that our brain is for having ideas,
00:03:33not for holding them.
00:03:34And a big part of why we let stuff slip through the cracks
00:03:37when it comes to managing our time
00:03:38and managing our productivity
00:03:39is 'cause we haven't written them down.
00:03:41And so anytime I need to do something,
00:03:42I write it down into an app.
00:03:44These days I use Roam.
00:03:45But then when I figure out my daily to-do list,
00:03:47it's all based on this analog system by Ugmonk,
00:03:50which is very nice.
00:03:51And it's kind of cool having a physical to-do list
00:03:54in front of me that I can cross things off of
00:03:55and it just feels nice.
00:03:56And yeah, even at work, when I'm working as a doctor,
00:03:59I use physical to-do lists to manage my patient list,
00:04:01to manage my list of tasks.
00:04:02There's something incredibly satisfying
00:04:04about crossing something off,
00:04:05which you just don't get when you use an app.
00:04:06Principle number five for time management
00:04:08is the concept of time blocking.
00:04:10Apparently, this is something
00:04:11that Elon Musk does all the time.
00:04:12And basically the idea there
00:04:14is anytime we need to do something,
00:04:15we put a block for it in our calendar.
00:04:17So I don't like doing this for absolutely everything
00:04:19because I'm a bit of a waste man
00:04:20and I think the more time I spend
00:04:22managing my productivity system,
00:04:24the less time I spend actually getting stuff done
00:04:26and then it's just all completely pointless.
00:04:27But the one thing that I always schedule into my calendar
00:04:30at the start of the day is my daily highlight.
00:04:33So if I've decided my daily highlight
00:04:35is filming this video, usually, well,
00:04:37I'll try my best to schedule it into my calendar
00:04:39at the time where I know I'm gonna film the video.
00:04:41If my daily highlight is call my grandma,
00:04:44I will literally schedule it into my calendar.
00:04:46If my daily highlight is make changes to my website,
00:04:48I will schedule it at like for a block in my calendar.
00:04:51And that's like really nice and reassuring
00:04:52because it means that that one thing
00:04:54that I've decided is really, really important
00:04:55is always gonna get done
00:04:56because it's always on the schedule.
00:04:58And then if I need to move it around,
00:04:59I'll move it around if something comes up,
00:05:01but at least it's there on the schedule by default.
00:05:03And this thing where you combine the daily highlight
00:05:05with time blocking it in the calendar
00:05:06is just incredibly useful.
00:05:08Everyone always kind of thinks that like,
00:05:09oh, but only one thing a day,
00:05:11don't you have to do more than that?
00:05:12And yeah, you do kind of have to do more than that
00:05:13in most of our lives.
00:05:14But imagine if every single day for the next year,
00:05:17you could actually do the one thing,
00:05:19the one most important thing to do that day,
00:05:21you'd make a hell of a lot of progress
00:05:23over the course of the year,
00:05:24and it would just be absolutely game changing.
00:05:25Principle number six is related
00:05:26to something called Parkinson's law,
00:05:28which is that work expands to fill the time
00:05:30that we allocate to it.
00:05:31So if I have to film a YouTube video in a day,
00:05:33and I give myself the whole day to film that YouTube video,
00:05:35inevitably it's gonna take all day to film the YouTube video.
00:05:38Whereas if I only give myself half an hour or an hour
00:05:40to film the YouTube video,
00:05:41and I fill my day up with other things,
00:05:43then inevitably I get the video done
00:05:45in that small amount of time.
00:05:46And so the actionable advice here
00:05:48is to leverage artificial deadlines,
00:05:50even when it's something like filming a new course.
00:05:52Like, you know, I'm working on a course
00:05:54for YouTube for beginners,
00:05:55where I kind of film and talk you to everything
00:05:57about my YouTube video production process.
00:05:58And this doesn't really have a deadline.
00:06:00Like I could literally do it whenever I want.
00:06:01I don't have to do it.
00:06:02It's a purely optional project.
00:06:03But I've set myself the goal that, okay, you know what?
00:06:06I'm gonna film all of this course next weekend.
00:06:08And I've blocked out time in my calendar next weekend
00:06:10to film the course.
00:06:11And that's an artificial deadline,
00:06:12which means the course is gonna get done.
00:06:14Whereas if I just had it in my mind
00:06:16or in my to-do list without a deadline, without a schedule,
00:06:20it would just inevitably never, ever get done.
00:06:22Point number seven is one I've started applying recently,
00:06:24and that is having protected time.
00:06:26When you are an entrepreneur
00:06:27and you're like working for yourself
00:06:28and all that kind of stuff,
00:06:29you end up basically being able
00:06:30to set whatever schedule you want.
00:06:31But like if you're like me and you like making connections
00:06:35and making friends with people all around the internet,
00:06:38you get to a point where your day is filled
00:06:40with lots and lots of Zoom calls.
00:06:41And I realized that for me,
00:06:43I need to keep my mornings completely free
00:06:45of any obligations or any Zoom calls.
00:06:47And this has been an absolute game changer
00:06:48because in the morning,
00:06:49that means I can wake up whenever I want.
00:06:51Usually it's half past eight these days.
00:06:52And it means that for a solid like four hours at least,
00:06:55I've got uninterrupted time where I can do whatever I want.
00:06:58So these days I'm working on writing my book.
00:07:00And so the morning is my protected time for writing.
00:07:02But even on days where I'm not working on the book,
00:07:04it's just genuinely so nice to have that like time slot
00:07:07where I can think about the business
00:07:08or plan some more videos
00:07:10or do the things that help move me forward in my work career.
00:07:14And sometimes if I'm not really feeling it,
00:07:16I'll just decide, you know what?
00:07:17I'm gonna use this protected time to play "World of Warcraft"
00:07:19or to just kind of relax and read a book on the sofa.
00:07:22So if you're interested in better ways
00:07:23to managing your time,
00:07:24I would recommend figuring out
00:07:26what your protected time is gonna be.
00:07:28Time that is just for you and you alone or "World of Warcraft"
00:07:31and not for anyone else where no one is allowed
00:07:33to book something in your schedule.
00:07:34All right, principle number eight is delegation.
00:07:36Now this one is a little bit weird
00:07:38because normally when you say the word delegate,
00:07:40people imagine that,
00:07:40oh, well, I can't afford to delegate something.
00:07:43I don't have enough money to delegate to hire someone.
00:07:46And sure, that's probably true.
00:07:49But the way that I think of it,
00:07:50even when this YouTube channel wasn't successful,
00:07:52was that like what is actually the dollar value of my time?
00:07:56How much is my time actually worth?
00:07:58And when it came to running my business,
00:07:59I decided that, okay,
00:08:00my time is worth 20 pounds an hour or $25 an hour.
00:08:03And that means that anything I'm doing that I don't enjoy,
00:08:05that I can outsource to someone
00:08:07that I can delegate for less than $25 an hour,
00:08:09I absolutely should do that.
00:08:11And that principle of delegation
00:08:12has encouraged me to get a cleaner, which has been great
00:08:14because now we have someone
00:08:15who comes in to clean the house every other week,
00:08:17which means I don't have to do it myself.
00:08:18And back in the day,
00:08:19when I was building my businesses from the ground up
00:08:21and there was lots of things that needed to be done,
00:08:22like data entry or things like that,
00:08:24I was able to delegate those to freelancers
00:08:27in like the Philippines or in Bangladesh or in India
00:08:29through upwork.com or fiverr.com.
00:08:31And like paying them like $7 an hour
00:08:33is an amazing like wage for someone
00:08:35for work in the Philippines.
00:08:36But it was fantastic for me
00:08:38because it freed up my time to do things
00:08:40that were adding more value to the business
00:08:42and to my life than doing data entry, for example.
00:08:44And so whatever your circumstances are,
00:08:45I'd encourage you to think about
00:08:47what is that dollar value of your time.
00:08:50And potentially if you want, can you delegate stuff
00:08:53that's cheaper than that to other people potentially.
00:08:56Tip number nine for time management
00:08:57is to try and automate scheduling as much as possible.
00:09:00Now that we're in the world of like Zoom calls
00:09:02and like chatting to people over the internet,
00:09:04basically every day,
00:09:05I found I was wasting a lot of time
00:09:06in scheduling back and forth where it'd be like,
00:09:08hey, I wanna talk to you, but like,
00:09:09are you free this time, Pacific time,
00:09:11this time Eastern time, this time British standard time,
00:09:13all this kind of stuff.
00:09:14And we'd go back and forth with emails for like a solid
00:09:1710 days before anything would get done.
00:09:18But then I discovered an app called Calendly
00:09:20and Calendly is great.
00:09:21It's free for like the free version.
00:09:23I pay for the pro version these days,
00:09:24not sponsoring this video or anything like that.
00:09:26Unfortunately, Calendly if you're watching this, let me know.
00:09:28But the idea behind Calendly
00:09:29is you can literally send someone a link
00:09:31and it has like all of your availability
00:09:33and they can just book a slot in your calendar.
00:09:35Now this feels a little bit weird to do initially.
00:09:37It feels like a bit of a power move
00:09:38that hey, book a slot on my calendar.
00:09:40But anytime I get a Calendly link from someone,
00:09:42I'm like, oh my God, I'm so grateful
00:09:44because this has literally saved me 20 minutes of my life,
00:09:46time that I'm never gonna get back
00:09:47in not having to worry about scheduling back and forth emails.
00:09:51Even sometimes these days,
00:09:52when it comes to like cashing up with friends,
00:09:53I just send them a Calendly link and I'm like,
00:09:54look, hey man, I'm really sorry.
00:09:56But like, you know, here's the Calendly link.
00:09:58I know we're never gonna talk
00:09:59because the schedules are never gonna align.
00:10:00But if there's a time that works for you,
00:10:02click on this link and he books a time and we have a call.
00:10:04And it's nice 'cause I've caught up with so many more friends
00:10:06in the last few months through using Calendly links
00:10:08than I did in the last like three years
00:10:11of having to schedule back and forth with WhatsApp messages.
00:10:14And finally, principle number 10 for time management.
00:10:16And this is something
00:10:16I've only recently started to appreciate,
00:10:17which is that like when you're like a productivity nerd
00:10:20and you're interested in like efficiency
00:10:21and getting more done,
00:10:22it's very easy for us to get to the end of the day
00:10:24and to just feel chronically dissatisfied
00:10:27with what we've accomplished.
00:10:29Like at the end of the day, it's like,
00:10:30oh, well, I filmed one video today,
00:10:32but I could have filmed five videos.
00:10:33What's wrong with me?
00:10:34I'm such a waste man
00:10:35and kind of internally beating ourselves up about this.
00:10:37But one thing I've started to kind of tell myself recently
00:10:39is that I can choose to be satisfied at the end of the day.
00:10:41At the end of this day, I'll have filmed this video.
00:10:43I was planning to film three more videos,
00:10:45but I didn't get around to doing those.
00:10:47That's fine, I filmed one.
00:10:48I can choose to be satisfied with what I've done
00:10:50and that's all good.
00:10:51And like it doesn't change how much work I've done
00:10:55by me beating myself up about it.
00:10:56It just makes me feel bad.
00:10:58And therefore I can choose to feel good
00:10:59with how I've managed my time.
00:11:01If you're interested in more strategies
00:11:02on how to manage your time,
00:11:03I actually have three whole online courses
00:11:05themed around productivity and time management
00:11:07that are hosted on Skillshare.
00:11:08No, they're not sponsoring this video,
00:11:09but if you hit the link in the video description,
00:11:11there'll be a link that gives you a free trial to Skillshare
00:11:14where you can check out my three classes on productivity.
00:11:16One of them is about the fundamentals of productivity.
00:11:18One of them is about the productivity equation,
00:11:20which is my personal mental model for productivity.
00:11:22And the third one is one that I released very recently,
00:11:24like last week, around productivity for creators
00:11:26and how we manage our time
00:11:28doing this like creative high side hustle,
00:11:30entrepreneur type stuff.
00:11:31So check that out with the links in the video description.
00:11:33And if you want more tips for time management
00:11:35and general productivity,
00:11:35you should check out my book review
00:11:37and summary of the book "Make Time",
00:11:38which is one of my favorite productivity books of all time.
00:11:40And that will be linked right over there.
00:11:42So thank you so much for watching.
00:11:43Have a great day and I'll see you in the next video.
00:11:45Bye bye.

Key Takeaway

Effective time management comes from taking ownership of your time, being selective with commitments, focusing on one daily highlight, using time-blocking and artificial deadlines, protecting personal time, delegating strategically, automating scheduling, and choosing to feel satisfied with your accomplishments.

Highlights

You own all of your time - at any moment, you're doing what you most want to be doing, making time management entirely within your control

Apply the 'Hell Yeah or No' principle - once opportunities exceed available time, something should either be a definite yes or it's a no

Set a daily highlight - choose one most important thing to accomplish each day and time-block it in your calendar

Leverage Parkinson's Law with artificial deadlines - work expands to fill allocated time, so create strict timelines even for optional projects

Establish protected time blocks - keep certain periods completely free from obligations for deep work or personal activities

Delegate tasks worth less than your hourly value - outsource activities you don't enjoy if they cost less than what you value your time at

Automate scheduling with tools like Calendly to eliminate back-and-forth communication and save hours of coordination time

Timeline

Ownership of Time - The Foundation

The speaker introduces the first principle: we absolutely own all of our time. This realization was life-changing, stemming from a fortune cookie-like wisdom stating that at any moment, you're doing what you most want to be doing. The speaker provides personal examples like spending six hours playing World of Warcraft and filming videos, emphasizing that even with bosses or parents, you fundamentally control your own time. The key insight is reframing 'I don't have time' to 'I'm choosing not to make time,' which is empowering because it acknowledges that if something isn't getting done, it's simply not a priority rather than a genuine lack of time.

Hell Yeah or No - Strategic Selection

The second principle comes from Derek Sivers' book 'Hell Yeah or No' and addresses how to handle opportunities. When starting out with few opportunities, saying yes to most things makes sense, but once inbound requests exceed available time, the strategy must change. The maxim becomes binary: something is either a 'hell yes' or it's a no - there's no middle ground. The speaker admits struggling with this, often filling his calendar with 'kind of all right' commitments that he later regrets. The practical application is learning to be comfortable saying no to opportunities that don't excite you, reserving time only for things that generate genuine enthusiasm.

Daily Highlight and To-Do Lists

Tips three and four focus on daily task management through the 'daily highlight' concept from the book 'Make Time' by Jake Knapp and John Zaratsky, and using physical to-do lists. The daily highlight means selecting one thing that must get done each day - the most urgent, satisfying, or fun task. This prevents drowning in endless to-do lists and ensures consistent progress. The speaker uses Analog by Ugmonk, a physical system with notecards and a wooden holder, for daily tasks. The principle 'your brain is for having ideas, not holding them' emphasizes writing everything down to prevent things from slipping through cracks. Even when working as a doctor, the speaker uses physical lists because crossing items off provides satisfaction that apps cannot replicate.

Time Blocking and Parkinson's Law

Principles five and six cover time blocking and leveraging Parkinson's Law, which states that work expands to fill the time allocated to it. While Elon Musk reportedly time-blocks everything, the speaker only schedules the daily highlight into the calendar to avoid over-managing productivity. This ensures the most important task always gets done while remaining flexible. Parkinson's Law is applied through artificial deadlines - if you allocate all day for a YouTube video, it takes all day; allocate one hour, and it gets done in one hour. The speaker provides an example of creating a YouTube course with no real deadline but setting an artificial one for next weekend and blocking calendar time, which ensures completion. Without deadlines and schedules, optional projects never get finished.

Protected Time and Delegation

Tips seven and eight address protecting personal time and strategic delegation. As an entrepreneur with flexible schedules, the speaker's calendar filled with Zoom calls until establishing protected morning time (roughly 4 hours) completely free from obligations. This allows for deep work on projects like book writing, business planning, or simply playing World of Warcraft when needed. For delegation, the speaker challenges the assumption that you can't afford it by calculating your time's dollar value - initially set at $20-25/hour. Any task you dislike that can be outsourced for less than that value should be delegated. Examples include hiring a cleaner and using Upwork or Fiverr to hire freelancers in the Philippines, Bangladesh, or India for tasks like data entry at $7/hour, freeing time for higher-value activities. This principle applies regardless of circumstances.

Automated Scheduling and Choosing Satisfaction

The final two principles cover automating scheduling and choosing satisfaction with accomplishments. Calendly eliminates the time-wasting back-and-forth of scheduling across time zones by letting people book directly into your calendar - initially feeling like a power move but actually appreciated by recipients who save 20 minutes of their lives. The speaker even uses it to catch up with friends, resulting in more connections in recent months than three years of WhatsApp scheduling. The tenth principle addresses productivity nerds' tendency toward chronic dissatisfaction at day's end, always feeling they could have done more. The speaker learned to choose satisfaction with completed work - filming one video instead of five is fine because beating yourself up doesn't change the work done, it only makes you feel bad. Choosing to feel good about time management is entirely within your control.

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