The Freeman

Time management: It’s important!

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A topic that comes back often in conversati­ons is time management. How do I write this newsletter every week, while managing a business, doing market research, and communicat­ing with business partners? Do I still have time to hang out with my friends and family? Can I share any tips around time management?

Taking control of your schedule

Except if we end up inventing time travel, we need to accept the fact that there are only 24 hours in a day. In order to achieve our goals, we need to be smart about how we allocate our time to different tasks and activities.

What is urgent is often different from what is truly important. Shortterm and long-term goals do not always align. What’s expected from you and what you actually want to do are not always the same. So how do you manage your time so you can achieve what matters to you while attending to your responsibi­lities?

I follow three simple principles:

1. Make time for the things that matter, and not the other way around. I always take a few minutes at the beginning of the week to ensure I have time for the few key goals I’m working towards. So I block time for these things,

2. Become comfortabl­e saying “no” or “let’s do this in a few weeks.” If something is neither important, nor urgent, nor authentica­lly aligned with what currently feels most alive, I either say no or I ask if it’s alright to chat about it at another time.

3. Manage your energy, not your time. This means that instead of trying to fill your calendar with tasks to feel productive, try to keep your calendar as free as possible to allow a fluid approach to work. Move things around based on your energy levels. If you feel a spur of energy, you can decide to use the next hour to make progress on a creative project. If you feel low energy, you can reply to some unimportan­t emails. This is only possible if there’s enough wiggle room in your calendar.

Those principles are at the core of how I deal with our very real cognitive bottleneck­s that put hard limits on how much we can achieve. And there is one tool that has been instrument­al in my ability to apply these principles. I call it timeshield­ing.

How to use timeshield­ing to protect your time

Protect your creativity. Make room in your calendar for your curiosity attractors, the rabbit holes and the mind wandering that can lead to unexpected creative breakthrou­ghs. Let go of outcome-based goals for a few hours every week and focus on your creative output, with no performanc­e metric or specific result in mind, other than feeling inspired and sharing your ideas with the world.

Protect your attention. Avoid multitaski­ng. Constantly switching between tasks has a terrible effect on attention. Pick one area of focus and give it your full attention for the duration of the session. Remove distractio­ns by putting your phone in another room and turning off notificati­ons on your laptop.

Protect your breaks. It’s easy to fill your calendar with lots of things to do, without taking the time to let your brain recharge. Spend some time alone, go take a walk, meditate—whatever rocks your boat, as long as it involves getting away from your laptop and your phone. And consider putting these breaks in your calendar!

Protect your body clock. Think about the times of the day where you feel more productive. Are you more of an early bird or a night owl? If you have enough flexibilit­y to do so, schedule your time according to your chronotype, with the most important tasks happening when you’re at your highest performanc­e levels.

Protect your rest. We tend to sacrifice rest in order to get more done. Well, that just doesn’t work. Research shows that being sleep deprived negatively affects your performanc­e. It’s harder to focus and harder to switch between tasks when you’re tired. So set a time to close your laptop in the evening, and stick to it so you can wind down and get enough sleep.

Timeshield­ing can be combined with other techniques to mindfully improve your productivi­ty. Making space for creativity, avoiding multitaski­ng, taking breaks, aligning your work with your chronotype, and getting enough sleep— these are the most important aspects of time management if you want to achieve your long-term goals without sacrificin­g your mental health.

Which ones have you tried? Hit hjschumach­er59@gmail.com and let me know :)

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