Some people work best in the morning, some at the night, you
must identify when you work best. When you work best you pick the highest
priority and important task and get it done.
Do you know when and how you're most productive? Sure, you might
know whether you like working early in the morning or prefer late night hours,
but most people don't understand much about their internal rhythms.
A lot of the productivity advice out there assumes that all
times of the day are equal. But before you should start finding ways to
increase your output, you should figure out what hours of the day are best for
your productivity.
Mastering your patterns can help you be a lot more productive.
For example:
· Are you better able to focus in the morning, afternoon, or
evening?
· Do you need to take frequent breaks?
· Are there times of the day when you can more successfully
multi-task?
Answering these questions can help you identify patterns, and
come up with strategies to increase your efficiency.
Emma Siemasko suggests
five ways you can figure out which hours of the day are best for your
productivity — and how you can adjust your habits accordingly. Some of his
suggestions are:
Start With Analysis
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans work
about 8.8 hours every day, but that doesn't mean that all of those hours are
equally productive. Most workers don't spend 8.8 hours deep in their tasks. In
fact, according to a Gallup survey, only 13% of employees feel engaged at work.
So how and when are you currently getting your best work done?
Before you can leverage that knowledge, you have to analyze where you stand. If
you start tracking when you're productive, you'll soon see patterns and adjust
your working time to when you are most productive.
For example, you might press start on a time-tracking app when
you begin a project in the morning, and see how long it takes before your mind
wanders and you open your email inbox or check Facebook. If you do this for a whole
week, you'll have a good idea of when you're super productive, and when you're
disengaged or distracted.
Alternatively, set up an app like Rescue Time to run in the
background and collect that data for you. Then take a few minutes to review the
results and think about what they say about you.
Think About the Past
Today, you're a busy professional, but once upon a time, you may
have had more freedom to choose when you got things done. When you were a
college student, which time was it easiest to write papers?
Maybe you were easily able to work faster all-nighters liked to
work in the library in the afternoon or set an alarm to wake up extra early in
the day an assignment was due. Whatever your patterns, they say something about
the time of day you're most productive, and you can work to leverage these
trends in your workday now.
If you're most productive later in the day, then do your best to
schedule most of your meetings in the morning so you have the second half of
the day to yourself. While that's not always feasible, do your best to become a
guardian of your most valuable work hours.
Ask Your Colleagues
No one knows you as well as you do, but those that work around
you know more than you think. When trying to find out when you're most productive,
it's worth talking to your colleagues, friends, and family.
If you work at home and have a significant other, they probably
have an idea of when you're most likely to stop working and send them a text
message. If you have an assistant, he might notice that you're not very
productive in the afternoon, so he's less likely to block off that time for
your project work.
Colleagues may have already noticed trends, such as your
preferences for meeting times, when you put on your headphones, and how likely
you are to take an extra-long lunch break. Ask your colleagues what they've
observed about your work habits — you might be surprised by what they reveal.
Maximize Your First Two Hours
Dan Ariely, author of Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces
That Shape Our Decisions and other books, as well as the James B. Duke
Professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics at Duke University, talked
about productivity and time of day in a Reddit Ask Me Anything Q&A.
He pointed out that the first two hours of the day are when most
people are most alert, and when they have the propensity to be the most
productive.
Unfortunately, most people's morning routines are scattered. As
a result, whether they're morning people or not, this isn't the time when
they're productive. Instead, it's when they're trying to get themselves out of
the bed or enter into traffic on the way to the office.
If you're like most people, try to revamp the first two hours of
your workday. What steps can you take to reduce the frenzy and ensure you can
get things done?
Find out how to give your morning routine a makeover
Some people are more productive at night, and if you know this
about yourself, that's valuable information. The best thing you can do is to
make changes in your schedule to maximize the number of hours later in the day
that you can spend on essential tasks.
Engineer Your Optimal Time to Work
It's nice to know when you can be productive, but the time of
day you are productive is not the only factor that goes into getting things
done. The Draugiem Group recently found that employees with higher productivity
were not spending more time than the others. Instead, they were taking more
frequent breaks. The Draugiem Group was able to get even more specific, noting
that these "super producers" took 17-minute breaks for every 52
minutes of work.
That may seem like a lot of break time, but what the study
discovered is that breaks are necessary and that it's impossible to spend 8.8
hours of your day deep in your tasks. Whether you're an early bird or a night
owl, taking frequent breaks is just as important as finding the exact hours
when you're most productive.
You can become a Productivity Champion by being a member of
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