434 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
434 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
# Focus, Timeboxing, and 80/20 Methodology
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Advanced techniques for deep work, energy management, and high-impact prioritization.
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## Table of Contents
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1. [Deep Work and Focus Blocks](#1-deep-work-and-focus-blocks)
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2. [Timeboxing Techniques](#2-timeboxing-techniques)
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3. [Execution Discipline](#3-execution-discipline)
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4. [Energy Management and Optimization](#4-energy-management-and-optimization)
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5. [80/20 Principle Applications](#5-8020-principle-applications)
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6. [Advanced Strategies](#6-advanced-strategies)
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---
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## 1. Deep Work and Focus Blocks
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### What Is Deep Work?
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**Definition** (Cal Newport): "Professional activities performed in a state of distraction-free concentration that push your cognitive capabilities to their limit. These efforts create new value, improve your skill, and are hard to replicate."
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**Shallow work**: Non-cognitively demanding tasks performed while distracted. Easy to replicate, low value creation.
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**Why deep work matters**:
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- Creates disproportionate value (complex problems solved, creative breakthroughs)
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- Builds rare skills faster (deliberate practice requires deep focus)
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- Produces flow states (intrinsically satisfying, high-quality output)
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- Increasingly rare in distracted world (competitive advantage)
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### Setting Up Deep Work Blocks
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**Pre-work (5-10 min before block)**:
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1. **Clear outcome**: What specific output by end of session? (e.g., "Draft sections 1-3 of spec" not "work on spec")
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2. **Gather resources**: All documents, links, code, notes accessible. No mid-session searching.
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3. **Eliminate distractions**:
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- Quit Slack/Teams (not just close, quit)
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- Close email tab/app
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- Phone in different room or airplane mode
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- Close all browser tabs except work-related
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- Set status to DND/Busy
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- Noise-canceling headphones if open office
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4. **Set timer**: Visual timer (not phone) to track remaining time
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**During deep work**:
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- **Single task only**: No context-switching. If new task occurs, write in notebook for later.
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- **No checking**: Email, Slack, news, social media forbidden. Even "quick check" destroys 15+ min of focus.
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- **Capture tangents**: Keep notebook for off-topic ideas. Write them down, return to focus.
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- **Push through resistance**: First 10-15 min feels hard. Push through. Flow state arrives ~15-20 min in.
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**After deep work**:
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- **Take break**: Non-negotiable. Walk, stretch, look outside. Don't skip.
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- **Capture progress**: Quick note on what got done, what's next session.
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- **Resist shallow work**: Don't immediately check email. Take actual break first.
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### Optimal Duration
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**Research findings** (Ericsson, Newport, Csikszentmihalyi):
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- **Beginners**: 60-90 min max before fatigue
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- **Experienced**: 90-120 min max
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- **Elite experts**: 4 hours per day max across 2-3 sessions
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**Why 90 min is magic number**:
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- Matches ultradian rhythm (90-120 min cycles of alertness)
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- Long enough for flow state, short enough to sustain intensity
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- Human attention naturally declines after ~90 min
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**Progressive training**:
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- Week 1-2: 25 min (Pomodoro) × 2 per day
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- Week 3-4: 50 min × 2 per day
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- Week 5-6: 90 min × 2 per day
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- Maintenance: 90 min × 2-3 per day
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**Don't exceed capacity**: 3 hours deep work (2× 90min blocks) > 8 hours shallow work. Quality over quantity.
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---
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## 2. Timeboxing Techniques
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### Parkinson's Law
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**"Work expands to fill the time available for its completion."** - C. Northcote Parkinson
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**Implication**: Give yourself less time, get more done. Time constraints force:
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- Prioritization (what really matters?)
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- Elimination of perfectionism (good enough > perfect never shipped)
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- Faster decision-making (no time for overthinking)
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**Example**:
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- Task: "Write product spec"
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- Open-ended: Takes 3 weeks (perfectionism, scope creep, procrastination)
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- Timeboxed (4 hours): Forces clarity, ships in 1 day
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### Timeboxing Methods
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**Fixed Duration, Flexible Scope** (Agile approach):
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- Allocate fixed time (e.g., 90 min)
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- Define minimum viable output (MVP)
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- Accept that you may not finish everything
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- Better than: Flexible time, fixed scope (leads to endless expansion)
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**Example** (writing blog post):
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- Timebox: 2 hours
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- MVP: Draft with intro, 3 main points, conclusion (even if rough)
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- Nice-to-have: Polish, examples, images (skip if time runs out)
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- Ship MVP. Perfect later if needed.
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**Hard Deadlines**:
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- Schedule end time, not just start time
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- Calendar block: 9:00-10:30am (not "9am - ?")
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- Set alarm for 10 min before end (wrap-up time)
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- Hard stop at end time, even if incomplete
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**Progressive Timeboxing** (for large projects):
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- Break into phases, timebox each
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- Example (feature development):
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- Phase 1: Research & design (4 hours)
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- Phase 2: Implementation (8 hours across 4× 2hr blocks)
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- Phase 3: Testing & polish (4 hours)
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- Ship at end of each phase or pivot if needed
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### When to Use Each Duration
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**25 min (Pomodoro)**:
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- High-resistance tasks (procrastination strong)
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- Building focus habit (beginners)
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- Routine tasks (email, code reviews)
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- Low energy but need to make progress
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**50-60 min**:
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- Moderate complexity (not deep work, not trivial)
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- Mixed tasks (some focus, some collaboration)
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- Good for meetings (default 30/60 min in most calendars)
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**90 min (Deep Work)**:
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- Complex thinking (strategy, architecture, writing)
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- Creative work (design, coding new features)
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- Peak energy periods (morning for most)
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- Maximum 3× per day
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**2-4 hours (Maker's Schedule)**:
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- Breakthrough work (research paper, product launch)
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- Flow-state tasks (coding, writing, design)
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- Once per week minimum for knowledge workers
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- Requires complete calendar control
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---
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## 3. Execution Discipline
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### Eliminating Distractions
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**Phone discipline**:
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- Physical separation (different room) > Airplane mode > Face down
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- Why: "I'll just check once" never works. Checking is compulsive.
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- Emergency: Give family/manager alternate contact (desk phone, colleague)
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**Slack/Teams/Email**:
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- Quit app (not minimize) during deep work
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- Schedule checks: 11am, 4pm (2× per day max)
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- Set auto-responder: "Checking email 2× daily. Urgent? Text/call."
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- Batch responses: Write all replies in one session
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**Browser discipline**:
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- Close all tabs except work-related (before deep work)
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- Block sites during focus (Freedom, Cold Turkey, LeechBlock)
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- Use separate browser/profile for work vs. personal
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**Environmental setup**:
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- Visual signal (headphones, sign) to discourage interruptions
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- Office door closed (if available)
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- Book conference room for deep work (escape open office)
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- Work from home on deep work days (if remote possible)
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### Managing Interruptions
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**Protocol for "urgent" interruptions**:
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1. **Defer**: "I'm in focus time until 11am. Can it wait?" (90% can)
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2. **Delegate**: "Can [colleague] help?" (transfer to someone with slack capacity)
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3. **Batch**: "Send me details, I'll address at 11am" (add to batch list)
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4. **Emergency only**: True emergency (production down, customer escalation)
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**Training others**:
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- Communicate schedule: "Deep work 9-11am daily, no interruptions"
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- Be consistent: If you allow interruptions sometimes, they'll keep trying
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- Offer alternatives: "Free after 2pm for questions"
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### Beating Procrastination
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**Why we procrastinate**:
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- Task ambiguity (unclear what to do)
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- Perceived difficulty (feels overwhelming)
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- Perfectionism (fear of imperfect output)
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- Lack of deadlines (infinite time = infinite delay)
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**Solutions**:
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1. **Break into tiny first step**: "Write introduction paragraph" not "Write chapter"
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2. **Use 25-min Pomodoro**: Commit to just 25 min. Lower activation energy.
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3. **Set artificial deadline**: "Draft by 5pm today" creates urgency
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4. **Remove perfection**: "First draft is allowed to suck" (can revise later)
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5. **Start with easiest part**: Build momentum, then tackle hard part
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**Two-Minute Rule**: If task <2 min, do immediately. Don't timebox or add to list. Clear small tasks fast.
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---
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## 4. Energy Management and Optimization
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### Circadian Rhythms and Peak Hours
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**Typical energy pattern** (most people):
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- **6-9am**: Peak (early risers) - deep work optimal
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- **9am-12pm**: Peak (most people) - deep work optimal
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- **12-2pm**: Lunch dip - social/meetings work well
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- **2-3pm**: Trough (post-lunch crash) - worst time for focus
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- **3-5pm**: Recovery - moderate work, planning
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- **Evening**: Low - rest, routine, NOT deep work
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**Individual variation**:
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- Track your energy for 1 week (rate 1-5 every 2 hours)
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- Plot pattern: When peak? When trough?
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- Schedule accordingly: Deep work during peak, admin during trough
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**Chronotype differences**:
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- **Larks (morning people)**: Peak 6-10am
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- **Owls (night people)**: Peak 4-9pm
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- **Third birds (majority)**: Peak 10am-1pm
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### Energy Optimization Strategies
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**Protect peak hours ruthlessly**:
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- No meetings during peak (9-12am for most)
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- No email/Slack during peak
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- Deep work only during peak
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- Schedule everything else around peak
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**Match intensity to energy**:
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| Energy Level | Task Type | Examples |
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|--------------|-----------|----------|
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| **Peak** | Deep work | Writing, coding, strategy, design |
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| **High** | Moderate work | Code reviews, planning, learning |
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| **Medium** | Meetings | 1:1s, standups, collaboration |
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| **Low** | Admin | Email, expense reports, organizing |
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| **Very Low** | Rest | Walk, nap, reading (not work) |
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**Energy recovery**:
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- **Breaks between blocks**: 10-15 min every 90 min (non-negotiable)
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- **Lunch away from desk**: Actual break, not "working lunch"
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- **Walking meetings**: Movement boosts energy for afternoon
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- **20-min power nap**: (2-3pm) resets energy if crash is severe
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- **Hard stop at 5pm**: Evening rest prevents next-day burnout
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**Sleep is non-negotiable**:
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- 7-9 hours per night (not negotiable despite "hustle culture")
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- Insufficient sleep → degraded focus, poor decisions, low output
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- One all-nighter destroys focus for 3-4 days
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---
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## 5. 80/20 Principle Applications
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### Beyond Task Lists
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**80/20 applies everywhere**:
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- **Code**: 20% of functions contain 80% of bugs
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- **Customers**: 20% of customers generate 80% of revenue
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- **Features**: 20% of features drive 80% of usage
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- **Meetings**: 20% of meetings produce 80% of value
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- **Relationships**: 20% of people provide 80% of support/value
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**Implication**: Identify and focus on vital 20%, minimize/eliminate trivial 80%.
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### Identifying Your 20%
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**Questions to ask**:
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1. "If I could only work 10 hours this week, what would I do?"
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2. "Which tasks, if done excellently, make everything else easier or unnecessary?"
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3. "What creates 10× value vs. 1× value?"
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4. "What will matter in 6 months? 12 months?"
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5. "What am I uniquely positioned to do? (vs. delegate/eliminate)"
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**Force ranking exercise**:
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- List all tasks/projects/commitments
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- Force rank 1 to N (no ties allowed)
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- Top 20% = vital few
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- Bottom 80% = delegate, defer, eliminate, or batch
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### Eliminating/Delegating the 80%
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**Strategies**:
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- **Eliminate**: Stop doing entirely. Many tasks done by inertia, not necessity.
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- **Delegate**: Transfer to someone else (team member, contractor, automation).
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- **Defer**: "Someday/maybe" list. Revisit quarterly. Most stay deferred forever (good).
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- **Batch**: Group low-value tasks (email, admin) into single session vs. scattered throughout day.
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- **Automate**: Script, template, or tool replaces manual work.
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**Permission to say no**: If not in top 20%, default answer is "no" or "not now." Saying yes to everything means no time for vital few.
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---
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## 6. Advanced Strategies
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### Maker's Schedule vs. Manager's Schedule
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**Manager's Schedule** (Paul Graham):
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- Day divided into 1-hour blocks
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- Calendar full of meetings
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- Context-switching between tasks
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- Works for coordination, decisions, people management
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**Maker's Schedule**:
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- Day divided into half-day or full-day blocks
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- Uninterrupted time for creating (code, writing, design)
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- Context-switching is enemy
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- Works for technical/creative work
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**Conflict**: Managers schedule "quick 30-min meeting" that destroys maker's 4-hour block.
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**Solution for makers**:
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- **Office hours**: Available for meetings Tue/Thu 2-5pm only
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- **Deep work blocks**: Mon/Wed/Fri mornings protected (no meetings)
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- **Communicate**: "I'm on maker's schedule. Half-days only for focus work."
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### Theme Days
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Dedicate each day to single theme (reduce context-switching across days).
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**Example**:
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- **Monday**: Deep work on Project A (code/write all day)
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- **Tuesday**: Meetings + collaboration (batched)
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- **Wednesday**: Deep work on Project B
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- **Thursday**: Meetings + admin
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- **Friday**: Planning, learning, cleanup
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**Benefits**:
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- Single context per day (vs. switching hourly)
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- Easier to protect full days vs. hour blocks
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- Clearer boundaries (teammates know Monday = no meetings)
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### Strategic Quitting
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**Sunk cost fallacy**: Continuing projects/tasks because "already invested time."
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**Better**: Evaluate based on future value, not past investment.
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**Quarterly review**:
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- List all commitments/projects
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- For each: "If I weren't already doing this, would I start today?"
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- If no → quit, even if significant past investment
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**Example**: Drop committee membership (2 hours/week), reclaim 100 hours/year for vital few.
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### Deep Work Rituals
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**Location ritual**:
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- Same place every day for deep work (trains brain: "This desk = focus mode")
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- Or: Dedicated space (library, coffee shop) exclusively for deep work
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**Time ritual**:
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- Same time every day (e.g., 9-11am)
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- Brain learns pattern, enters focus mode faster
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**Startup ritual** (5-10 min before deep work):
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- Make coffee/tea
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- Review session goal
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- Close distractions
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- Set timer
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- Begin
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**Shutdown ritual** (end of day):
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- Review what got done
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- Plan tomorrow's top priority
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- Close all work tabs/apps
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- Clear desk
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- "Shutdown complete" phrase (signals brain: work done, rest mode)
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### Accountability Systems
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**Public commitment**:
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- Share goals with colleague/friend
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- Weekly check-in on deep work hours completed
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- Accountability partner does same
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**Tracking**:
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- Log focus blocks completed (quality, duration, distractions)
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- Review weekly: "Completed X hours deep work vs. Y hours planned"
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- Adjust next week based on data
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**Reward systems**:
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- Small reward after completing focus block (walk, good coffee, 15-min break)
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- Larger reward after productive week (nice meal, movie, guilt-free weekend)
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**Commitment devices**:
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- Beeminder (pay money if don't meet goal)
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- StickK (pledge to charity if fail)
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- Public declaration (blog, Twitter) creates social pressure
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### Focus Stacking
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**Concept**: Use momentum from one focus block to fuel next.
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**Pattern**:
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- 90 min deep work → 15 min break → 90 min deep work
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- Same general topic/project (don't switch contexts)
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- Total: 3 hours deep work in one morning
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**When to stack**:
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- Critical deadline approaching
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- High-complexity work requiring sustained thought
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- Peak energy day (well-rested, healthy)
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**When NOT to stack**:
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- Low energy (quality degrades)
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- Multiple unrelated projects (context-switching negates benefit)
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- After meetings or interruptions (focus already fractured)
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**Maximum**: 2 stacked blocks (3 hours total). Beyond that, quality tanks.
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---
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## Key Takeaways
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1. **Deep work is trainable**: Start with 25-min Pomodoros, build to 90-min blocks over weeks. Don't expect instant focus.
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2. **Parkinson's Law is your friend**: Shorter timeboxes force prioritization and prevent perfectionism. Constrain time to boost output.
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3. **Energy > Time**: 3 hours peak-energy deep work beats 8 hours exhausted shallow work. Schedule deep work during peak hours only.
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4. **80/20 requires discipline**: Everything feels important. Force rank ruthlessly. Top 20% gets 80% of focus time. Say no to the rest.
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5. **Distractions are enemy**: One Slack check destroys 15+ min of focus. Eliminate during deep work. Quit apps, not just minimize.
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6. **Breaks are productivity tools**: Skipping breaks degrades focus exponentially. 90 min work → 15 min break is optimal cycle.
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7. **Consistency beats intensity**: 2 hours deep work daily (10 hrs/week) beats one 12-hour marathon followed by burnout. Sustainable pace wins.
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