Stephan Miller

27 Apr, 2008

Thoughts on Productivity, Habits and the Price is Right

Posted by: User ImageStephan Miller In: Writing| ZTD

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Habits are hard to break. Habits are hard to create. Any productivity book I have read that doesn’t state those two points clearly goes in one ear and out the other. I liked Zen to Done because it’s simplicity states that. Go ahead, give 450 rules and I might as well not start.

But even in simplicity, the complexity can be deceiving. Sometimes it takes rereading just to revisit the initial spark that set you off on the course.

Zen Handbook for Life comes in when I get to the habit breaking part of the issue. The habit I am currently trying to break is multitasking where it isn’t useful. It was only a few months ago where that the single tasking chapter was the one I threw out. "I’m a multitasker and I’m not changing. Single tasking is a lazy man’s load."

But now I see most of the time, focus is needed. I get no more work done multitasking. In fact, I get less actually finished. It masks the true issue, which is I can only do so much with the time I have.

But I still worry. I can’t fight that sometimes. But I can go around it. I can make worry look at the numbers. I am using Cool Timer to limit my time on activities. I have two preset times: 10 minutes or 30 minutes. This is for the weekdays. Anything longer will have to wait for the weekend, where I will get one maybe two 4 hour blocks of time.

I set the timer before I start something. When it goes off, I have the choice of continuing on the same thing or choosing another way to spend the block of time. It force me to see time pass. Also it allows me to give focus to tasks I thought could just come along for the ride during other tasks. It ends up that that was just a way to hide procrastination on things that really needed attention.

Each morning of my workweek, I have an hour and a half to get what I need to get done. Only so many 10 or 30 minute chunks will go into that time period. The numbers are obvious. They aren’t the blur you see when multitasking.

We are currently trying to teach a daughter to understand the value of money. I have yet to really understand the value of time. She has learned that food costs so much. This toy costs so much. So she knows that in order to get something, she has to save so long.

What I was doing with time was the direct opposite. By nickel and diming myself to death doing everything at once, I never understood the value in time projects had. While teaching our daughter to be a walking, talking Price is Right, I was wasting time. The cop out: I have a bad time estimating how long a project will take.

Did I know it was a cop out at the time? Nope.

Until right about the third paragraph, this post was under my lead. I was about to write out my new game plan. But what the hell, let it run free. You see where that gets me.

And sometimes it really sucks when I learn something as I write a post, because there it is. Don’t have the time to write another post. I am not afraid of knowing I was an idiot. Or that you know. But now it’s public record. Which brings us around to habits again. Many times, building a habit sometimes involves breaking another one. There is about 7 degrees separation between knowledge and action.

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12 Responses to "Thoughts on Productivity, Habits and the Price is Right"

1 | Bryan Barletta

April 27th, 2008 at 7:19 pm

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Glad to hear I’m not the only one with a time keeping issue. Each week I plan out all the work I have to get done and how long it should take me. My estimations are almost ALWAYS right, the issue is that I can never keep myself flowing from one project directly to the other.

I tried the timer thing on my iPhone, but that was about as useful as putting an alarm clock next to my bed as opposed to across the room. It’s just too easy to shut off and ignore.

On a side note, I just recently found your blog and have really been enjoying it! Keep up the great work.

Bryan Barletta’s last blog post..They rock too fast for love – a Motion City Soundtrack tale

2 | Shanti

April 28th, 2008 at 4:23 am

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I am also trying to master time management. I work during the day and go to school at night. Both are very demanding so time management is very important but still it feels like there are too few hours in a day or that my body needs rest when I want to work or my mind needs entertainment instead of focusing on school/work. I’m working on it :)
Shanti’s last blog post..Entrecard debate: I am Pro choice, I choose life

3 | Stephan Miller

April 28th, 2008 at 5:18 am

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It seems no matter what tools I use to fight my issues, I always have to re-evaluate them every once in a while. Old habits sneak in somehow.

4 | Dennis Edell

April 28th, 2008 at 7:44 am

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I am just now starting to devise certain strategies for things I need to do “consistently”. I’m hoping that the time frames for all in between will appear naturally out of that.

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..New Category: Blogging - Very Specific Blogging…

5 | Lin

April 28th, 2008 at 7:04 pm

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Well if it’s any consolation to you, many of us struggle with time management. Whether it’s trying to multi-task, or simply trying to focus in on just one project, normal life as it is can often create distractions and obstacles that keep us from fulfilling our goals, even for just one day.

I don’t believe there is any trick to managing time. Sometimes things work out well time-wise, and other times we have to disconnect and start all over again. It’s often a struggle regardless.

Lin’s last blog post..By: Mom @ Wide Open Wallet

6 | Mirjam

April 29th, 2008 at 3:08 am

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Going through the same thing here,I don´t use timers on a regular bases, but whenever I can´t “see the forest through the trees” I do set a timer for 30 minutes and work without stopping. Then either set it again or take a little walk around the house and catch up on my horses before going back in to repeat the process.

This way I do get to focus for 30 minutes straight without getting distracted, sort of like “power-workout” on the jobs that really need to get done ;)
Mirjam’s last blog post..Administration Note

7 | Stephan Miller

April 29th, 2008 at 5:02 am

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I’ve learned too, that for now, it’s the only habit I am starting. I tend to jam changes in life and then freak out because there is so much to change at once.

For now, I am using it so that I can see time pass and know how long it takes to complete something. Then I will use that knowledge to set a better schedule.

The problem is I want to fit more in. But the only way I can do it right now is by cutting other things out or batch certain tasks farther apart.

My unit of time before this was a day. I did a list of things each day and it was basically the same. On the weekends, it was a free for all. If I can make it a week and can hold that in my head and stick to it, then instead of doing everything daily, I can set days of the week where I do specific things and then add more time to the things that actually put me closer to my goals.

That’s the idea for now. Sometimes I throw up a rough post of my intentions, wait for comments and see how they affect my ideas on it. I guess it works like a committee. It helps me mold my plan.

8 | Sandy Allen

April 29th, 2008 at 9:26 pm

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I transitioned from an office to a full-time photography freelance situation, and struggled at first with the time management issue as well. Especially because I office part of the time at home. The first thing I did was NEVER watch TV unless I was watching it on DVR. Never as broadcast. The second thing I did was never work until “I get to a stopping point.” I stop cold on the hour or half-hour of any task - jot down my next step - and then move on to whatever else I need to get done. Its amazing how fast you can get back into a task when you leave it mid-step.

Finally - I stopped beating myself up if I slipped and found myself three hours into a Sex In The City marathon. It will happen. Life is short. And I decided if I was going to work for myself I would have a boss that cut me some slack every now and then.

Sandy Allen’s last blog post..little boy in blue

9 | Stephan Miller

April 30th, 2008 at 5:48 am

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My only issue with giving myself a break sometimes is that when I give myself an inch, I take a mile. But I do agree there needs to be time for breaks.

10 | Greenville NC Events

May 2nd, 2008 at 10:25 am

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Breaks are a must! sometimes i get going and going and get so worn out but i have to force myself to remember to take them!

11 | Empire Autopilot Jon

May 2nd, 2008 at 6:53 pm

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Yes i totally agree sometimes focus is what is needed. I like multi tasking and making shortcuts to finish the job quickly but sometimes it bites me in the ass because i miss a step or oh i didn’t know that fantastico wp plugin can’t be done on mulitple tabs.

Looking forward to reading more
EA Jon

12 | Stephan Miller

May 3rd, 2008 at 4:17 pm

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I used to swear by it. And the time I saved “while a page loads” always gets eaten up plus more with getting sidetracked before I even get back to the original task.

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