Benjamin Franklin played many roles throughout his lifetime. He was a leading author, politician, scientist, inventor, civic activist, diplomat, and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States.

In his autobiography, Franklin laid out how he attempted to live his day following the schedule below.

The schedule was intense. And there is no shortage of people started to think this is how they should live their day in order to accomplish success.

Yes, it’s undeniable that spending your time efficiently plays a critical role in your success. But more often than not, a rigid schedule like this only contributes to more trouble rather than making you more productive.

Instead of fitting yourself into an insane schedule, here’s how to manage time wisely — so that you accomplish more in the same 24 hours as everyone else has.

The Lack of Time is a Prioritization Problem

Let me guess, you’re juggling multiple roles right now — from trying to be a good spouse or parent to improving your work performance to starting a business on the side.

On top of that, you’re responsible for managing various areas of your personal life from money to health to relationships.

It’s easy to think that we have too much to do and too little time for all of them. Everywhere you go, you can find someone who won’t stop complaining about how busy they are and how they wish to have more time for the things they want to do.

The reality is, we all have 24 hours in a day and 7 days in a week — which includes Benjamin Franklin and everyone else who you admire and look up upon. Did they get an extra hour every day compared to everyone else? No.

 

If you feel like you don’t have enough time, remember this: You don’t have a time problem, you have a prioritization problem.

If something is important and urgent enough, you’ll make the time to get it done. Instead of hoping to have more time, find out what’s less important that you’re currently doing and remove it. Then, do more of what’s important to you. For example:

  • Stop watching motivational fitness videos on YouTube and start working out.
  • Delegate lower value tasks like cleaning the house and doing laundry (hire someone to do it) and spend more time on your side business.
  • Use Warren Buffett’s 25/5 Rule to remove unimportant goals so you can focus solely on the top goals.
  •  

• Focus and Attention Make Time Valuable

  • It’s counterintuitive, but I’m going to say this: your time has no value.
  • Yes, you get it right. Your time has no value by itself. It’s what you do with your time that makes it valuable. That’s why some people are willing to trade an hour for £5, and some others don’t sweat paying thousands and thousands of pounds to buy their time back.
  • Diving deeper into the concept, you can spend a lot of time getting nothing done other than wasting it, or you can spend the time purposely on your top priorities.
  • Often, it’s not just about how much time you spend on a particular task, but it’s also about how focused you are when spending that time. To make your time more valuable, you must spend it effectively — by managing your energy and attention instead of your time.
  • Our energy and
  • Our energy and attention level work in cycles known as the Circadian Rhythm. It rises and falls throughout the day. The key is to schedule what you do around these ebbs and flows.
  • l work in cycles known as the Circadian Rhythm. It rises and falls throughout the day. The key is to schedule what you do around these ebbs and flows.
  • Another trick I recommend a lot on my blog and productivity program is to limit your daily to-do list to a maximum of five tasks.
  • Then, add those tasks to your calendar. It gives you a better sense of how you’ll be spending your time, so you’re not overcommitting to too many things in a day.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *