Time Management Techniques

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  • View profile for Chris Donnelly

    Co Founder of Searchable.com | Follow for posts on Business, Marketing, Personal Brand & AI

    1,244,026 followers

    I've tried 100s of time management techniques.  This is by far my favourite: I used to work 80 hrs/week and call it "productive." When really I was: - Attending pointless meetings - Fighting countless small fires - Being involved in every decision Now I work less than 70% the time and get 4x as much done. The Eisenhower Matrix helped me get there.  It teaches you to categorise tasks by importance and urgency. Here's how it works: 1. Do It Now (Urgent + Important) Examples: - Finalise pitch deck before investor meeting tomorrow. - Fix website crash during peak customer traffic. - Respond to press interview request before deadline. Best Practices: - Attack these tasks first each morning with full focus. - Set a strict deadline so urgency fuels execution. 2. Schedule It (Important + Not Urgent) Examples: - Plan quarterly strategy session with leadership team. - Map long-term hiring plan for next 18 months. - Build a personal brand content system for LinkedIn. Best Practices: - Protect time blocks in advance. Never leave them floating. - Tie them to measurable outcomes, not vague intentions. 3. Delegate It (Urgent + Not Important) Examples: - Handle inbound customer service queries this week. - Organise travel logistics for upcoming conference. - Update CRM with latest sales call notes. Best Practices: - Build playbooks so your team executes without confusion. - Delegate with deadlines to avoid wasting time. 4. Eliminate It (Not Urgent + Not Important) Examples: - Tweak logo colour palette again for fun. - Attend generic networking events with no ICP fit. - Review endless “best productivity tools” articles. Best Practices: - Audit weekly. Cut anything that doesn’t compound long-term. - Replace low-value busywork with rest, thinking, or selling. If you are always reacting to what feels urgent,   You'll never focus on what matters. Attend to the tasks in quadrant 1 efficiently,  Then spend 60-70% of your time in quadrant 2.    That's work that actually builds your business. Which quadrant are you spending too much time in right now?  Drop your thoughts in the comments. My newsletter, Step By Step, breaks down more frameworks like this. It's designed to help you build smarter without burning out. 200k+ builders use it to develop better systems. Join them here:  https://lnkd.in/eUTCQTWb ♻️ Repost this to help other founders manage their time.  And follow Chris Donnelly for more on building and running businesses. 

  • View profile for Meera Remani
    Meera Remani Meera Remani is an Influencer

    Executive Coach helping leaders land VP-CXO roles | LinkedIn Top Voice | Ex - Amzn P&G | IIM MBA

    172,447 followers

    I interviewed 50 CEOs about time management. None of them use to-do lists Because that’s not what actually works. We know the cost of time management that fails. ↳ You work long hours, yet your list keeps growing. ↳ You miss family time. Your health takes a backseat. ↳ And deep down, you still feel like you haven’t arrived. Top leaders do it differently. They don’t just manage time, they master it. Here are 15 time mastery habits they use that you can apply to stay ahead without staying late: 1. Pomodoro Technique ↳ Set a 25-minute timer and focus on just one task ↳ Take a 5-minute break after each round ↳ After 4 rounds, step away for 15–30 minutes to reset 2. Eisenhower Matrix ↳ Separate tasks into urgent vs. important ↳ Do what’s urgent and important right away ↳ Delegate, defer, or drop the rest 3. ABCDE Method ↳ Tag tasks A to E based on priority ↳ ‘A’ tasks drive your goals - do them first ↳ ‘D’ and ‘E’ tasks? Delegate or delete 4. 80/20 Pareto Method ↳ Identify the few tasks that create the biggest impact ↳ Focus 80% of your time on that top 20% ↳ Cut the rest without guilt 5. 3-3-3 Method ↳ Block 3 hours for your most focused work ↳ Complete 3 quick wins to build momentum ↳ Handle 3 small upkeep tasks to stay on track 6. 2-Minute Rule ↳ If something takes less than 2 minutes, do it now ↳ Bigger tasks? Schedule or delegate ↳ Keeps your mental and digital clutter low 7. Eat the Frog ↳ Do your hardest task first thing in the morning ↳ It sets the tone for a productive day 8. Getting Things Done (GTD) ↳ Get every task out of your head and onto paper ↳ Organize them by next actions ↳ Review regularly and take focused steps forward 9. Kanban Board ↳ Use three columns: To Do, Doing, Done ↳ Move tasks across as you make progress ↳ Visual clarity = less overwhelm 10. Task Batching ↳ Group similar tasks (like emails or calls) ↳ Do them in one focused block ↳ Saves energy by reducing context-switching 11. Warren Buffett 5/25 Rule ↳ List your top 25 goals or tasks ↳ Circle the 5 that matter most ↳ Say no to the other 20 until those 5 are done 12. Time Blocking ↳ Block specific time for important tasks ↳ Treat it like a non-negotiable meeting 13. 1-3-5 Method ↳ Plan 1 big, 3 medium, and 5 small tasks for the day ↳ Keeps your workload realistic and motivating 14. MSCW Method ↳ Sort tasks into: Must, Should, Could, Won’t ↳ Prioritize the Musts during peak focus time ↳ Everything else can wait or be delegated 15. Pickle Jar Method ↳ Start with the big, meaningful tasks first ↳ Fit in smaller ones around them ↳ Make space for what truly matters You don't need all 15. You need the 2-3 that resonate with your biggest struggles. Which one speaks to you? Drop the number in the comments, I'd love to know. ♻ Repost to help your network trade burnout for focus. ➕ Follow me (Meera Remani) for tools that fuel your growth. Image courtesy and post inspiration: Justin Mecham.

  • View profile for Matt Long

    Personal Injury & Civil Litigation Attorney | Partition Suits • Contract Disputes • Property & Money Fights | Points & Miles | Richmond, VA

    5,929 followers

    Stop confusing “urgent” with “important.” I have been a lawyer for 16 years. Here is one thing I have learned that applies to law and to life. Some things feel urgent because someone is yelling about them. Some things are urgent because the clock is ticking. And some things are neither, but get treated like both. The truly important things, the ones that move cases forward, protect clients, or change the trajectory of your business, rarely scream for your attention. They sit quietly on your to-do list while you are putting out “fires” that do not matter. Here is how I try to handle it: If something is due December 1, I aim to have it done by November 1. If the deadline is 21 days away, I try to finish in 10. I stay 2 to 3 weeks ahead and try to do that 100 percent of the time. Life gets less stressful, cases run smoother, and the workflow is easier when you work ahead. The only way to protect your time and your schedule is to focus on what truly matters instead of getting distracted by fake problems. It also means doing the crappy things first. Every day when I get to work, I knock out the stuff I do not want to do first. The hard phone calls, the difficult pleadings, the complex discovery. Sometimes I do not even open my email until later. People think being “responsive” means answering everything the second it hits your inbox. That is not responsiveness, that is reactivity. You do not win trials, run a business, or live a good life by reacting to noise. You win by protecting your focus for the things that matter. Everyone thinks their problem is the most important problem in the world. In reality, the most important thing in your professional and personal life is your time and your sanity. Protect them like your life depends on it.

  • View profile for Surya Vajpeyi

    Senior Research Analyst, Reso | CSR Representative - India Office | LinkedIn Creator | 77K+ Followers | Consulting, Strategy & Market Intelligence

    77,293 followers

    𝐉𝐮𝐠𝐠𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝟒 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐬 𝐚𝐭 𝐎𝐧𝐜𝐞? 𝐇𝐞𝐫𝐞’𝐬 𝐖𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐈 𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐝.🎭 One month, I found myself handling 4 projects at the same time. Different deadlines. Different team members. Different expectations. At first, I thought: “I got this!” By Week 2, I was overwhelmed. 💬 Teams notifications piling up 📧 Emails left unread 📝 Deadlines creeping closer It was chaos. But here’s what I learned that helped me not just survive—but actually deliver all four projects successfully. 🔹 𝟭. 𝗡𝗼𝘁 𝗘𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘆 𝗧𝗮𝘀𝗸 𝗗𝗲𝘀𝗲𝗿𝘃𝗲𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗦𝗮𝗺𝗲 𝗘𝗻𝗲𝗿𝗴𝘆 I used to treat all tasks equally—huge mistake. Instead, I started prioritizing like a CEO: Impact vs. Urgency → What moves the needle the most? Tasks I can delegate vs. Tasks I MUST own 🔹 𝟮. 𝗦𝘁𝗼𝗽 𝗢𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗺𝘂𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴. 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝗿𝘁 𝗦𝗺𝗮𝗿𝘁 𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗺𝘂𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 Handling different teams meant tons of calls, updates, and meetings. Solution? I grouped discussions into structured updates instead of responding to every little thing. Weekly syncs → Big picture Asynchronous updates → For non-urgent matters 🔹 𝟯. 𝗧𝗶𝗺𝗲-𝗕𝗹𝗼𝗰𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗖𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗴𝗲𝗱 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗚𝗮𝗺𝗲 I used to jump between projects all day. It was exhausting. Then, I started: ⏳ Morning = Deep work on Project A ⏳ Afternoon = Meetings + Project B ⏳ Evening = Reviewing & planning for tomorrow This stopped my brain from context-switching every 10 minutes. 🔹 𝟰. 𝗬𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗖𝗮𝗹𝗲𝗻𝗱𝗮𝗿 𝗦𝗵𝗼𝘂𝗹𝗱 𝗦𝗰𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗬𝗼𝘂 𝗮 𝗟𝗶𝘁𝘁𝗹𝗲 (𝗕𝘂𝘁 𝗡𝗼𝘁 𝗧𝗼𝗼 𝗠𝘂𝗰𝗵) I learned the power of scheduling everything. Even my ‘thinking time.’ Because if you don’t control your calendar, your calendar will control you. 📌 Lesson? Multitasking isn’t the flex. Managing your time is. You can’t give 100% to everything—but you can be 100% present in what you’re doing right now. Ever been in a situation like this? How do YOU manage multiple projects without losing your mind? Drop your best tips below! 👇 #TimeManagement #Productivity #CareerGrowth

  • View profile for Mike Soutar
    Mike Soutar Mike Soutar is an Influencer

    LinkedIn Top Voice on business transformation and leadership. Mike’s passion is supporting the next generation of founders and CEOs.

    48,466 followers

    Time stops being your own the moment you become CEO. I remember taking over London radio station Kiss FM years ago. (The youthful demeanour in that photo didn’t last long 👶🏻 😂) In my first week as a CEO, my calendar filled up faster than a Glastonbury headline slot. Everyone wanted a catch-up or “just a quick word”. I spent so much time reacting to other people’s priorities that my real job - leading the company - got buried beneath the noise and it took me weeks to regain control of my own agenda. Here are four strategies that I still use today when I feel the outside world leaning in too far: 1. Turn your calendar into a fortress Block out “deep work” time every week for strategic thinking and high-impact work. Treat these blocks like your most important meetings. 2. Shrink your default meeting times Most meetings expand to fit the time they’re given. Set the calendar default to 30 minutes instead of an hour. You’ll be amazed at how much more productive they become. 3. Make stakeholders work for access Create clear communication rules with board members and investors. Regular updates are fine, but limit how often you’re available for drop-ins or last-minute calls. 4. Say no - without apology As CEO, your most powerful tool is focus. Politely but firmly decline anything that doesn’t align with your top priorities. Saying no isn’t selfish; it’s leadership. Master these, and you’ll feel a little less like the company’s busiest person - and a lot more like its most effective one.

  • View profile for Brent Saunders
    Brent Saunders Brent Saunders is an Influencer

    Chairman & CEO, Bausch + Lomb; Chairman of BeautyHealth and Roam

    57,123 followers

    In April I sent a company-wide note with the subject line “I hate meetings.” Unsurprisingly, it’s our most-read internal communication to date. My message was simple: meetings can be incredibly effective when done right, but we’ve all adopted some bad habits when it comes to using our time – and our colleagues’ time – wisely.   After soliciting feedback from colleagues around the world through polling, group discussions and direct outreach, I shared our first round of meeting-focused updates:   ✔ Default meeting lengths in Outlook would now be 20- and 40-minute blocks, as opposed to 30 and 60 minutes. ✔ Pre-reads should be utilized more, prepared in a thoughtful way and sent at least 24 hours in advance. ✔ Even when the purpose of a meeting is clear, agendas matter! We should get in the habit of creating clear and concise agendas for all meetings, regardless of length. ✔ Less technical, but just as important: when considering a meeting, ask yourself – can this be done another way (e.g., e-mail, phone call, walk down the hall for an in-person discussion)? If a meeting is required, when considering participants ask yourself who really needs to take part. In the first month, total meetings per week dropped by ~1,800, and total audio minutes per week dropped by ~15%; that’s 282,280 minutes, or more than 4,700 hours. Stating the obvious, that’s rapid culture change. And while things have normalized a bit (at least, until our next round of updates), we’re still seeing a downward trend. Are these groundbreaking ideas for how to become a more efficient and effective organization? No, but they don’t have to be. Sometimes it’s as simple as 1) reminding people that we don’t have to operate a certain way because “that’s how we’ve always done things,” and 2) encouraging ownership of our time, the most valuable commodity we have. #CompanyCulture #TimeManagement #WorkSmarter

  • View profile for Christian Krause

    I help VPs maximise sales team productivity | Revenue growth without adding overhead | 1:1 exec coaching | Train The Trainer | Team trainings | Onsite workshops | SKO speaker

    110,573 followers

    One major reason why sales reps miss quota: They don't spend enough time selling👇 In fact, they only sell 28% of their day. The other 72% are spent in non-selling activities. - Email and Slack - Internal meetings - Updating the CRM - Other types of busywork This is a massive problem. If you only move the needle 28% of the time... how are you supposed to get to your number? The solution: implement Pareto Time Management. Pareto's Law states: 80% of your results come from 20% of your activities. Here's how to implement that in your day to day: Step 1): Time Inventory For one entire week track how you spend your time. - Use a timer. - Fill out a spreadsheet. - Then categorize activities. The goal here is to create transparency and self-awareness. Step 2): Activity Separation Decide which activities have a direct revenue impact vs. which do not. - Build a table with 2 columns. - Revenue vs. non-revenue activities - Important: use your own best judgement here. Step 3): Time Blocking Now it's time to plan your next week. - Block sufficient time for revenue activities. - I recommend aiming for 50% (~20h) weekly. - Aim for more if you can. Important: Communicate this with your manager & team. This is change management. Step 4): Color coding - Use different colors for revenue vs. non revenue activities. - This will give you a better sense of time budgeting. Closing remarks: time management is a never ending effort. There will always be other things competing for your attention. DO NOT LET THEM WIN. Focus on selling. What's your best time management tip for sellers?👇 Graphic by Pejman Milani

  • View profile for Dorie Clark
    Dorie Clark Dorie Clark is an Influencer

    WSJ & USA Today Bestselling Author, 4x Top Global Business Thinker | HBR & Fast Company Contributor | Fmr Duke & Columbia exec ed prof | Helping You Get Your Ideas Heard | Follow for Strategy, Personal Brand, Marketing

    388,821 followers

    One of the most common things people tell me is this: "I just don't have time." It sounds reasonable. Most of us are overscheduled. The meetings multiply. The emails keep coming. The urgent always feels louder than the important. But here's the hard truth: Time doesn't magically appear. It gets claimed. And if you don't claim it intentionally, someone else will claim it for you. We tend to treat commitments to other people as sacred. A client meeting? Of course you'll show up. A board call? Non-negotiable. But the time you set aside to think? To reflect? To plan your future? That's often the first thing to go. Over time, this creates a pattern of constant reactivity. You're busy. You're productive. You're responsive. But you're not necessarily moving forward in a meaningful way. Short-term responsiveness is useful. It's part of being a professional. But it can't be the only way you operate if you care about long-term impact. That's why I'm such a believer in protecting what I call "white space." White space is time deliberately left open. For strategic thinking. Deep work. Relationship building. Or advancing projects that won't get done unless you make them a priority. If you wait for your schedule to "calm down," you'll be waiting a very long time. Protecting that space can feel uncomfortable. You may have to say no. Or "not now." Or disappoint someone in the short term. The good news? You don't need to block out entire days to start. Yesterday, I talked about finding just 5 minutes for one small compound habit. The same principle applies here. Even 5 minutes of protected thinking time is better than zero. And once you prove to yourself that you can claim that time, you can expand it. Here are three simple ways to start: First, treat your thinking time like any other meeting. If it's on your calendar, it's real. Second, practice strategic refusal. Not every opportunity deserves your time, even if it's appealing. Third, use that time intentionally. Not for inbox cleanup, but for work that compounds over time. When I was writing The Long Game, I realized how much blocking white space had changed the trajectory of my career. Even one afternoon a week made a measurable difference. It's rarely dramatic. But it's powerful. Because in the end, the professionals who shape their careers aren't the busiest ones. They're the ones who protect time to think. And that's a decision no one can make for you. If this is the reminder you needed, save it. And if someone you care about keeps saying they "don't have time" for the work that matters most, send it to them. They might not get the time back on their own.

  • View profile for Ishaan Arora, FRM

    Founder - FinLadder | LinkedIn Top Voice | Speaker - TEDx, Josh | Educator | Creator

    101,476 followers

    2018-2021: You're a full-time student, preparing for FRM & CFA, AND building a startup? 2022-2024: How do you manage 2 businesses and keep up with content on 3 platforms? From networking events to family functions to friends reunions, almost everyone asks me the same question! It all comes down to one thing: effective time management.⏰ 18-year-old Ishaan didn’t know anything about it; just went with the flow; life disciplined me! Here are the time-management strategies that help me stay productive and avoid burnout! ⏳Apply the Eisenhower matrix: Sort tasks into four categories: urgent and important, important but not urgent, urgent but not important, and neither. This method helps you focus on tasks that add the most value while pushing aside distractions. ⏳Use the Pomodoro Technique: Work for 25 minutes, then take a 5-minute break. Repeat this cycle, and after completing four cycles, take a longer break (15–30 minutes). This method helps maintain focus and prevents burnout. ⏳Use the 2-Minute Rule for Small Tasks: If a task takes two minutes or less, do it immediately. This keeps minor tasks from piling up and clears your schedule for more significant work. ⏳Apply Time Blocking to High-Energy Periods: Instead of just blocking out time on your calendar, match your most demanding tasks to the times of day when you have the most energy. This makes difficult tasks easier and leaves less mentally taxing work for low-energy times. ⏳Apply Parkinson’s Law: Set tighter deadlines for tasks to force yourself to focus and complete them faster. Parkinson’s Law states that "work expands to fill the time available," so giving yourself less time can boost productivity. ⏳Follow the Rule of Three: At the start of each day, identify the three most important tasks you need to accomplish. By focusing on just three big things, you can keep your priorities clear and your workload manageable. Which techniques do you use? 💬

  • View profile for Ajay Srinivasan
    Ajay Srinivasan Ajay Srinivasan is an Influencer

    Founding CEO of Prudential ICICI AMC (now ICICI Prudential AMC), Prudential Fund Management Asia (now Eastspring Investments) and Aditya Birla Capital; | Advisor | Mentor

    9,838 followers

    For all of us, time is the most valuable asset. In an organisation, where the leaders spend time signals the priorities, shapes culture and determines whether the organisation executes on what truly matters. Great time management, I have found, isn’t about squeezing more tasks into a day; it’s about aligning your time with critical outcomes and creating leverage through people, processes and decisions. Those who are good at this make the hour last longer. Why is time management key? It converts strategy to action. Your calendar is the operating system of strategy. If this calendar doesn’t reflect the company’s priorities, the organisation isn’t likely to achieve its goals. It frees time for what matters. Leaders create impact less by doing and more by enabling. Ensuring time availability for the right activities multiplies output. It improves decisions. Unrushed thinking and focused reviews improve judgement, reduce rework and prevent “urgent” fires. It is the signal for direction and culture. Teams copy leaders’ calendar management style. When the leader models deep work, prioritisation, preparation and learning, others in the team follow. What are the common obstacles? Tyranny of the urgent: Unplanned demands, whatsapp pings and what gets classified as “urgent” crowds out important work. Meeting creep: Meetings accumulate without a clear purpose or decision rights Ambiguous priorities: Undefined, unprioritized goals produce reactive calendars where everything feels equally important. Delegation gaps: Work gravitates upward when role clarity or trust is low; leaders become doers, choking bandwidth Context switching: Too much activity especially in different contexts leads to poor focus; 60 minutes of activity is then only 10 minutes of progress. Saying “yes”: Without guardrails, leaders accept more than their calendar can bear. What’s the fix? Define the focus. Translate strategy into key quarterly outcomes. If an activity doesn’t advance these, it’s a candidate to decline, delegate or delay. Design your ideal week. Time-block for people, performance, thinking and certainly for buffers Run meetings like decisions, not rituals. Ask for a pre-read with the question to be decided, options, data and recommended next steps. Start with the decision, then discussion. End with the owner, deadline and success metric. Schedule Important/Non-Urgent work first each week. Deal with urgent/important issues and define what “urgent” means with your team. Delegate for outcomes, not tasks. Reduce context switching. Batch similar work so you don’t have fragmented focus. Silence notifications during deep work. Install guardrails for what you say “yes” to Audit and iterate. Review your calendar monthly: What created impact? What can be eliminated? Your calendar tells a very important story. Read it. As someone said, "When you invest your time in what truly matters, balance follows and happiness becomes the dividend"

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