I have no productivity issues.
Never had them. Never will.
But I have some productivity hacks I never thought of sharing until now.
I have lots of tips to help you enjoy being productive so I made 9 of them extra easy to skim through.
No fluff. No pain.
1. Read some of those newsletters you’ve left unopened in your inbox. [P.S.: You can always check out my newsletter to save your content.]
2. Take a short course. Skillshare has some of the best, on-point courses. Cooking, business, design, you name it.
3. Stay active on Quora, keep in touch with your peers on Twitter, or jump into a discussion on LinkedIn or your favorite Slack group.
4. Take care of the small tasks in your backlog. My ultimate productivity tip is to always start your day with the most difficult or lengthy task. 90% of the time this works for me. For the other days, handling small tasks or taking breaks often to take care of different duties helps you keep up with your workload.
5. Say thank you! For a long time, I dealt with not knowing how to thank people who helped me with small tasks or referrals. The MyPostcard service makes it extra easy and cute to say thank you by sending postcards to your friends, clients, family members, and colleagues.
6. Learn a new language. Start from Duolingo.
7.Make a list of everything you want to get done. This seems to work for most people but I do things differently. I don’t even use a task management tool. 🤯 So what on Earth do I do? I keep everything I need to take care of as opened tabs in my browser. This helps me focus only on what I need to work on and see everything at a glance. This way, I only take care of fun stuff when I’m done with everything. There’s also small tasks that aren’t a big priority [e.g. updating my cover photo, creating a new YouTube tutorial]. I add these as ideas in my bookmarks and get to them when I have the time.
8. Schedule at least large chunks of your day. You don’t need to write down everything you’re going to do. However, make sure you have an overview of the big tasks you should take care of so you don’t get caught up doing something else and postpone your important duties indefinitely.
9. Keeping track of time. Ugh, I hate time tracking. But for someone who doesn’t know where their time is going, you can definitely start by tracking one month of your life at work. This will show you where your time goes and what’s distracting you. In the future, you should be able to better schedule your work and even block distractions. Whatever tool works as long as you keep it. 😉
Chptr