Time. It’s the one thing that is absolutely the same for every single person in the world.
It doesn’t matter if you live in Africa or Arizona.
It doesn’t matter if you’re a CEO, pastor, janitor, or homeless.
Everyone has 24 hours. 1440 minutes. 86,400 seconds.
Time may fly by or seem like forever. But one thing remains the same. We all have the same amount of it.
One of the most frustrating statements is “I don’t have the time.”
Why? Because we all have time. It’s just a matter of how we use it. Priorities.
Something occupies your time. The challenge is defining what it is in your everyday life.
4 Revealing Ways to Determine Where You’re Losing Time Within Your Day
1. Log Your Time
Most people assume they lose very little time within their day. Until they measure it.
Once you know exactly where your time is going, you have incredible intel that is an absolute gift right there for you.
But you must track it. You can be as detailed as you want and the more detail you can provide the better.
I tracked a full week (seven consecutive days) of my time in two ways: non-travel week / travel week. Why? Because they look completely different and I want to know where my time is going.
WHEN you do this, I caution you to don’t adjust anything simply because you’re tracking it. You want an accurate view of how your time really is at this first stage.
Log it and move one.
Here is a link to a number of free time logs to track your time. Click Here.
2. Analyze Your Time
Logging your time is a great first step. It’s going to provide you incredible intel but it cannot stop there.
It’s critical you break this raw information down and let the facts be the facts.
When someone allows me to look through their day, it’s a vulnerable place. Why? Because there’s usually a lot of subjective, wasted time packed in that you’re just unaware of it until you log and analyze it.
The purpose of analyzing it is to allow you to see not how you want to use your time or even think you use your time but how you ACTUALLY use your time.
You may be very surprised and even embarrassed at what you find. But isn’t the point to have an honest portrayal so you know what to change?
This leads into what do to next …
3. Adjust Your Time
This is where it really matters. You’re in a small group if you log your time. You’re in an even smaller group if you analyze your time.
But if you do this critical action item of actually adjusting your time, you’re in an elite group who really want to make the most of their time and actually have the ability to change it.
Let me give you an example. You take your log of one week and with a red pen you take notes of all of your observations.
You notice all of the areas where time is not being used wisely. You also notice patterns. You seem to go off course at the same times each day.
This is how you begin to adjust your time.
4. Re-Write Your Time
What if you have a chance to do it over again? You actually do if you choose re-write your time.
You cannot go back and do yesterday all over again but theoretically you can learn from yesterday’s mistakes for a better tomorrow. How?
You adjust your time by noticing what you need to change (adjust). Then you re-write your time by creating your ideal day.
This is the concept of not just planning your day but answering the question, “if I had the perfectly structured day, what would it look like?”
Let me give you a personal example:
6:00am Journaling / Bible Reading / Inspirational Reading / Vision Work Review
7:00am Writing Time
8:00am Workout (run or bike) – listen to an audiobook
8:30am Breakfast / Shower
8:50am Ramp Up – planning my day
9:00am 1st Focused Time Block
(note: a focused time block is a block of time dedicated to one project without interruption)
10:00am Buffer Block – check emails / phone calls, etc
10:30am Break
10:45am 2nd Focused Time Block
11:45am Buffer Break – check emails / phone calls, etc
12:00pm Lunch
1:00pm 3rd Focused Time Block
2:00pm Buffer Break – check emails / phone calls, etc
2:30pm Break
2:45pm 4th Focused Time Block
3:45pm Buffer Break – check emails / phone calls, etc
4:15pm Clean up
4:45pm Cash Out – breaking down my day / prepping for tomorrow
5:00pm Workout
5:30pm Dinner
6:00pm Family Time
7:30pm Bed Time with the Kids – watch a show / read to them
8:00pm Learning Time – read a book / work through an online course
8:30pm Time with Wife
9:30pm Ready for Bed
10:00pm Bed Time
Let me remind you this is an ideal day when I’m not traveling. When I log my time I can see where I went off road and why.
Sometimes it’s for a good reason. Other times, well… This is my structure that allows me to maximize my day. It will look different for you.
Closing Challenge…
Time is relative. And what you do with it is completely up to you.
Motivated busy professionals must learn to find the leaks of time within their day and move from busy to productive.
And one of the most telling ways is in your use of time.
I challenge you to log your time for a week. Analyze your time to see what you do with it. Then adjust what you find ultimately leading to re-writing your time to what would be ideal to produce maximum results that reflect your values.
You will be amazed at the results if you commit to this exercise. Try me.
Closing Question…
Where are you losing the most time within your day and what are you going to do about it?
[…] And often, I’m losing time somewhere within my day. The goal is to find out where and become productive while you’re there. Read about how to where you’re losing time within your day HERE. […]