Three Tips to Improve Timeboxing

Three Tips to Improve Timeboxing

Timeboxing is an intentional method of ensuring you do productive and deep work throughout your workday.

You commit to a specific time of work without interruption — like 60–120 minutes.

Some set an alarm or countdown to make sure you start and stop to move on to the next task.

Here are three tips I have learned to improve my capacity to timebox:

1.) Communicate / Remove Distractions — Because I work from home, I have a family calendar on Google that pops up on my wife and kid’s phones. They know to do their best to avoid calling/asking me for things during that time. I also put my phone and email on “Do Not Disturb” mode.

2.) It’s ok not to be ‘done’ — This is difficult for me. As the timebox period ends, I want to finish! I am learning to let go and move on to the next part of my day.

3.) Schedule Breaks — I have to put “Stretch/Stand Up” reminders on my calendar. Otherwise, I will go 6–8 hours sitting before I realize it’s time to go pick-up my kids from school in the afternoon.

I love timeboxing.

I see tangible results on projects I claimed I was ‘too swamped’ to do before because I was “so busy.”

Aren’t we all?

Need help organizing your week? Check out the life preserver template I made in the comments

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I simplify the path to convert $3–30MM businesses and commercial real estate projects into real, attainable cash.

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Marcelo Bermudez, CEPA

I simplify the path to convert $3–30MM businesses and commercial real estate projects into real, attainable cash.