Is your day packed absolutely packed or did you pack your day?

What’s the difference? Your role in creating your schedule.

You can live your life proactively or reactively.  Living proactively means that you are designing your days around the tasks that will help you accomplish your longer-term goals.

Living reactively means that you either don’t have control over your schedule, or that you have a plan but you don’t stick to it for whatever reason. The reasons can include your own procrastination, your work environment, or letting others push their goals onto your day. Read more about effective time management here.

The latter happens when you subscribe to the false thinking that someone else’s goals are more important than yours. If you are in the habit of living reactively, it can be a hard habit to break.

However, time blocking can help.

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What is time blocking?

In my previous post I explained how to determine “what” you should be doing and the tools I use to manage my day. That’s the first part of productivity.

You’ll also need to start tracking your time more accurately. Without knowing how and when you complete tasks, you won’t be able to properly time block.

Once you have your priorities, tools for managing your day, and time tracking app of choice,  you can start on the next step: daily time blocking.

Time blocking is the process of arranging your tasks into the hours of a day to achieve max productivity. It’s how you design your days in a proactive way, vs. being reactive to the demands of others. Read more about productivity habits here.

Here’s why you should try it.

The benefits of time blocking for productivity

Maybe you’re tired of feeling “busy,” but not productive. Maybe you’re sick of back-to-back meetings, or limited hours to truly focus.

Whatever the reason, time blocking is worth trying. Even if you’ve tried other time management techniques. Productivity experts and time blocking advocates agree.

An article quoting Kevin Kruse, author of 15 Secrets Successful People Know About Time Management, recommends time blocks instead of to-do lists “because of the discipline and order it applies to your tasks.”

Organizing your schedule instead of making a to-do list takes productivity one step further. Because you’re dedicating specific windows of time to your work, everything finds its place. Tasks aren’t floating around in your mind. There’s a time set aside to get it all done.

As Kruse continued, this can even help you sleep better at night.

Once you start time blocking, you’ll have a grasp on what you can accomplish in a day, giving you a much more realistic set of goals.

Sleeping through the night? That’s one point for time blocking.

#1. It makes your work a priority

When you create a calendar event, it’s likely something important for yourself, or a commitment you made to someone else.

Time blocking does the same thing, but for all of your tasks. It elevates your work — especially the highest priority projects — to an immovable event.

Paul Minors explained time blocking this way, “You’re making a promise to turn up at 10am and work on that presentation. This self-commitment helps you to turn good intention (the tasks on your task list) into a plan of action (a commitment about when you’re going to get the work done).”

Is your day packed absolutely packed, or did you pack your day?

What’s the difference? Your role in creating your schedule.

You can live your life proactively or reactively. Living proactively means designing your days around the specific tasks that will help you accomplish your longer-term goals.

Living reactively means that you either don’t have control over your schedule or have a plan but don’t stick to it for whatever reason. The reasons can include your own procrastination, your work environment, or letting others push their goals onto your day. Read more about effective time management here

The latter happens when you subscribe to the false thinking that someone else’s goals are more important than yours. If you are in the habit of living reactively, it can be a hard habit to break.

However, time blocking can help.

What is time blocking?

In my previous post, I explained how to determine “what” you should be doing and the tools I use to manage my day. That’s the first part of productivity.

You’ll also need to start tracking your time more accurately. Without knowing how and when you complete tasks, you won’t be able to correctly time block.

Once you have your priorities, tools for managing your day, and time tracking app of choice,  you can start on the next step: daily time blocking.

Time blocking is the process of arranging your tasks into the hours of a day to achieve max productivity. It’s how you design your days in a proactive way, vs. being reactive to the demands of others. Read more about

#2. It helps you work distraction-free

It’s all too common to feel the pull of other tasks, notifications, co-workers, clients, and so on when trying to focus.

Distractions are a part of modern life.

Time blocking minimizes their negative impact, giving you dedicated work time on one specific task.

You may have heard “deep work” or “flow.” In short, deep work is focusing without distraction on a cognitively demanding task. Once you’ve learned this skill, you can think through complex situations and produce better results much faster.

Time blocking + deep work = a productivity dream.

#3. It minimizes the mental burden of switching tasks

We all know it’s hard to resume a task once you’re pulled into something else. If your workplace sounds like the title of Celeste Ng’s 2017 novel, Little Fires Everywhere, you will want to try time blocking.

It’s not always easy to pick up where you left off, especially if you’re still considering the most recent fire drill.

There’s scientific evidence of that.

According to a Zenkit article, researcher Gloria Mark discovered how counterproductive task-switching is.

“The average knowledge worker switches tasks every three minutes, and, once distracted, a worker can take nearly a half-hour to resume the original task,” Mark explained.

Time blocking reduces the time you switch tasks throughout the day, allowing you to avoid that half-hour wasted.

The list goes on, but we’ve found these to be the main benefits of time blocking. Let’s get started.

.

Here’s why you should try it.

The benefits of time blocking for productivity

Maybe you’re tired of feeling “busy” but not productive. Perhaps you’re sick of back-to-back meetings or limited hours to truly focus.

Whatever the reason, time blocking is worth trying. Even if you’ve tried other time management techniques. Productivity experts and time blocking advocates agree.

An article quoting Kevin Kruse, author of 15 Secrets Successful People Know About Time Management, recommends time blocks instead of to-do lists “because of the discipline and order it applies to your tasks.”

Organizing your schedule instead of making a to-do list takes productivity one step further. Everything finds its place because you’re dedicating specific windows of time to your work. Tasks aren’t floating around in your mind. There’s a time set aside to get it all done.

As Kruse continued, this can even help you sleep better at night.

Once you start time blocking, you’ll have a grasp on what you can accomplish in a day, giving you a much more realistic set of goals.

Sleeping through the night? That’s one point for time blocking.

#1. It makes your work a priority

Creating a calendar event is likely something meaningful for yourself or a commitment you made to someone else.

Time blocking does the same thing but for all of your tasks. It elevates your work — especially the highest priority projects — to an immovable event.

Paul Minors explained time blocking this way, “You’re making a promise to turn up at 10 am and work on that presentation. This self-commitment helps you to turn good intention (the tasks on your task list) into a plan of action (a commitment about when you’re going to get the work done).”

the self commitment in time blocking

#2. It helps you work distraction-free

It’s all too common to feel the pull of other tasks, notifications, coworkers, clients, and so on when we’re trying to focus.

Distractions are a part of modern life.

Time blocking aims to minimize their negative impact, giving you dedicated work time on one specific task.

You may have heard the phrase “deep work” or “flow.” In short, deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task. Once you’ve learned this skill, you can think through complex situations and produce better results much faster.

Time blocking + deep work = a productivity dream.

#3. It minimizes the mental burden of switching tasks

We all know it’s hard to resume a task once you’re pulled into something else. If your workplace sounds like the title of Celeste Ng’s 2017 novel, Little Fires Everywhere, you’re going to want to try time blocking.

It’s not always easy to pick up where you left off, especially if you’re still thinking about the most recent fire drill.

There’s scientific evidence of that.

According to a Zenkit article, researcher Gloria Mark discovered just how counterproductive task-switching is.

“The average knowledge worker switches tasks every three minutes, and, once distracted, a worker can take nearly a half-hour to resume the original task,” Mark explained.

Time blocking reduces the time you switch tasks throughout the day, allowing you to avoid that wasted half hour.

The list goes on, but we’ve found these to be the main benefits of using time blocking. Let’s get started.

benefits of time blocking

How to time block

Below, I will quickly describe my process for daily time blocking and how you can develop a similar plan. This is meant to be a speedy and effective way to start with time-blocking, not the end-all solution.

Feel free to modify and adapt this process to fit your goals.

Step 1. Determine your most and least productive times of the day

This is different for each person. I am a morning person naturally, and I think it will always be that way. By 9 pm, I am ready for bed; by 6 am, I am ready to get up and start the day.

My most productive time of the day is from 6-9 am. This is the time that I feel renewed and can think deeply and get my best ideas. The critical aspect here is not whether you are a morning person or a night person but to realize your most productive time and maximize it.

What time of day do you feel most productive? (Hint: You can track your productivity along with work output to find out.)

Action item: Decide on a 60-minute block of time that is your most productive.

Step 2: Schedule it and stick to it

Schedule out right now when your time is going to be. Start with only 60 minutes, but book it and put it on the calendar — experiment with doing this for seven days. Don’t make a big commitment; you don’t need to.

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You just need to book 60 minutes when you feel the best during an average day.

Do not let anyone, under any circumstances, disturb you during your productive time. This is YOUR time, and despite your current thoughts, it’s not too much to ask.

Turn off all distractions. Email, phone, Slack, social media, and chat should all be turned off during this time. 

Consider task batching (grouping similar tasks) during this time and focusing only on priority tasks. Add this to your Google Calendar or Slack status so your co-workers know your time blocked schedule.   

Action item: Book the 60 minutes on your calendar for each of the next seven days

Here’s an example:

time blocking example

Step 3: Put the most important tasks in your 60-minute slot

At this point, you’ve figured out your optimal time of the day and booked it on the calendar.

Now, the last thing you want to do is to waste that time with mindless work (email).

Instead, focus on the tasks that require your thought and focus. For me, those are items like sales copy, product requirements, or designing marketing plans.

Move the really hard tasks to the 60-minute block. Otherwise, you’ll push them back, and they won’t get the attention they deserve. This naturally moves the easy stuff like emails, follow-up phone calls, etc., to the times when your mind is not 100%.

This is more mindless work or tasks that won’t require full brainpower. Don’t get caught spending your most productive time on the least meaningful work.

Action item: Place a critical task on each calendar item.

Here’s an example of what a calendar item looks like:

how to time block calendar example

OK, so that’s my very simplistic plan to get started with time blocking.  Those 60 minutes a day will end up being some of your best.

Time blocking downsides and challenges

Like any time management technique, time blocking has its shortcomings.

It’s best to know what to look out for as you get started with time blocking so you can stay committed.

Not planning ahead

To be fair, time blocking requires some planning chops. If you’re the “always winging it” type, time blocking might add a little structure that can feel limiting.

Don’t worry. In a matter of time, time blocking will become second nature.

It just takes more discipline at first.

As LifeHack suggests, prepare your tasks in advance — during a dedicated time block. “This ensures that you map out all the possible roadblocks and other threats to your productive work.”

A time block for planning your time blocks? You bet.

Picking the wrong time of day

Maybe you’re finding that right after lunch isn’t your true power hour, as you thought.

Nothing wrong with that.

After a week, assess what’s been working and make changes. Again, time tracking can help — especially when you look at activity rates — to see when you’re humming along and make the most of it.

Give yourself the flexibility to move your hour if you need to. However, fair warning: this is also a common excuse for why time blocking doesn’t work.

“I do my best work at different hours of the day” may be true. But that also means you likely have at least one overlapping window regularly.

Don’t fall into the trap of thinking you can’t find an hour a day to truly focus.

You can do it!

Your workplace doesn’t allow for it

It’s true that time blocking takes a fair bit of dedication to succeed. The time you schedule needs to be protected, which requires some communication with your team.

One way around this is to encourage a pilot program at your workplace. See if you can get others to take on this approach so that more people understand and respect it.

If that’s not doable, consider this “closed-door” time. Most workplaces will be open to the idea of heads-down, focused work time. So take it one step further by blocking your calendar so that meetings can’t get booked over it.

Consider Sprints when you start time blocking

Similar in concept to time blocking is creating weekly Sprints for your work. This way, you’re focusing only on a set number of similar tasks for a predetermined duration, often one week.

A very simple method for this is to create one main list of tasks you want to do or need to get done. Then, you prioritize the tasks every week and either leave them in the backlog or put them in your current or future sprint. 

Your current and future Sprints are what they sound like: these are the tasks you will work on during the current week and then the things you will need to get done in the following. If a task is a lower priority, it will remain in the backlog until it gets picked up. You don’t work on anything else in your current sprint until you finish all the tasks. If you don’t complete some items, they will roll over to the future sprint. 

The advantage of this approach is that you are forced to prioritize your tasks and plan things properly on such a detailed level. It takes a few weeks to get used to this system, but when you do, the benefits can be significant. It can also be combined with time blocking.

The sprint approach can be challenging without software that organizes this for you. Hubstaff Tasks is a great solution, as you create tasks on a Kanban board and then drag and drop them from the backlog to your current or future sprint. The best thing about Hubstaff Tasks is that it’s free for teams of up to five people, so be sure to check it out.

Level up to a time blocking planner

Ready to reach the next level? Check out these time blocking planners from Productive Flourish and Make Use Of. You can always use your regular calendar, too.

Now that you know the benefits, the step-by-step process, and the potential roadblocks, you’re ready to start time blocking.

Time blocking has proven to be very effective for me. What are the most effective methods you use to get the most out of every day?

This post was originally published February 2014, and updated March 2024. 

Category: Employee Productivity, Time Management