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Plan your week, not your whole life

I have been struggling with using my time most effectively and efficiently so that my productivity is high and simultaneously I don’t feel burn out.

I tried a lot of different methods, but nothing worked perfectly for me. Then, I accidentally discovered this method while I was scheduling my goals.

My goal was to increase my productivity without sacrificing the quality of my work and life!

I wanted to peacefully work on tasks at hand without worrying about millions of other things. At the end of the day, I wanted to feel satisfied and fulfilled. You know, I am a creative and highly energetic person.

I get thousands of ideas and want to learn millions of things. So no matter how hard I work, no matter how intelligently I develop something, I always felt like something is still missing. A feeling of guilt was always lingering in my heart.

One fine day it occurred to me that I am not a superman! I have a limited stock of energy which diminishes with the Sun going down. Besides that, there’s a constant assault on my resourcefulness by various factors outside of my control.

In short, though I have 24 hours a day, I have much fewer hours in which I can be highly productive.

I have already been aware of and applying the well-established time management techniques like the 80/20 rule (Pareto’s principle), urgent vs. important, prioritizing your tasks, starting with the most challenging things first, etc. But something was missing.

Somehow nothing was giving me peace of mind. With my headphones on, listening to focus@will tunes, shunned from external noises, I was deeply absorbed in thoughts, trying to understand why it’s not working for me. Finally, a little voice in my head told me to get up and get to actual work; you are wasting time.

And then, I realized I had set unrealistic expectations for myself. No matter how ambitious I am, no matter how talented I am, there’s a limit to how much I can “produce” in a given time.

And I also realized that even if I get 24 hours to work, I am restricted by the amount of energy I have. And then there was a Eureka moment!

All the pieces of the puzzle fall in place. I immediately recorded my thoughts, and here is the framework that you can use to achieve your goals peacefully!

Here’s the first principle: Long-term planning is guesswork!

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The future can’t be predicted with certainty.

At the most, you can be sure of what will happen in the next few weeks. Long-term planning is guesswork. Long-term planning is not as relevant as it used to be because of faster technological change and increased competition in the market.

In today’s dynamic environment, one needs to adapt quickly for survival and success.

Long-term planning may still play a role in strategic decision-making for big firms with dominant positions in their market segment. But for us, lets’ stick to a week.

Before planning your week, first, let’s find out your budget. How much time do you really have? Here, I want to make a distinction. Whenever you think about time, always remember that time is not a single entity as far as scheduling your tasks.

Whenever you think about time, think about a specific time and your energy level at that time. We want to find out time slots wherein you have high energy, medium energy, and low energy.

So even though you have got 24 hours a day, you have got a limited number of time-energy slots. When I say energy, it is physical as well as emotional energy. It is your overall state of mind and body. It is an indication of your resourcefulness which can predict the extent of your productivity.

Now you have a meaningful and realistic inventory of time! Understand this, even if you have time, but if you are tired or are feeling sad, upset, or irritated, you can’t really put that time to good use.

Now, make a list of the goals you want to achieve this week, you can either write that on your note or at the 12-week year notion template.

Then Exclude Sunday from the week. If you want you can have a five-day week.
Here is my suggestion for choosing your goals for a week. Choose any five important categories of your life—for example, business, fitness, family, learning, and personal.

Now choose exactly one goal from each category that you want to achieve. So, you will have one business goal, one fitness goal, one family goal, one learning goal, and one personal goal. Remember, just one goal from each category.

Don’t be greedy; it’s just for a week! Next week you can choose different goals if you want. And that’s the beauty of this framework – freedom of making mistakes with no strings of guilt attached to your choice.

If you strictly follow this strategy, you will choose only the most important goals for a week. You will be ultra-focused. You will cut down the unnecessary crap. You will start saying no.

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Here I assume that your commitment and sincerity are as high as a founder who wants to establish his vision to life!

This step will also reveal what your real priorities are. You just have a week; you have to choose what you want to do, you can’t postpone essential things, you may not get another week! So, choose wisely.

The next step is to make a list of tasks needed to complete each goal. Then, sort the list into three categories: high energy tasks, medium energy tasks, and low energy tasks.

Now you are clear about what to do and what is the best time to do it! That’s it!!

If you want to be even more productive, you can select just one micro goal for a day and apply all of your energy to it. You need to avoid multitasking and just focus on one task at a time.

The side effect of using this framework is that you will realize it’s high time you quit a few things that are so dear to you.

It will also help you recognize your actual responsibilities.

Finally, it will also clear all the confusion about who you are and what’s your purpose!


I recently came across this informative post that I had saved in my Notion notes years ago. While going through my saved posts, I stumbled upon it again and read it twice.

This time, it struck a chord with me in a different way, and I felt a strong connection to it, so I decided to share it here by adding my perspective to it. All credit for the original post goes to Prashant Chaudhari, a wonderful writer and importantly a marketer with a vision.

I tried to find more of his similar posts online, but it seems he has stopped writing about productivity topics, idk why but anyway enjoy the post:)

posted to Icon for group Productivity
Productivity
on May 13, 2024
  1. 1

    Hi there,
    I'm kind of new to the Indie Hackers blog, but this post really clicked with me. Planning my whole life always felt like trying to predict the weather a month out 😂. But this idea of planning just one goal per category each week makes everything feel way more manageable, especially when your energy fluctuates so much day to day.
    It actually reminded me of another article I read recently on the Memtime blog about planning your week for productivity. It takes a similar approach but adds some cool insights about mapping energy levels to specific tasks and creating realistic weekly plans. Might be helpful if you’re trying to apply this to work stuff too.

  2. 2

    Hey Akshay, this is such an insightful read! I totally get what you mean about feeling overwhelmed and guilty despite working hard. The idea of planning just a week instead of long-term is brilliant – it feels way more manageable and realistic.

    Breaking down tasks into high, medium, and low energy slots is a game-changer. I often find myself trying to power through when my energy is low, and it’s just not effective. This framework makes so much sense.

    Thanks for sharing these tips! I’m definitely going to give this method a try. Appreciate you sharing your personal experience with it too – makes it really relatable.

    Cheers!

  3. 2

    I also often find that my work efficiency can be quite low at times. For example, sitting in front of the computer for long periods can lead to shoulder soreness or eye strain, which then makes me feel frustrated.

    1. 1

      Get moving, the best thing you can do is to make sure you stay active. Even if that just means walking around the house, you gotta keep moving. An old mentor of mine barely ever sat throughout the day, he constantly walked and stood at well over 80yrs old.

      He looked younger than most 60yos I know, he always said “a body in motion stays in motion, a body in rest will be quickly laid to rest”

      1. 1

        Yes. Consistent exercise and moving is important for your health, and good health is a prerequisite for effective work.

  4. 2

    Great insight and cool tips.

  5. 2

    Thanks for sharing this great post. I have successfully implemented weekly goals with product teams to remain focused. I was wondering what you think about using energy to better manage your days. Weekly planning focused on time works well for teams, but as an individual, I find that daily energy management works best. The daily energy bucket depends on so many factors like diet, how well I slept the night before, and more. It is difficult to pre-plan your week with time when your day-to-day depends far more on energy.

    1. 1

      The body has a natural rhythm to the day. Sleep - grogginess - peak - dip - peak - slow down - sleep. Ideally, plan your day to tackle things that need high focus during the peaks. Also, keep your sleep debt low so the dip doesn't go so low that you need to nap (been there and it was lack of sleep).

      Being active definitely helps with energy levels too and getting the blood flowing.

  6. 1

    Hi, I'm new to Indie Hackers.

    Great post. Recently I have been trying to write a line about a tiny thing I want to do and do just that before move to another tiny one.

    1. 1

      I heard from one of the vision researchers at Oxford University that they talked to the most famous athletes about their secret sauce of success. They all said that they have a narrow view that only concentrates on the sub-goals and the big goals connected to them.

      You can always cut down the sub-goals into tiny ones and achieve them one by one just like you are doing rn

  7. 1

    Good tips, @AkshayRaveendran. I've followed the same routine for 10 years now:

    • Focus on 2-3hrs of VERY focused work every morning (when we are at our most productive)
    • Wake up before 6am
    • Cold shower
    • Journal (with a coffee)
    • Define 1 key priority to do today
    • Do that priority task
    • Work through the other top 2-3 things on the list
    • Leave the rest of the day for meetings, random tasks, exercise, hobbies, family

    It's helped me successfully bootstrap 3x business, publish 2 books & learn 3 new languages.

    1. 1

      Oh man, Journaling. Honestly, it was a bit weird at the beginning but now I can understand all the things that I’ve read from experts.

  8. 1

    Loved the levels of nuances covered in this post. Thank you for sharing!

  9. 1

    Such a detailed post. Have the same thought process about time and energy constraints in daily routine and to get more work done, but this post is written beautifully. Makes me Want to feature this in my upcoming newsletter (curatedforfounders.com) Akshay. :)

  10. 1

    Particularly love how this was written. In my honest opinion, however, the best way to plan your day or "life" is probably subjective.

  11. 1

    Why do people overcomplicate working ?
    Write 3 tasks that you have to do each day that are crucial to your KPI and it's done
    you don't need 4 morning routines to get customers

    1. 2

      I recently got another method Each day, set one big task (1), three medium tasks (3), and five small tasks (5) to accomplish. This method provides focus and prevents overwhelming to-do lists

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