Remember when you used
to have a period at the beginning of every day to think about your schedule,
catch up with friends, maybe knock out a few tasks? It was called home room,
and it went away after high school. But many successful people schedule themselves
a kind of grown-up home room every day. You should too.
The first hour of the
workday goes a bit differently for Craig Newmark of Craigslist, David Karp of
Tumblr, motivational speaker Tony Robbins, career writer (and Fast Company blogger) Brian Tracy, and others, and they’ll tell
you it makes a big difference. Here are the first items on their daily to-do
list.
Don’t Check Your Email for the First Hour. Seriously. Stop That.
Tumblr founder David
Karp will “try hard” not to check his email until 9:30 or 10 a.m., according to
an Inc. profile of him.
“Reading e-mails at home never feels good or productive,” Karp said. “If
something urgently needs my attention, someone will call or text me.”
Not all of us can roll
into the office whenever our Vespa happens to get us there, but most of us with
jobs that don’t require constant on-call awareness can trade e-mail for
organization and single-focus work. It’s an idea that serves as the title of Julie Morgenstern’s work management book Never Check
Email In The Morning, and it’s a fine strategy for leaving the
office with the feeling that, even on the most over-booked days, you got at
least one real thing done.
If you need to make sure
the most important messages from select people come through instantly, AwayFind can monitor your inbox and get your attention
when something notable arrives. Otherwise, it’s a gradual but rewarding process
of training interruptors and coworkers not to expect instantaneous morning
response to anything they send in your off-hours.
Gain Awareness, Be Grateful
One smart, simple
question on curated Q & A site Quora asked “How do the most successful people
start their day?”. The most popular response came from a devotee of Tony Robbins, the
self-help guru who pitched the power of mindful first-hour rituals long before
we all had little computers next to our beds.
Robbins suggests setting
up an “Hour of Power,” “30 Minutes to Thrive,” or at least “Fifteen Minutes to
Fulfillment.” Part of it involves light exercise, part of it involves
motivational incantations, but the most accessible piece involves 10 minutes of
thinking of everything you’re grateful for: in yourself, among your family and
friends, in your career, and the like. After that, visualize “everything you
want in your life as if you had it today.”
Robbins offers the “Hour of Power” segment of his Ultimate
Edge series as a free audio stream
(here’s the direct MP3 download).
Blogger Mike McGrath also wrote a concise summary of the Hour of
Power). You can be sure that at least some of the more driven people
you’ve met in your career are working on Robbins’ plan.
Do the Big, Shoulder-Sagging Stuff First
Brian Tracy’s classic
time-management book Eat That Frog gets its title from a Mark Twain saying that, if
you eat a live frog first thing in the morning, you’ve got it behind you for
the rest of the day, and nothing else looks so bad. Gina Trapani
explained it well in a video for her Work Smart series). Combine
that with the concept of getting one thing done before you wade into email, and
you’ve got a day-to-day system in place. Here’s how to force yourself to stick
to it:
Choose Your Frog
"Choose your frog,
and write it down on a piece of paper that you'll see when you arrive back at
your desk in the morning, Tripani
advises."If you can, gather together the material you'll need
to get it done and have that out, too."
One benefit to tackling
that terrible, weighty thing you don’t want to do first thing in the morning is
that you get some space from the other people involved in that thing--the
people who often make the thing more complicated and frustrating. Without their
literal or figurative eyes over your shoulder, the terrible thing often feels
less complex, and you can get more done.
Ask Yourself If You’re Doing What You Want to Do
Feeling unfulfilled at
work shouldn’t be something you realize months too late, or even years.
Consider making an earnest attempt every morning at what the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs told
a graduating class at Stanford to do:
When I was 17, I read a
quote that went something like: "If you live each day as if it was your
last, someday you'll most certainly be right." It made an impression on
me, and since then, for the past 33 years, I have looked in the mirror every
morning and asked myself: "If today were the last day of my life, would I
want to do what I am about to do today?" And whenever the answer has been
"No" for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something.
“Customer Service” (or Your Own Equivalent)
Craigslist founder Craig
Newmark answered the first hour question
succinctly: “Customer service.” He went on to explain (or expand)
that he also worked on current projects, services for military families and
veterans, and protecting voting rights. But customer service is what Newmark
does every single day at Craigslist, responding to user complaints and smiting
scammers and spammers. He almost certainly has bigger fish he could pitch in on
every day, but Newmark says customers service
“anchors me to reality.”
Your own version of
customer service might be keeping in touch with contacts from year-ago
projects, checking in with coworkers you don’t regularly interact with, asking
questions of mentors, and just generally handling the human side of work that
quickly gets lost between task list items. But do your customer service on the
regular, and you’ll have a more reliable roster of helpers when the time comes.
What do you do with the first hour of your workday to increase
productivity and reduce stress? Tell us about it in the comments below.
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