Jay Baer (Twitter: @jaybaer) www.ConvinceAndConvert.org Every year, audit your time and find a way to
delegate at least 15% of what you're doing.
Jay Baer is the founder of Convince & Convert, a keynote speaker, and best selling author of Youtility. Craig Ballantyne (Twitter: @craigballantyne) www.EarlyToRise.com Get up 15-minutes earlier than everyone else in your
house and get into the office 15-minutes before everyone else. You can solve
any problem in your life if you devote 15-minutes of focused thinking to it first
thing in the morning every day.
Craig Ballantyne is the creator of Turbulence Training, the world's best metabolic home workout, and is the editor of EarlyToRise.com. Zvi Band (Twitter: skeevis) www.zviband.com Every Sunday, I take 30 minutes to identify what my core
goals are for the coming week, and have that on my desk at all times. Believe it
or not, the most effective thing I've found, which I've practiced for the past eight
years, is to have a small paper notepad on my desk at all times. I've practiced the
same ritual—the first thing I do in the morning is write down the list of actions I
have to do, carrying over anything from previous days. I'll cross off and add
tasks during the day, as well as record notes. Despite all the digital “to-do” tools,
nothing I've found beats having a piece of paper and seeing things get crossed
off.
Zvi is the co-founder and CEO of Contactually, a contact management platform that helps professionals turn relationships into results. Eric Bandholz (Twitter: @bandholz) www.beardbrand.com In life, there is only one thing—action. What are you
currently doing at this moment and how is it helping to improve your life? You
have the same amount of time in a day as everyone else on the planet. How you
break up that day will ultimately determine the legacy you build. The beautiful
thing about this is when you recognize that you are 100% in control of your
actions, then you can do whatever the hell you want. If you really want to be
better at time management, then start acting on it; everything else will fall in
line.
Eric Bandholz is the founder of Beardbrand, a company that is changing the way society views beardsmen through beard care.