Not only are most people at their cognitive
best earlier in the day, but it’s less
likely that unexpected items will jump onto the calendar or require urgent
attention.
In Their Own Words…
I try to reserve the morning for doing "real work." I find I can focus more in the morning whereas it's
harder to get focused after having been bombarded by meetings, so I try to save meetings for later in the
day.
–Nathan Blecharczyk is the co-founder of Airbnb.
Taking Dr. Ariely’s advice to heart, drink that
first cup of coffee while
driving in to work, but then shut your door,
silence your phone, close email and
social media, and work on your MIT.
In Their Own Words…
I schedule a series of 90-minute "Jam Sessions" throughout my day/week where I focus exclusively on
one vital priority and nothing else.
–Stephen Woessner is host of the Onward Nation podcast and CEO of Predictive ROI.
I have found that I am most productive from 6:00 a.m. to noon. I'm up, fresh, creative, and that is the
time I make crazy things happen. I do more in those hours than people probably do all week.
–Christina Daves is the author of PR for Anyone
and the CEO and founder of PR for Anyone®.
How Does This Apply If You’re A(n)...
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