Ask HN: Have you ever used time-blocking? Why? How'd it work?
Time-blocking is when you reserve specific chunks of time (usually on a calendar) for specific tasks. Granularity may vary, but think of it as reserving time to complete each of your to-dos. I'm developing a product that will help people do this.
So I'm curious:
If you've used the technique, what were the circumstances (Work, school, parenting, etc)? Did it improve your productivity or balance? If you've since stopped, why did you decide to stop using the technique?
Thanks!
9 comments
[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 35.8 ms ] threadYour solution (https://www.cloqworq.com/) which accesses Google Calender and moves todos into slots looks cool.
I somewhat look forward to a hardware solution that includes blocking access to internet or other distractions like https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/saent-be-less-distracted. I've tried kitchen clocks (countdown) but they just added stress and pressure and didn't do anything to keep me focused.
I think I'm learning that people tend to plan further out (a few days to a week) in the face of external deadlines (i.e. exam season at school, sometimes end-of-quarter in business, etc). Adhoc time blocking occurs more when the motivation to be productive is self-imposed. Does that jive with your experience?
If your software could disable distractions, and that's mainly access to certain websites (like HN) or email, it's a huge plus.
With the kickstarter campaign I just like the hardware gadget and the initial prices are low enough to try. I can imagine the social sharing added to the software I saw in the screenshots will be awful.
I do not use a task list, but rather for 25 minutes I work on my story focusing on just that. Then I take a 5 minute break. After 2 hours I take a longer break, (first one is lunch, second one is 30 minutes, third one is 15 and then after another hour I go home)
It works very well for me. I am happy with my output. Some days, I have to abandon Pomodoro to instead have a meeting during that time slot, or other times I am just less productive Than I would like. It is a good baseline to help keep me focused.
I use iCal at work but I'd love something similar for home, where I use Ubuntu. I dislike Google Calendar, it didn't work so well. A desktop app seems to work best for me.
I'd be interested in hearing more about your project!
This and a few other rules worked so extremely well that our revenue increased 33% and all our customers are very happy.
Timeblocking was such a huge success for us that we started building a SaaS app on top of our method called ... ... ... (wait for it)
http://timeblock.com
:)