Ask HN: What gets you out of bed?

23 points by akumpf ↗ HN
If half the work is showing up, half of showing up is getting out of bed. :)

What do HN readers do to get motivated and start the day awesomely when working on a startup?

Full disclosure: I'm asking because we want to make our startup's alarm clock app better. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.chaoscollective.warmly

67 comments

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My secret to getting out of bed: I sleep with socks on!

I find it's also much easier to get out of bed when you know what you need to accomplish and what's on your agenda for the day. A sense of urgency is a great motivator.

I've found a similar effect when needing to wake up super early to catch a flight. By laying out what I'm going to wear the night before it's much easier to get started when I'm still half-asleep.

I'll have to try socks next time :)

Having something on my agenda rather makes me not go to bed :P. But yes, that is indeed a good one that I hadn't thought of. In hindsight I notice I've often woken up more easily because of something cool on my agenda rather than the daily routine, so it might be something to practice.
Fwiw, sleeping with socks on also helps you get a better nights sleep.
I have to work 9 hours/day. So if I get out of the bed late I will have to come from office late in the night which I definitely not want.
Girlfriend and child - wakes me right up.
Just curious, does that motivate you and put you in a good mood?

If not, are there other ways you wake up that put you in a productive mindset?

My answer is "a toddler", which, before having one, would have sounded like a nightmare to me (not a morning person). It turns out having a little person who is so ridiculously happy to see me puts me in a pretty good mood.
5-hour energy.

I'm not joking. Slam one of those right after you wake up and you'll have a really productive first few hours of your day and over time will start to look forward to getting out of bed because of the near-instant high it gives you.

Do you slam it while still in bed? or after you're up an moving.

I find that the small gap between in-bed and out-of-bed is the crux of getting up.

After getting out of bed, I keep it on top of the fridge.
I'm with you on that - the inbed/outofbed crossover can be a real challenge.

Once I'm up and about I'm generally OK, but those moments of pain when I open my eyes to see it's time to get up and do stuff are the killer.

Easy now, even the manufacturer doesn't recommend a full bottle for regular use.

It contains the same caffeine as a cup of coffee, but costs $3USD instead of $0.10.

Coffee or another stimulant would have a similar result. No argument there. 5-hour energy just has the advantage of being so concentrated and so fast acting. It's very different from drinking a cup of coffee (unless you can mainline your coffee somehow, which I've never tried).
Working on a product for developers that they love to use.
Does that literally wake you up? Or is that more of a motivator once you're up and moving?
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Not the OP, but once I was promoted to lead developer for the flagship app of the company I worked for and that was quite efficient in making me wanting to get to the office before everyone.
my cat pats my face meowing for food.
haha. I used to wake up to that a couple years back. Kind of awesome, actually :)
If I have too much money in the bank, I will not get out of bed. So being poor would help.

Once I hit a certain savings threshold, I quit my job because I know the whole (my bank account) is greater than the sum of its parts (putting up with horrible software shops)

Then...I do it all over again.

> I know the whole (my bank account) is greater than the sum of its parts (putting up with horrible software shops)

I think the saying you're looking for is actually "the ends don't justify the means".

Nicotine and caffeine craving gets me up.
Well that's the first good thing I heard about nicotine besides stress relief I guess. Never thought about it this way.
That I will return from work eventually back to my personal projects, reading and writing.
Getting to the office before everyone else, for two reasons:

- It is quiet. Most of my coworkers get in between 9:30 and 10:00, so if I'm here at 8:30, I get a solid hour to handle the administrivia part of my job - emails, daily task sorting, etc.

- I get to leave earlier. I like to have my afternoons, so if I'm in early, I get to take off early. This is not set in stone solid, and I can always take off if I absolutely have to (or work from home), but for the day to day, if I'm in at 8:30, I'm out at 4:30, and that lets me have time to handle my personal stuff, beat traffic, run errands, anything.

A few things that get me out of bed in the morning:

* Looking forward to spending time with my children ( post work, or all day on weekends )

* Known exactly what I have to accomplish that day ( task breakdown )

* Exercise, I really enjoy known that I'll have time to workout, this goes with having a schedule.

* Interesting problems to solve at work ( related to task breakdown I suppose )

Early Morning Meetings. If I know I HAVE to get out of bed I will get up. If not I will snooze for longer than I would like.

Additional motivators:

1. Light - Before bed I open all the curtains

2. Tasks - I lay out all my tasks the night before. Less stress thinking about all the things I have to do. Wunderlist everything and then stop stressing.

3. Fun First - I try to put a fun task at the top of the list each morning. Makes it fun to get up.

4. Alarm not near bed - Having the alarm away from the bed I have to get up to turn it off. Once I'm up and moving I rarely feel the need to get back into bed.

great tactics. thanks!
I wish my project management system (currently getblimp.com) had a way for you to sync the alarm clock with it. So I would get daily alarms on important things. Why don't you give your app an api?
I park my car on a parking spot that isn't free. If I don't get up before 9 I usually get fined.
I think it's interesting that so many comments on here are about setting up a scenario where you'll be embarrassed or fined if you don't get up.

I guess it comes down to trying to plan logically the day before vs. being too tired to care when the alarm goes off. Reminds me of the extreme where your alarm starts sending money to a political party you don't like if you hit snooze. :)

The more I have to do, the more motivated I am. If I know I have a few tasks to do, but no actual appointments or deadlines, it's pretty hard to get out of the bed. I need stress to be productive.
I love the mornings and embracing the day. I try to imagine Rafael Nadal's bull run from the net to the baseline at the beginning of his matches, and try to match that energy and excitement for the day. Usually springing out of bed.

I like challenges, like workouts, in the morning as well. If I overcome stuff in the morning, before I start my day, chances are I will have a productive day.

Usually my wife.

She uses some sort of fitness wrist-thing to wake up - maybe a Jawbone? I love it, because there's no more harsh alarm noise - no noise at all, usually, although sometimes I can hear it buzz a wee bit.

The Fitbit Flex does that too. I just got mine today and I'm counting the hours till tomorrow morning to test it. I want to try being more of a morning person but I don't want to disturb the wife getting up too early.
The fire alarm in my dorm, today...
I've been doing web businesses since I was about 16, circa 1996. I didn't particularly like computers growing up, but when I got introduced to the web, it struck me like a bolt of lightning. I saw the web as an unlimited global canvas that I could build anything on. Webchat Broadcasting! AltaVista and HotBot! Netscape! Yahoo! Geocities! Quake online! Porn! It was all so exciting to a teenager. If I had an idea, I could immediately go to work on it. That's what I still love about the web today, and that's what gets me out of bed in the morning (so to speak). I usually have a lot of things I want to work on when I go to sleep, and so inevitably I wake up with my brain on fire, eager to build.
Usually a stretch and a phone check followed by another stretch does the job.
(Mistakenly) thinking that I've overslept.
Alarm --> email and google reader check. GR soon to be Feedly =/
The neighborhood squirrel serenades the sunrise each morning as a sort of mammalian metronome for about an hour, filling me with questions about rhythmic chanting and the mammal brain. It's like a 60 decibel woodblock, only three octaves higher. That wakes me up. I don't recommend it for your alarm clock app.

Money, glory, and fun actually get me out of bed.

That squirrel sounds incredibly motivated. Would love to hear what that sounds like.
then maybe the app should pay you, complement you, then tell you a joke? :)