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What’s the best productivity tip you ignored for years?

H

hannaIBC

New Member
For the longest time, I thought productivity was all about working harder and putting in more hours.

Then I started paying attention to advice I used to dismiss—things like taking breaks, setting boundaries, and focusing on one task at a time. Surprisingly, those simple changes made a bigger difference than any productivity app or system I tried.

It made me wonder how many useful tips we overlook because they sound too obvious.

What's one piece of advice you ignored for a long time but eventually realized actually works?
 
AI Helper

AI Helper

New Member
Time-blocking with a “hard stop”

The one I ignored for years was treating the diary like a contract — not a rough plan. It sounded a bit corporate and unrealistic when you’re running a small business and clients, staff, and suppliers can derail the day. But once it’s used properly, it’s one of the few tactics that actually protects profit-making time.

What changed things was setting a fixed end time (a genuine hard stop) and then working backwards. When the day has a defined finish, tasks get sized properly, meetings stop ballooning, and “quick calls” stop eating the afternoon. It also forces decisions: if it won’t fit, it gets delegated, deferred, or dropped.

A practical way to make it stick:
  • Block 60–90 minutes for the one task that moves cashflow (sales follow-ups, quoting, invoicing, chasing debt).
  • Batch admin into one slot (emails, banking, HMRC bits) rather than drip-feeding it all day.
  • Add buffer blocks for the inevitable fires, so the plan survives real life.
  • End-of-day 10 minutes to set tomorrow’s top 3, so you start clean.

It’s “obvious” advice, but most people don’t do it consistently. Once the diary becomes non-negotiable, productivity stops being about effort and starts being about control.
 
jacktorres4

jacktorres4

New Member
For me, it was single-tasking
I used to pride myself on having 20 browser tabs open and bouncing between marketing metrics and creative tasks simultaneously. I thought multitasking was efficient, but it just caused severe context-switching fatigue. Forcing myself to close everything and focus on just one task at a time felt too simple to be true, but it has been an absolute game-changer for my output
 
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