Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Motivation Monday: My 5 Best Tips for Increasing Productivity
Episode Date: August 21, 2017This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed “Motivation Monday.” (Yes, I know, very creative of me. What can I say, I’m a genius…) Seriously though, the idea here is simple: Eve...ry Monday morning, I’m going to post a short and punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else that you have planned for the week ahead. As we all know, it’s one thing to know what you want to do, but it’s something else altogether to actually make yourself do it, and I hope that this series gives you a jolt of inspiration, energy, and encouragement to get at it. Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
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Hey, this is Mike from Muscle for Life and welcome to another episode of my podcast.
This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed Motivation Monday. Yes, I know,
so creative of me. What can I say? I'm just a genius.
Seriously though, the idea here is simple. Every Monday morning, I am going to post a short and
punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else
that you have planned for the week ahead. Because it's one thing to know what you want to do, but it's something else altogether
to actually make yourself do it. And I hope that this series gives you a jolt of energy and
encouragement to go ahead and do all of those things that you want to do. So if you like what
you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment. that you're going to eventually just wind up kind of flattened under the tonnage of all the work
that you have or that you want to do? Well, if you are nodding your head, you are definitely not
alone. I have been there myself. And in fact, research conducted by Microsoft found that while
people worked about 45 hours per week on average, 17 of those hours were spent unproductively,
17 hours per week. That's a tremendous amount of time.
If you look at it, if you expand it, that's 68 hours per month, that's 884 hours per year,
36 full days of wasted time per year. I mean, imagine what you could do with those wasted hours.
And I'm not talking about just doing more work necessarily either.
You could read about 60 books. You could write your own book or two in that time. You could
learn a new language, probably become pretty fluent actually, or you could work out every day
or just have more time to spare for your family. And even if you are not that bad, even if you're
not one of the millions of people out there that are frittering about a third of their days away, chances are that you do have some room for
improvement. I know I do. And it's something that I work on fairly consistently, which has allowed
me to become far more productive than the average person. And in this podcast, I want to share my
five best for easily and effortlessly increasing productivity. If you do these five things today,
you're going to see immediate results. And if you make them habits, then you might be surprised at
just how much more you can get done every week. So here's the first one. Stop checking your email
so much. So, I mean, I basically try to spend as much time in my email as possible, said no
productive person ever. I mean, I've known and I've spoken with
quite a few scarily productive people and one for one, they talk about doing email like they were
performing surgery. You know, you wash up, you don your scrubs, you put your game face on,
you cut, probe, mend, and you get out. You know, on the other hand, many horribly unproductive
people are hopelessly addicted to email. I mean, I swear they would mainline it if they could.
And research backs this up.
Actually, studies show that knowledge workers spend upward of 28% of their time every day
just waiting through their inboxes.
And the problem here is that email is a diabolical time waster.
It's the easiest way to feel productive without actually doing
anything all that important. Most communications just don't need to be answered immediately.
People can wait. Now, spending too much time in your email inbox is one problem, and another
one is starting your day with it. And the reason why this is an issue is because when
you start your day with email, it prevents you from planning and prioritizing your time
and tasks for the day, which I'm a big believer in. Instead, what starting your day with email, it prevents you from planning and prioritizing your time and tasks for the day, which I'm a big believer in. Instead, what starting your day with email can do
is it can set you up to react to whatever other people want you to do with your time and attention.
It can basically get you working on other people's ideas and goals and not yours.
So remember that every minute that you spend doing one thing like email,
is a minute that you spend not doing something else
that could be far more important.
There is always an opportunity cost
to whatever work that you do.
And that's why I believe that working off of a list
of clearly prioritized tasks is far more important
than just having a list of things to do. So this is kind of implied,
but what I recommend is that instead of starting your day with email, start it with laying out and
reviewing what you need to get done for the day and dedicate your first block of work time to
those tasks, to the things that are most important, that are most aligned with your greater goals and
purposes for the activity that you are engaged in. And if you
want bonus points, then schedule your email routine. Personally, I clean out my inbox once
per day. And once I've finished, I really only return to it if my work tasks demand it. And I
go in, I'll quickly grab what I need and I'll get out before my eyeballs can lead me astray.
All right. So my second tip is to manage your
priorities better. And this just follows naturally from the first, because one of the best ways to
get nothing done is to try to do too many things. You have to look at your to-do list like it is the
hottest club in the town and you're the steel jawed Hulk of a bouncer. So the kid with the
sloppy fake ID, yeah, get the fuck out of here. The
blowhard with the blowout and the fake Rolex and spray tan, yeah, back to the Jersey Shore.
No, my point here is you have to be very picky with what you deem worthy of your time and
attention. And here's a little tip that I've learned. If you can do something quickly and
easily, then you probably shouldn't be doing it at all. You can probably
skip it with little or no consequences, or you can probably just find someone else to do it.
It's really the hard, time-intensive, arduous work that you know only you can do that's going
to get you closer to where you want to be. The work that is really the highest and best use of
your time. So in my case, it is content
creation. It is recording podcast episodes like this, writing articles, writing books,
shooting videos, and so forth. All of this takes a lot of time. Only I can do it. I could outsource
some of it, but the quality would decline and I don't want that. So this is the type of work that
is always the highest priority,
the work that I make sure always gets done. And that sometimes means that other things don't get
done and that's okay. Okay. So the next tip here is to eliminate all distractions. Too many people
out there, they're just full on victims of our modern dopamine on demand culture. I mean, who
has time for deep thought or deep work when the penny
arcade of the internet beckons with its clanging bells and strobing lights and greasy food.
I guarantee you that if you can't learn to work undistracted, you are never going to be good at
getting things done. And I might even go as far as saying that you are never going to be really
good at anything because it takes
tremendous amounts of focus, concentration, and work to develop extraordinary abilities.
Furthermore, research shows that distractions make you dumber and more error-prone and that
they cause you to waste a significant amount of time simply refocusing on the tasks at hand.
Now, what type of distractions am I talking about?
Just the usual suspects, the things that immediately come to mind, like talking to
other people or listening to other people's conversations, wandering around mentally,
doing email, watching TV, listening to lyrical music, making phone calls, sending text messages,
instant messages, surfing the web, and so forth so forth now I don't think there's
anything inherently wrong with any of these things of course but the reality is you are sitting in a
productivity strike zone when you're trying to work on something while also thinking about the
argument that you had earlier or flicking through your emails or watching a youtube video or carrying
on a text conversation hours and hours can go by like this
with very little to actually show for it. And the only way to escape the trap is to block out
everything and then focus deeply and intently on your work at hand. So that means banish any
digital distractions, put your phone on silent, you know, put on noise canceling headphones,
shut your door so people know not to bother you and so forth. on silent, you know, put on noise canceling headphones, shut your door
so people know not to bother you and so forth. All right, moving along. Here is the next tip
and it is create a personal routine. You know, I don't really know how I get everything done
and how I get fit in all my workouts and get my meal prep. I don't know. I just, I guess things
just kind of happen. I just hope for the best. Said no productive person ever.
You know, I think too many people, they really just ask too much of their willpower and their
self-discipline because they don't realize that it's in pretty limited supply. Yes, you can improve
it as I spoke about last week, but many people are starting with rather shallow reserves. And
the most productive people that I know,
they all do the same thing as far as willpower goes.
They save it for the most demanding
and creative parts of their work and lives,
and they just automate the rest.
And it turns out that many of the most productive
and ingenious people throughout history
have done the exact same thing.
No matter how creative or eccentric
their work was, they robotically set about it every day at the same times, in the same places,
and in the exact same ways. And this goes beyond even that because many of these people, they even
ate the same foods, they drank the same beverages, they walked the exact same routes, they spoke to
the same people, they read the same books every day without fail. And they did this for a good reason because the more their lives that
they just gave over to habit, the less time and energy they had to waste thinking and deciding
on trivialities. I mean, studies show that the average person makes over 200 food-related
decisions per day. That's crazy. That's just related to food.
And that's also quite draining mentally.
That drains mental energy.
It drains willpower and self-control.
And it can be completely avoided by just following a meal plan, for example.
Anyway, by automating a lot of the frivolous aspects of our day-to-day living,
what this does is it leaves you with more mental bandwidth
to dedicate to the truly meaningful
parts of your life. And this is why people like Mozart and Voltaire and Ben Franklin and
Hemingway and Tesla, they all did this. It just, it isn't a coincidence. So a simple place to start
in building an effective personal routine is reviewing all the activities that you engage in
regularly, and then applying the 80-20 rule,
the Pareto principle. I'm sure you've heard of that. If you haven't, it's very simple. It is
the scientifically validated observation that 20% of the input is responsible for 80% of the output.
So 80% of the consequences stem from 20% of the causes. And this can be seen in all types of areas like
manufacturing and management, human resources, and so forth. And you can apply it to your life
by looking at all the activities that you engage in every week and identifying the minority that
are delivering the majority of your progress and success. And if you really do that, you are going to find that those are very few
in the greater scheme of things.
You're gonna find that a lot of what you do
doesn't really move the needle
and in many cases may actually be sabotaging you.
So the idea of course is to remove as much of the latter
as you can to make more time for the former.
All right, so the last tip here is to manage your mood. I don't need to cite scientific research to tell you that you just work better
when you are calm and happy. We've all experienced that. And on the flip side, we also tend to work
like crap if we feel like crap. And that's why many productivity systems, I think they really
miss the boat when they focus too much on managing
your time and not managing your energy and mood. Here's how Sean Aker puts it in his book, The
Happiness Advantage, which I do recommend if you haven't read it. Doctors that are put in a positive
mood before making a diagnosis show almost three times more intelligence and creativity than
doctors in a neutral state, and they make accurate diagnoses 19% faster. Optimistic salespeople outsell their pessimistic counterparts
by 56%. Students primed to feel happy before taking math achievement tests far outperform
their neutral peers. It turns out that our brains are literally hardwired to perform at their best,
not when they are negative or even neutral, but when they are positive. So if you manage your mood as carefully as your work,
you're not only going to get more done in less time, you're going to feel better as well.
And particularly important is your mood at the beginning of the day, because research shows that
this has a market effect on both the quantity and quality of your work throughout the rest of the
day. So starting off on the right foot is very important. It your work throughout the rest of the day.
So starting off on the right foot is very important. It turns out this is one of the reasons why I personally like to work out first thing in the morning and highly recommend it. It
really sets you up for a good day. So last year, I want to share 10 simple and scientifically
proven ways to improve your mood. So one, you can jot down a few good things that have happened to
you every day. Two, you can make time to do things that you're uniquely good at. Three, you can show
gratitude for the nice people and the good things in your life. Four, you can spend time with people
you like. Five, you can stop obsessing over making more money. Realize that this is not going to make
you as happy as you think. The great Western disease of I'll be happy when I have the
house or the car or the boat is a trap. Six, stop obsessing over yourself and your goals and help
someone else with theirs. Seven, watch less TV and do something productive. Stay busy instead,
maybe with mastering a skill. You know, this could just be a hobby. It doesn't have to be work. Eight, choose to be optimistic, even to the point of overconfidence. This is much better
than being pessimistic or cynical. Nine, eat something sweet and take a nap. You're going
to feel better after both of them. My little sweet indulgence is chocolate. I've said that
many times. I like it. It makes me feel good. I eat about 150 calories of dark chocolate a day. It's great. And 10, take time to reflect on and savor the little wins in
life and stop holding out for the big events that you hope will make you happy. Again, there's not
very much happiness to be had in achievement. Happiness, I think, is something that you can't
necessarily pursue, but it just ensues from how you live. And a lot of that, I think, is something that you can't necessarily pursue, but it just ensues from how you live.
And a lot of that, I think, is, again, I mentioned this earlier, really dedicating yourself to
something greater than you, making it more about the people that count on you and the
people that you can serve than yourself and what you can get out of it.
So the bottom line here is a superhuman level of productivity.
It doesn't require superhuman genetics or education or even superhuman levels of willpower.
Anyone can cultivate this by just adopting and gradually strengthening these five strategies
that I laid out in this podcast.
And those are break your email addiction, identify and prioritize high value activities,
work in a completely distraction-free environment,
build an effective personal routine, and do things regularly to raise your mood.
Hey there, it is Mike again, and I just wanted to say that I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful. Now, if you'd like to read about all this stuff as well,
then head over to muscleforlife.com, that's muscleforlife.com,
and legionathletics.com, L-E-G-I-O-N athletics.com, because I've published over a million words of
free articles on the blogs on those websites on all types of things related to building muscle,
losing fat, and getting healthy. New articles go up every week
on both sites as well. So if you like what you read, then definitely hop on my mailing list and
you will be notified when new stuff goes live. My email subscribers also get exclusive deals on my
products and services and other goodies. So there's that too. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I will
see you in the next one. Oh, and before you leave, let me quickly tell you about one other product
of mine that I think you might like specifically my workout app stacked. It has tens of thousands
of users and close to 400 reviews on the Apple store with a four-star average. And it helps you
get more out of
your training in several ways.
It helps you quickly and easily plan out your workout routines.
It gives you quick access to useful tools like plate math and 1-rep max calculation.
It allows you to visually track your progression in your workouts as well as your body measurements
and much, much more.
It's free to download too.
So if you want to check it out,
then head over to www.getstackedapp.com
or just hit the iOS app store
and search for Stacked Workout and you will find it.