Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Laura Vanderkam: Smarter Ways to WFH (Work From Home) | E105
Episode Date: March 8, 2021Stressed out about working from home?  Then stress no more!  In this episode, we are chatting with Laura Vanderkam, best-selling author, podcast host, and productivity expert. Her Ted talk, How to... Gain Control of Your Free Time, has been viewed over 11 million times! She is also the host of Before Breakfast which features productivity tips every weekday morning. Her work has been featured in the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, City Journal, Fortune, and Fast Company and she has appeared on shows such as The Today Show and CBS This Morning.  In this week’s episode, we talk about Laura’s new book, The New Corner Office, which is all about how to work from home, the benefits of having a routine, and creating work rituals. We’ll also dive deeper into how to cultivate a great WFH environment, ta-da lists (instead of to-do lists), why planning out your week ahead of time is beneficial, and more!  Social Media:  Follow YAP on IG: www.instagram.com/youngandprofiting Reach out to Hala directly at Hala@YoungandProfiting.com Follow Hala on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Follow Hala on Instagram: www.instagram.com/yapwithhala Follow Hala on ClubHouse: @halataha Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com  Timestamps:  03:56 - Laura’s Past Five Years 05:07 - Benefits of Having a Routine and How to Have a Good One 07:35 - Opinion on a Fake/Mock Commute 09:11 - Advice on Dressing while WFH 11:09 - What’s a ‘Monday Morning’ Ritual 12:53 - How to Respond to Fires at Work 15:02 - Thoughts on Batching 17:07 - Laura’s Work Environment and How to Have the Best Environment 20:56 - How to Limit Distractions 22:51 - Ta-Da Lists 26:30 - How to Prioritize Tasks 28:19 - Why to Plan Out Your Week On Fridays 31:36 - Visualizing Your Future to Help Your Goals 34:57 - Why Designing Your Ideal Week is Important 37:30 - How to Keep Employees Engaged and Good Company Cultures 40:55 - Looking at Time with an ‘Abundance’ Mindset 42:35 - Laura’s Secret to Profiting in Life  Mentioned in the Episode:  Laura’s New Book, From the Corner Office: https://lauravanderkam.com/books/the-new-corner-office-how-the-most-successful-people-work-from-home/ Laura’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lauravanderkam/ Laura’s Website: https://lauravanderkam.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This week on YAP, we've got Laura Vandercam back on the show. She first appeared on YAP over two
years ago for episode number four where we covered all things time management. Laura is a journalist,
the author of several productivity books, a podcast host, successful blogger, and a mother of five
children.
With this much on her plate, it's no wonder she's known for being a leading time management
and productivity expert.
Laura's TED Talk had a gain control of your free time has been viewed over 11 million
times.
Her work has been featured in major publications like The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal,
and USA Today.
And she's also appeared on television shows
like The Today Show, CBS This Morning,
and most recently The Drew Barrymore Show.
In today's episode, we go deep on Laura's latest book,
The New Corner Office, How the Most Successful People Work
From Home.
In our conversation, we discussed the benefits
of having a routine and work rituals,
had to cultivate an ideal work from home environment
using Tidalis instead of Tidulis and so much more.
Hey Laura, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thank you so much for having me.
So for those of our listeners who are new listeners,
Laura was actually my fourth episode.
So way back two years ago, she was actually my first interview.
Previous to that, I would have like four or five people and kind of chop it up and put narration.
And Laura was my first real, proper interview episode. And people loved that episode. And it gave me
motivation to keep going in that interview style. So Laura, thank you so much for taking a chance
on me. We got to win. Wow, I'm thrilled that that, you know, I knew you win. Hey, that's great. I know.
And it's like, you know, I'm so thankful for all because you were a big name back then
you were still like, you know, a best-selling author. You had a lot of different books
and podcasts already and you took a chance on me. So I'm always grateful for the people
who took a chance on me and I always invite always grateful for the people who took a chance on me, and I always invite them back to the show,
the first 20 people who took a chance on me.
So welcome back.
And we've grown a lot since you last came on.
That's wonderful.
I'm so glad to hear it.
Yeah, so in our first episode together, episode number four,
it was called Level Up Your Time Management Skills.
We've really uncovered all your expertise and advice
on time management.
We talked about having 168 hours in the week
and how everybody has that same amount of time.
We talked about tracking your time,
how to be most productive in your time.
So if anyone is interested in time management,
go back to episode number four.
We really covered that in depth.
So this time, I'm going to focus on your new topic,
which is really like working from home,
from what I understand.
So I want to dive deep into that.
And before I do that, I want to ask you,
what have you been up to the past two years
since you last came on the show?
What have you been studying?
What have you been doing?
Yeah, so I did.
You know, like many people,
we wound up spending a lot more time at home over the last year.
And I thought that a lot of other people would be experiencing this and wondering, what do
I do with this?
How do I clamp my days?
How do I stay productive?
How do I deal with distractions?
How can I sort of think of my career long term if I'm going to be working from home and
the sort of normal rules of the office don't apply.
And so I wrote a book called the New Corner Office, which looks at exactly that question,
right?
Like how can we work productively and ambitiously from home?
And then, you know, doing the normal podcasting stuff, the, you know, I had another baby a
year ago or so.
So that's the number five. Number five for me. so. That's something to say.
Number five, number five for me, wow.
Well, that's awesome.
Well, I really want to focus this episode on your work from home content.
I think it's really valuable for my listeners.
I think most of my listeners are working from home right now.
And so it's a perfect topic.
So let's start off with routines.
What is the benefit of having a rhythm and routine and what's your advice in terms of
designing a routine that works best for us?
Well, the upside of working from home is you tend to have a lot more control over your schedule
than you might if you're in an office.
Even offices that are very flexible, there's sort of a certain time where you're expected
to be there and certain things you're expected to do while you're there.
It's not that you're going to get fired for leaving in the middle, but
people wonder where you're going.
Whereas if you are working from home, you have a lot more autonomy over these things.
And so, the upside is you can't experiment.
The downside is that you have to be responsible for figuring out a rhythm that works for you.
And so, I tell people to kind of look at their time.
We've talked about time tracking
in the past, but keeping track of how you're spending your time, partly so you can learn,
when are you most focused? When are you most productive? And that's both you personally,
but then if you're dealing with anything like kids remote schooling or anything like that,
what time is available to you and what time is not available to you? Because if you know
what time is available, then you can make the most of it. Whereas if you're still trying to figure this out, it's going to be
very difficult. But think about what your workday can look like to maximize your use of focus time.
You want to build in an appropriate number of breaks so you can manage your energy. Think about
what you do during those breaks in order to actually
be rejuvenated, so not just surf in the web, but maybe get up and go for a walk or, you know,
to talk, call a friend or something like that. And then most importantly, come up with a way
to end your day. Because one of the biggest problems people have with working from home is,
is not that they're going to watch Netflix, like people don't really do that. Like, you know,
it was just, worry, oh, everyone's going to watch Netflix all watch Netflix. Like people don't really do that. Like, you know, it was just worry,
oh, everyone's going to watch Netflix all day.
No, professionals don't really do that.
The bigger issue is that people don't know when to stop.
Because if you can see your laptop all evening,
like you'd be like, I should be working.
But like you're not getting anything done
because you're tired.
And so you're like half working and half not working.
You're not relaxed.
You're not getting anything done.
It's really the worst of all worlds.
So come up with a way to indicate that your day is done
at least for now and have that kind of goodbye every day.
You know, whether it's writing your to-do list for tomorrow,
going for a fake commute like walking around the black,
but something to give yourself a little bit of permission to relax.
Yeah, and so you just brought up a fake commute.
Let's talk about the start of our day.
I had an episode recently where I talked about self-care and I gave the advice to go on a mock
commute. So waking up, going around the block, walking your dog even, just going outside,
getting some vitamin D, or even just like walking up your stairs if you live in an apartment building
and don't want to go outside. But just something to kind of trigger the start of your day.
So what is your opinion on a mock commute?
I think it's a great idea for many people, especially if you are relatively new to working
from home.
You've only been doing it for the last year or so.
And the reason is that some people have, in fact, many people have more of a mental
separation between home life and work life.
And if you go very quickly from one to the other, go back and forth between
the two, you can feel a little bit just jarred. It doesn't feel quite right or you have trouble
getting into the mindset for it. And if that is the case for you, it's not the case for everybody,
but if it is the case for you, then it helps to put at least some separation between the two.
So your brain knows that, okay, I am in work mode now or later in the day, I'm in home mode now.
And you know, nobody really likes commutes.
I mean, everyone hated commuting back
when this was more of a thing that people did.
But the one upside is it does introduce
that obvious separation.
So, a mock commute is something that's much shorter
and more pleasant, but still introduces
that same separation.
So, yeah, the idea of walking your dog
or running a quick errand or going for a little walk,
doing something that would get you moving,
but it could be as simple as having a ritual.
Like you always go and make your coffee,
you have your mug that has some sort of fire you up
kind of saying on it, I don't know,
but take that into your workspace, sit down
and have something you do first, right?
That could be a way to get that same idea
of a ritual
that starts your day. Yeah, and so how about getting dressed? Like, do you recommend when we're, you know,
starting our day? A lot of people are wearing pajama pants and going on these Zoom calls and they're
just dressing from the top up. Like, what is your advice in terms of dressing? Because I've heard
all different kinds of advice here. What's your advice on that? Well, I probably wouldn't wear pajama pants just in case you had to like get up to do something
while you're on the Zoom call.
People like, wait, those are fluffy pajama pants.
You know, that's interesting.
That may be the impression you are wishing to convey in that particular Zoom call.
But I'm certainly totally cool with wearing jeans or even dark
stretch pants or something. Something that's not going to look ridiculous if you wind up standing
up and people can see you, but you can certainly be comfortable. I don't wear shoes. I know there's
certainly a school of thoughts like, well, you need to wear shoes to be in work mode. I don't think
that's the case. I think that being comfortable is great. However,
you probably don't want to be sloppy just because of people seeing you. So come up with that sweet spot
between looking presentable on Zoom, but not feeling like you are pinching your feet into high heels.
Isn't that wonderful that people have not had to do that for the last year?
I haven't worn heels in so long.
And to your point, I think the only shoes I've aware is like,
Uggs to just like go outside.
I don't wear shoes either.
So and I'm plenty productive.
So I agree.
You don't need to wear shoes to be productive.
And people might see your pants if you stand up, but like,
they're not going to see your feet.
So you really don't need to worry about that part.
Just a nice pair of comfy socks as well.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, so I also know that you talk about something
called a Monday morning ritual.
So what's a Monday morning ritual?
What can we do there?
You talked about it on one of your podcast episodes.
Of course, I'm trying to remember what I said now.
But I think, well, here's,
if I'm going to guess what past Laura might have been expounding on,
I think Monday mornings are actually a really good time
to carve out for your biggest value work.
And ideally stuff that's more speculative
because it's how you are gonna start your week
with this thing that's gonna fire you up,
you're thinking about your career long term.
It's stuff you don't have to do,
but you would really like to do.
Now the problem that happens is mostly people
have this speculative stuff,
they're like, oh yeah, this would really advance my career.
I really should make time for this.
And then the time they carve out is like Friday at 3 PM.
Like you are not gonna do it at 3 PM.
Like let's just be honest, right?
You're gonna slide into the weekend at that point.
Or they carve out a time, it's like, okay, I'll get all my other work done on Thursday. Then I'll
I'll look at this. Again, not going to happen. Dedicating Monday morning to that is when you are
at your freshest, when you are starting everything off, it will probably happen because the work week
emergencies probably have not yet arisen at like 8 a.m. on Monday. So I would suggest
starting your week with that really big important speculative work that you otherwise will not
make time for. And if you do this week after week, you'll make a lot of progress in your
career.
I love that. So basically like schedule your most important tasks for the week on Monday
before the emergencies come up. So in your book, you talk about
resisting the need to respond to all the urgent matters right away, right? So talk to us about that. Like how do we need to change our mindset in terms of responding to all the fires at work?
And how is it different now that we're living, you know, in COVID and working from home?
Well, I think people are becoming a little bit more comfortable with this idea that they don't
have to respond to everything in two seconds. But certainly in the first few weeks of working from home. Well, I think people are becoming a little bit more comfortable with this idea that they don't have to respond to everything in two seconds, but certainly in the first few weeks
of working from home, there was that idea, like, oh, my boss is going to think I'm watching
Netflix if I don't respond immediately.
And so people would just not get out of their inbox their entire day.
And I understand the impulse to answer all Slack messages or whatever within five seconds
of them coming in. But there's a tradeoff. Like there's an opportunity cost for being this
responsive, which is that you don't have time for that deep focused work, which is probably what
you were hired to do in the first place. Like you were probably not hired because of your rapid
email response time. Like you were probably hired because there's something that you are an expert in,
that you do very well, that your organization would like you to spend your time doing.
Again, my guess is that is not being in your inbox all day.
So if that is the case, then every time you are spending hours in your inbox responding to everything,
you are not spending hours doing those other things,
and so there's a huge opportunity cost for that.
Now that doesn't mean you shouldn't be responsive.
Like yes, you should be responsive.
And especially when we are working from home,
we can become a real bottleneck.
If we were just like, okay,
well, I'm going to stop checking email completely.
Like don't do that because then whole projects
will grind to a halt as everyone is waiting for your response.
But there is a big difference between,
let's say checking once an hour,
or once every 90 minutes or once every two hours
for 10, 15 minutes,
responded to anything that is urgent at that point,
and then being off email again for another hour.
There's almost nothing that has to be responded to
in less than an hour.
If there is, then the person needs to call you, right?
If it's email, then by definition, they are not
expecting a response in, I mean, they may be, but they shouldn't be in an hour. So, give
yourself that hour out of your inbox, that hour when you are not being responsive, when
you can be more proactive, and you'll be getting a lot more done.
And do you think that hour on, hour off, doesn't it take a little bit of time to kind of get settled in our work?
I would recommend and maybe you disagree kind of batching checking your email when you're
feeling like drained or like maybe right after you eat or something like that so that you
can kind of batch that when you're not at your peak performance? Well, I agree.
And my our off-ebell and then check and our off- then check is more based on an improvement
for people who are in constantly.
If that is not you, if you don't suffer from that issue, then by all means take as much
time off as you can, right?
So maybe check it once in mid-boringning, like once around lunch, once in mid
afternoon, once before you leave for the day. Like four times a day would actually be great.
I think that's more than enough email checks for most people. And that will allow you to
have, you know, 90 minutes or more of focused time for any sort of work. I would say that
most people can't go more than about two hours focused on just about anything.
You're going to take some sort of break, whether it's just getting a drink of water going to the bathroom,
quick looking at something else. We can't stay focused for six hours on one thing.
So it doesn't have to be less than every two to three hours to check your email.
And I need to take my own advice because I'm the type of person who always checks my email,
always checks Slack like every second.
It's just ADD, I think, honestly.
I need to take my own advice.
What's so appealing?
Because it's like, oh, I'm doing something productive.
Or I'm deleting emails.
Look, I did something.
I deleted emails.
I mean, it didn't really do anything, but it feels like it.
Exactly.
So the title of your book is the new corner office.
Describe to us what you are a work environment like is at home
and what is the best way to design a work environment
to make us as productive as possible.
Yes, well, I have a corner office.
It's a corner from my house.
I've worked in this office the entire time I've lived
in this house. I mean if you are going to work from home long term you really do need some sort of
dedicated space with a window and a door that closes. And I'm not saying that it has to be a full
scale home office with like gorgeous built-in bookcases and a full you know Zoom studio or anything
like that. But you need some place where you can expect
that it will be quiet and where you can focus and where you have your stuff that you use.
If that means moving, it might mean moving.
If you plan to do this long term, the upside of the current environment is that many more
people are going to be able to work from home at least two to three days per week in the
future, which means that you don't have to limit your sites of where you're going to live to
the same narrow radius you might have had to in the past.
So possibly you'll be able to find something that's larger, that's got a home office, in
your budget, because you aren't going to have to commute five days a week to the place
that you were previously doing that for.
Windows are good.
You need some natural light, otherwise you'll just feel like you're stuck in a closet all
day.
There's something that's comfortable.
It is definitely worth getting your chair right, getting your desk height right, because
if you work from home just a couple hours a week or one day a week, whatever, the problem
isn't so bad
because you won't be there that long.
But once you start working 40, 50 hours a week
in the same spot, any small problems
are gonna get magnified so many times over.
So it is worth, you know, figuring out the ergonomics,
making sure that you are comfortable,
feel like you're in a neutral position.
And then, you know, you can make it into your happy place and in a way
that you really can't in a cubicle at work. I mean, if there are things you wish to be looking at
out that window, well, you can probably make that happen in a way that you just can't in like an
office park, right? Like, you are not in charge of the landscaping, where you are at home. You know,
you can put the decor as you want, like like whatever makes you happy, keep the temperature where you want it.
I mean, this is, that's a real big win.
I always even freeze in office buildings because it's so overly air conditioned and summer and, you know,
I don't have to do that in my home office and I feel like special sense even.
That's the kind of thing, like you're not going to make it spell like
Gardinia Blossom candle in your office
at a corporate office,
but in your hotel office,
I mean, if that's your power scent, why not?
I totally agree,
and I think it's important that wherever you work
is kind of separated from where you relax, right?
So like, try to avoid where you watch TV
and kind of unwind for the days
is what I would say, right?
You don't want to be working where you relax.
Yeah, and not because you're going to be tempted
to relax during work hours,
because most of the time that's not actually the problem.
It's that you're going to be tempted to work
during the time you've set aside to relax.
So yeah, as much as possible,
I know a lot of people just grab the kitchen table
because it was the first thing that were like,
oh, it's a flat surface.
Let me put my laptop there.
But then you're in the center of everything.
And so it's a lot harder to have some privacy, have quiet people come to you for stuff if
there's other people in the house because you look like you're available.
So you want to make yourself look less available.
So coming up with some spot that is a bit more separated from everyone else is really
key as much as you
can pull that off.
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So you just basically brought up
distractions, right? And your mother of five, which is, that's a lot to handle while working from home,
and I think you've been working from home for quite a while since before COVID, right? So what have you
learned in terms of minimizing distractions? Well, the key thing is that anyone who is too young to
care for themselves needs somebody else to care for them.
You cannot be the adult in charge of young children
during the hours you plan to work.
Now, nothing about COVID has changed that.
It's just made it a lot harder to pull off
since a lot of people's schools have been closed
or daycare situations have not been available.
And so people have been trying to do both at the same time.
And just as I
would always tell people in the past who are saying, oh, I'd like to work from home. Is this
a way to save money on childcare? I'd be like, no, you're going to feel harried and frazzled
and pulled in a million directions at once. And like, guess what? People are doing it now without
childcare. I feel harried and frazzled and pulled in a million directions at once. So the
question is, well, what can you do about that? I definitely think that if you have young kids at home, it would be who have you to hire
someone, and it's some sort of situation that you could make work, that you could trust
in terms of quarantine bubbling together.
There might be money that you're not spending on commuting and traveling and things like
that to get at least a few hours a day for focused work.
If that's not going to happen, if you have two parents working at home,
the two of you should formally trade off, right?
One person has the morning, one person has the afternoon,
or however you wanna work it.
But rather than having your kids come to each of you
and all of you getting distracted at different points
or feeling like, is this fair?
She was distracted less than I was today, or whatever.
Just say, okay, this person is in charge of the kids in the morning,
this person is in charge of the kids in the afternoon.
When you're not in charge, that is your focused,
drill down work time, you know it is available.
You also know not to schedule anything important
during the time when you are in charge of your kids.
And I wanna talk about productivity and to-do-less
for a minute.
So you are an advocate of very short to-do lists.
You say three to five items max,
and you also sometimes call it a to-do list,
and you got that from Gretchen Ruben.
So I thought that was really cute.
So tell us about the to-do list,
why keep it just three to five items max?
Well, the idea of having a short to-do list
is that you want your to-do list
to represent things that you want your to-do list to represent
things that you actually intend to do.
And unfortunately, people wind up making these like 50 item to-do lists.
Like, you're not going to get through 50 items in a day, but the question is, well, which
ones are you going to get through, right?
Like, is it going to be the easiest ones, the ones that were screaming loudest, the first
ones you saw?
I don't know. But the odds that the ones that you do get through were the ones that were screaming loudest, the first ones you saw, I don't know.
But the odds that the ones that you do get through were the ones that absolutely had to happen
today and were the most important are low.
Whereas if you forced yourself to prioritize to like five main things, like you will in
fact get through them.
Now people like, that seems very short.
Like this does not mean the stuff that you do every day.
Like this does not mean like cook dinners on the list for the five things for the day.
It's not, if you always post something on your blog, I would say that's probably not something
you'd put on your list of five things because anything that's a routine, that's a habit.
If you always check your email at 11am, that doesn't need to go on the to-do list for the
day. This is, this is things that are discrete tasks that are important enough to become a contract with yourself that
you will get through by the end of the day. But when it is short, then you can get through
it. You start to develop this real trust in yourself that yes, if I put it on the to-do
list, it is going to happen. And the only way you can make sure of that is to keep it short
because guess what? Stuff is going to come up. Things are going to happen. Things are going to go wrong.
People are like, oh, well, I couldn't get through everything on my to-do list because stuff
happened this afternoon. New things landed on my lap. It's like, oh, imagine that. When
has that ever not happened, right? Whereas if you know you've decided these three things
absolutely do have to happen, well, you probably will get to those three things even when the
new stuff lands on your lap too. Or even if you get called away for a personal emergency at like 2 p.m.
right? You still will have been able to get through the very limited list, and that's why you
want to make it very, very short. The Tidalist part is more that at the end of the day, it's
helpful to know what have I done. And ideally, this both matches the Tidalist that you created,
you know, for the day.
And then you can also add anything that you did that came up in the course of the day
and then celebrate that those accomplishments happened as well.
I love that because usually we spend time prioritizing our tasks in the day, like in the
beginning of the day, but we don't really go back and say, like, what did I accomplish
today and kind of celebrate those small wins? And I think that's probably really important mentally to kind of keep you motivated to do the
same thing tomorrow and crush all your goals. Oh definitely. I mean, when you get through
what you have set out to do, you feel this incredible sense of progress because you don't have to
keep shoving things forward to the next day. Like, oh, I didn't do that again. Let me move it to
Thursday. Oh, I didn't do it again.
Move it to Friday.
Oh, once it's on the list, it's done.
And then you can move on to the next stuff.
And so in fact, you wind up getting more done
with a short list because once things have been done,
you can move on to the next thing, as opposed to having them
continually resurrect themselves day after day after day.
And how about prioritizing all of our things that we need to do?
So you say do, write down three major things that we need to do every day, three to five major things.
But I know all of us probably have 50, 60, 100 things that we have to get done.
So what's your advice there in terms of having all your tasks in one place and then prioritizing them?
Do you have a system that you personally use?
Well, you could have, you know, David Allen,
the productivity author,
has what he calls a someday maybe list.
And so this is a kind of list of anything
that's going on in your life.
And certainly if you have lots of different projects going on,
you could make a list of that somewhere too.
I plan my life in weeks.
I hardly recommend this.
And I have a weekly priority list of all the things
I need to sort of get to in the course of the week.
And then I pull my daily tasks from that list.
And so, you know, I've got five things for Monday.
Well, that's not everything I have to do in the week,
but it's five that are then done.
And then I know that there's a time on Tuesday for other parts of my weekly tasks.
And so sometimes I will go ahead and make the entire weeks to do lists at once.
Like when I plan my weeks on Friday afternoons, I look at what's coming up in the following week.
What are my big tasks? All my different projects. Where do they stand?
The spinning plates. Like what's going to need me to push it?
What's spinning without my help, what stops spinning entirely that I need to do, what new plates do I want to add.
And so then I'm sort of running through all my different tasks and spheres of influence
and figuring out what needs to happen in the next week.
And then I can break that down into the shorter list for each day.
I never make the entire weeks to do this
because, again, stuff comes up
and I won't know everything that I need to do on Thursday
by Friday, the week before,
but I can usually set at least Monday and Tuesday
and half of Wednesday.
And if I do that, well, now I've got,
I know when most of the major stuff of the week will happen
and so there's space when things do come up too.
And so you plan out your week on Friday.
Is there a reason why you do that?
There is.
I think Friday's a really good time for it.
Currently it's because most people aren't doing much of consequence on Friday, particularly
Friday afternoon.
We're kind of sliding into the weekend at that point.
It is very difficult to start anything new.
So it's often wasted time.
Like you're just sort of hanging around until it's like,
okay to leave or okay to shut your laptop down these days.
So if it would be wasted time,
there's no opportunity cause to now rework it
for planning time.
So let's make it planning time.
A lot of people use Monday mornings,
but the problem is when we show up at work,
Monday morning, we're like, go time. We have the most energy we will have for the week. So that's a good
time to do that speculative stuff we were talking about. It's not a good time to plan because there's
a bigger opportunity cost for Monday morning than there is for Friday afternoon. Another reason
is that, you know, some people plan Sunday night. I know that's another popular time, but other people
may not be at their desks on Friday night. So if you need to, you know, set up a meeting or get something from somebody to make the next week work,
the odds are pretty good. They are still at their desk at Friday afternoon, whereas, you know,
Sunday evening at 8 p.m. you realize you want to set something up. Like, why is that person at their desk?
They're not doing that. So it's just in business hours, which is often helpful if you need to do things that
It's just in business hours, which is often helpful if you need to do things that require reaching out during business hours.
And then finally, planning on Friday for the week ahead allows us to think about our
weekends.
If you haven't really made a plan for your weekend or thought about what you'd like to
do on the weekend, having a little time on Friday afternoon to say, okay, well, what would
be fun?
What would I like to make happen? Any logistics that need to occur?
Well, now you've done it,
and so you're gonna have a lot more fun
than if you sort of wait until Saturday morning
and when nobody feels like doing anything
Saturday morning and then nothing winds up happening.
I think this is excellent advice to everybody listening.
So use your Tidalist to end your day
and kind of close off your day.
And then Friday, you've got your planning.
And that also kind of signifies that the work week is over.
And you can like go into the weekend,
like fully knowing that you've got everything planned for the next week.
And you can kind of close that off, shut that out of your mind,
and just enjoy the weekend.
Because I think part of the problem in COVID is just like,
everybody's just on this wheel and doesn't know when to stop working.
Yeah, definitely know what happens.
It's good to have some demarcation and some make days a little different from
each other too. I encourage people to plan at least some sort of many adventures
into your life. And I know it's a lot harder these days, but maybe it's
something like streaming a concert or going for a walk someplace new.
But anything that will shake up your routine a little bit, routines are great, but if life
is nothing but routine, the days don't stand out for each other.
So you want to do, you know, a little thing here and there that's a little bit out of the
ordinary and makes you feel a little bit less like you're in a rut.
And you know, spend some time thinking about what those things would be and life will feel
a little bit more adventurous.
So I know that you're a proponent of thinking big and you talk about bucket lists and you've
got this list of 100 dreams.
Tell us about that.
Why is it important to visualize your future to think about the things you want to accomplish
and work in your life and how does that actually help us move closer to our goals?
Well, I think it just helps our brains focus on what might be cool to do.
We have time in life.
Like, everybody has some amount of discretionary time, but the problem is if we don't think
we have a whole lot of time, well, we don't think about what we'd like to do with our time.
And so then when time does appear, we're kind of like, ah, just do whatever's
easiest. This is why people spend the majority of their leisure time watching TV or surfing
the web because it's the easiest thing to do. It requires very little effort, whereas,
you know, other things require more effort. And so we have to plan ahead and so we don't do them.
Making a list of 100 dreams, which is an exercise I got from a career coach named
Caroline Steneza Levine, is an unadded list of anything you might want to spend more time
doing in your life. So 100 items is, I mean, it's a bucket list, but nobody puts 100 items
on their bucket list. I mean, people stop at like 20 and then they don't come back to
it, right? Because it's not something that they're like, oh, yeah, I should make a bucket
list. And then you kind of do and then you stop and then, you it, right? Because it's not something that they're like, oh yeah, I should make a bucket list
and then you kind of do and then you stop
and then that's the end of it.
But 100 items, aiming for 100 items.
You not only get those 30 countries you want to visit,
like that's gonna be the first 30,
but then after that you start thinking a little bit more
about like, oh, there's that perk that's an hour away
from us that we've never visited
or I'd love to try this restaurant
or I'd like to learn to make a good souffle or I would like to try watercolors or buy an adult coloring book or
jigsaw puzzle. I mean there's start to be very small things that are actually quite doable,
right? Because if you're like, I want to do a puzzle. Well guess what? You can make that happen
very, very quickly. You can buy one and be delivered in two days or whatever, and you're leisure time
over the next weekend can be spent putting together this thousand-piece puzzle. You want to make
an unedited list because we often talk ourselves out of things. This is not a contract. Unlike
your to-do list, this list of 100 James is not a contract with yourself at all. It's just things
that might be cool. Maybe you'll do it, maybe you won't. Maybe you'll try things on it and decide you hate them. Good to know. Don't have to keep
worrying about that anymore. But you know, give C and answer to the question of like, well,
what should I do? I have some time. What would I like to do with it? You know, I have a little
time at night after the kids get better. We have some time this weekend or we have a vacation
coming up. What should we do? And so you're not racking your brain in that moment when you realize
there is time
about what you want to do with the time.
So before we move on to the next topic,
which is really about fostering connection and COVID
and having good culture and things like that,
is there anything that you didn't cover
that you wanna tell my listeners
in regards to productivity or time management
when it comes to working from home?
I think we covered a lot.
I think with everything, it's helpful to try tracking your time
for a couple of days or a week, ideally.
Just doing a good sense of what the rhythm of your life looks like.
And then you can decide what you like and what you don't like.
And that's just a very helpful place to be operating from.
I guess you just reminded me of one more question that I have for you.
Is you mention designing like your ideal week, right? Why is designing your ideal week
an important thing to do in your opinion? Well, you know, we often think about ideal
days too, but an ideal week is the cycle of life as we actually live it. So
thinking about the whole of the week allows you both to think about, you know,
the work week and things you'd like to do that maybe don't have to happen daily,
but might be nice to have once or twice a week in your life. It also lets you think about what an
ideal weekend would look like, what sort of a formula for a good weekend would look like for you.
Maybe there are things that you want to do, like you want to wake up twice during the week early
to exercise, but it's not every day. And so if you were designing an ideal day, it would be hard
to figure out what that would be.
But when you look at the whole week,
you could see something that's a little bit more reminiscent
of the life that you will actually be living.
But by thinking about how you'd like to spend your time,
you empower yourself to get your actual schedule closer to it.
So that's why we want to figure out
what an ideal week would look like.
So like, for example, you could say,
I want to work out three times a week and I want
to work out in the morning.
I want to talk to my friends five times in an ideal week and kind of like know all the
big things that you want to do and kind of the general time frames and then map that out.
And as you schedule your life, keep that in mind.
I think all of this stuff is such great advice.
It's just basically taking a step back, you know, slowing down to speed up essentially so that you can live the life
that you most want to live.
It is so hard to do that with time though, because time keeps passing regardless of what
you do. And so it's very hard to take yourself outside of it and then make conscious choices
about how to direct it. But that's why we build in these like weekly planning times, or
you know, to have a little moment to think about
what my ideal week would look like.
Because when you're just moving from thing to thing,
it's very hard to direct it.
But if you can build in times where you do step outside
of the flow for a little bit,
then your farm were able to make conscious choices.
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I recently became an entrepreneur. I was working at Disney Streaming Services and I started an
agency so I was able to quit my full-time job, which has been very exciting. One of the things that
I realized at Disney as work from home started to progress
is that the team morale just went to the shitter,
sorry for cursing, but even for Christmas,
nobody said happy holidays to each other.
There was just no team morale.
And everyone didn't really talk to each other anymore,
other than meetings, we just lost connection and I feel like
the team morale really went down the tube. So what's your advice there in terms of keeping
employees engaged and fostering like healthy company cultures during this time?
Yeah, I'm really sorry that happened because it is definitely not inevitable. And this is just
something that any of your listeners who are in management really need to think about is that your
your job is not just making sure that the work gets done. I mean, that's part of it,
but you need people to do the work and you want people motivated to do the work. And the only way
you have that is if people have a culture that they are plugged into and feel motivated to stay
part of, they feel like other people are on their team and cheering them on. So you can cultivate
that, recognizing that people aren't just their jobs.
One thing that people can do is start all meetings
with a few minutes of social time.
And I know that people are like, whoa, I don't have time
for that.
That sounds like such a waste of time.
My meetings take too long as it is.
But you put it on the agenda, right?
So it's not just like that awkward start of a Zoom meeting
where it was like, well, is everyone here?
Can we actually start?
Do I have to make some comment about the weather before I dive into the real stuff?
Like, I actually put in, you know, five minutes at the start where everyone says an answer
to one guided question.
And you know, this is just a way for people to, hey, you're hearing everyone's voice, which
is good because you want a meeting to involve everyone's contributions.
And so, you're getting used to hearing everyone when that happens.
But just let's people talk a little bit
about what's going on in their lives.
So everyone knows where people stand at a given woman
as they're about to collaborate together on something.
You can do social activities.
Virtually, the key thing is they really
have to be well facilitated.
And honestly, professional social events
should have been facilitated in the past.
They just weren't because there's always the option
to be like, okay, I'm just gonna go buy my team drinks.
Like, I don't have to think about it, right?
I'll just take them all out for drinks.
That's great. Like, or I take them out for dinner.
Yay. You know, solve that problem.
Whereas now you have to think about it a little bit more.
But there's all kinds of things you can do.
Very short fun Zoom things, you know, like playing kuhut type trivia games, you know,
just scavenger hunts. Again, you keep it to 30 minutes, honestly, and you have a limited
number of people on it. And, or if you're having a fun chit chat, have it be guided. Like,
you've all read the same article, and now you're discussing it together with one person
leading, or you've all read the same book. now you're discussing it together with one person leading or you've all read the same book and now you're having a discussion with one person leading.
But just, you know, building in things like that and then if again, as a manager,
it's your responsibility to reach out and see how people are doing, like get in the habit of
calling people, like just picking up the phone and calling people. So that you don't put the
owners on them to reach out to you. But also people know that they're not
just going to hear from you when you're in trouble.
Like it's not that like where's this report?
What didn't this happen?
It's like, hey, how's everything going?
I just want to check in, you know, see,
like, did, how did you feel after that meeting
yesterday? Like, what was your takeaway?
It's just, and then, you know, see how life
is going and and and take that upon
yourself to make sure that
people, as whole people, feel successful.
And I love that you said, like, not to wait, like, be so worried about wasting a few minutes.
And I think that really speaks to your perspective that time is abundant.
And you always say that, you know, we should approach time with an abundance mindset.
Why is that?
Like, why is it more beneficial to you look at time with an abundance mindset. Why is that? Why is it more beneficial to you look at time
with an abundance mindset?
Well, you just make better choices.
I mean, because if you are constantly feeling like
there's no time for anything,
like you feel rushed, you feel harried,
you're not going to be open to opportunity
because how could you take on any opportunities?
There's no time, there's no space for anything, right?
Whereas if you tell yourself,
I have all the time I need for what is important to me.
Well, you know, we see what we choose to see.
So if you're walking around with the story
that I am hearing busy rush, start for time,
well, Sherri, you can find evidence of that.
I'm sure we can all find evidence in our lives
of moments that are star for time,, rushed, harried, whatever.
But if you're walking around with the story that I do have time for the things that matter
to me, then you're like, oh, hey, you know, I just got my kids in bed and I, you know,
have 90 minutes before I need to go to bed, I could read a book.
I'm the kind of person who reads a book.
Look at me, you know.
And if it's the same thing with that, the start of the meeting is like, we have so much
to get through, I have 10 meetings today. How could I possibly spend time just chatting? But it's the same thing with that start of the meeting, it's like, we have so much to get through.
I have 10 meetings today.
How could I possibly spend time just chatting?
But here's the thing.
If you all trust each other and feel like you're happy together and going to have a great
meeting because you all feel like you're in it together because of this five minutes of
chit chat at the start, well, it's going to be a much better meeting.
Like you may not have to have a second meeting because somebody just resorted to total subterfuge
over something that they weren't happy about on the previous meeting.
It is so much better to invest the time in getting it right.
I completely agree.
Well, this is such an awesome conversation.
The last question I ask all my guests is, what is your secret to profiting in life?
Well, I mean, profiting is having extra, you know, that there's more coming in than what
is going out.
And I think that this is a good way to think about our time as well, that we have more
coming, more available to us, you know, and spending on things we would like to do, then
the things that sort of drain
us and make us unhappy. And yes, there are things we have to do in life. But even so, like,
even if you absolutely hated your job and it was 40 hours a week, there are 168 hours in
a week. And so if you slept eight hours a night, that's 56 hours per week, seven times eight,
56, 40 hours for work, we still have 72 hours for other things.
And so you could think of yourself as,
yes, I have this money time going out
for the work that I'm not thrilled about,
but I have these 72 other hours
that I can do other things with.
Wow, what a profit, right?
Or maybe I can change the work too.
And then I look even more profitable
because I have even more of my hours
that I feel good about.
Getting yourself into a place where you feel happy about your hours is how you can profit
in life.
Yeah, and to everyone listening, I highly recommend that you guys go check out episode
number four.
We talk about this a lot in terms of, you know, you have enough time for the things that
you want to do.
And honestly, Laura, I've taken so many of those value bombs
that you shared in that episode. And I've said them so many times on other podcast interviews
that I've been on when they ask me like, how do you have time for a side hustle? I always
give that example that you still have 72 hours left after you sleep and work. And that's
plenty of time, even if you have kids or whatever it is. So I love that piece of advice.
And where
can our listeners go to learn more about you and everything that you do?
Yeah, please come visit my website, which is LauraVandercam.com, just my name. And if
you're looking for more podcasts to listen to, you might check out Before Breakfast, which
is a short, every weekday morning quick tip that'll just help you take your day from
great to awesome.
Amazing. Thank you so much!
Thanks for having me!
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Having Laura back on the show was a blast, and now that most of us are spending more time at home and working from home,
I hope this episode lefty with ideas in terms of how to increase your productivity,
better prioritize your tasks, and boost your overall well-being and work-life balance.
My favorite gem of this episode was the Tidalist.
It's a super short daily to-do list that you can realistically accomplish 3-5 items
max.
Keeping your to-do list super short and with the most important items is a really, really
smart idea to move the needle towards success
while also maintaining motivation.
I hope that everyone listening today
had some of their own personal insights
or takeaways from this episode.
If you loved this conversation,
definitely check out her first interview with me,
that's number four, and that's truly a YAP classic.
In it, we discuss all things time management,
and fun fact, Laura was my first one-on-one guest interview
on YAP.
Prior to that, I had a completely different format
for my show.
And if you want more work from home tips,
why don't you check out my YAP snacks,
step up your self-care in 2021 episode
that I put out on December 27th, 2020.
In that episode, I talk about learning
how to master
your environment and the touchstones of self-care
that can help you stay healthy, happy, and productive.
Here's a clip from that episode.
I'm gonna try to help the people
who are naturally messy and naturally unorganized, right?
So I actually personally think that I fit into this category.
I have to try really hard to maintain organization.
I'm a very creative person.
I'm a very optimistic person.
I always think I have more time than I do.
And I'm naturally messy.
I would say when it comes on the spectrum of organization, right?
So cheese Hughes is somebody that I interviewed episode a attacking human behavior. And he is an X FBI agent. He is a master
when it comes to influencing others and having amazing persuasion
skills. He is the ultimate master at that. And so he taught me
something that stuck with me forever. He told me to be a leader.
You need to lead yourself. He says that before you
can ever influence others, you need to be able to influence yourself, which means that you
need to be super self disciplined. And this is something that always stuck with me. He
said that you wear your messiness on your sleeve. He says that he can always tell when he's
talking to someone if they haven't made their bed that day, or if they have a pile of dishes
in the sink, or if they have clothes piled up on the floor, he can tell instantly if their
environment is a mess, and if they're wearing their messiness on their sleeve, as he says. So you bring
your mess with you wherever you go. You are not your most confident, influential self. If you have
not made your bed, if your house is a mess, you wear that on your outward,
and people will be able to see that and see through you.
They won't know what's off exactly.
They'll be like, oh, this person's saying great things, but something is off about them.
I don't quite know what it is, but something is off.
And what's off is the fact that you have not disciplined yourself and you have not controlled
your environment.
So at the very least, what I want you guys to take away from this is make your bed every
day.
With us being at home constantly, it's easy to feel depressed, it's easy to feel like
you don't need to make your bed that who's going to notice, especially if you're single,
you're living by yourself.
It's easy to just kind of roll out of bed and roll into bed every day and not make your
bed, but that is not a good way to live. That's not how you're going to lead yourself or be a leader. You've got a snap out of bed and roll into bed every day and not make your bed, but that is not a good way to
live. That's not how you're going to lead yourself or be a leader. You've got a snap out of it.
So make your bed as soon as you wake up. Make it a routine.
Again, that's my YAP snacks. Step up your self-care in 2021 solo episode from late December for
more work from home and self-care tips. And if you love YAP, please drop us a review on Apple Podcasts.
Apple Podcasts reviews are by far the best way
you could thank me and my team for our work
on Young and Profiting Podcast.
They act as social proof and they improve
our Apple Podcast ranking.
But I know I have a lot of listeners who listen on
Castbox, Spotify, Podcast Republic, overcast.
So no matter where you listen from, we appreciate you, and if you can, drop us a review or comment on your
favorite platform, we would really appreciate that.
As always, I'm going to shout out a recent Apple Podcast review.
This week's shout out goes to Midwest MC, who says, a lesson in every question.
Really like the format and deep questions.
Learn to ton from others who've been through similar struggles
and now pass on advice that resonates
no matter where you're coming from.
Thank you so much MidwestMC.
At Yaff, we really take pride in digging deep with our guests
and we try to ask really smart questions.
We do our research and we do this
so we can uncover the best and most actionable gems for you. Thanks guys so much for listening. If you enjoyed this episode please make sure to
write us a review just like Midwest MC and feel free to share a young and
profiting podcast with your friends and family and remember to follow us on
social media. We love to see people profit from our work and share content to
our social media. You can find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala
or LinkedIn just search for my name, it's Hala Taha.
And now I'm on Clubhouse, follow the Young and Profiting Club
and you can find me there at Hala Taha.
I'm hosting live events there almost every day.
Once again, big thanks to Yap family, this is Hala, signing off.
Are you looking for ways to be happier, healthier, more productive, and more creative?
I'm Gretchen Rubin, the number one best-selling author of the Happiness Project.
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My co-host and Happiness Guinea Pig is my sister Elizabeth Kraft.
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night person, abundance lever or simplicity lever, and every episode includes a
happiness hack, a quick easy shortcut to more happy. Listen and follow the podcast, Happier with Gretchen Rubin.
We did it!
I still can't believe we got this project done so fast and so well.
When I'm in New York, I'm in Chicago, and I'm in LA.
But?
We're making it happen in Miro.
Together, our best work just happens faster on Miro's collaborative online whiteboard.
No more scheduling meeting after meeting
for work that could happen from anywhere.
Whether it's getting design feedback here,
mapping timelines here.
Or brainstorming next steps here.
It all just happens on the Miro board.
Exactly.
And it's nice not having to wait an entire day to get sign off from this guy.
Hey!
Well, it is true.
See how Miro users save up to 80 hours every year by meeting less and doing more.
Get on board at Miro.com.
The first three boards are free.
Forever.
That's MIRO.com.
on board at Miro.com.
The first three boards are free forever.
That's M-I-R-O dot com.