Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity

The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 12:32 PM
    TORONTO — Is there one sure-fire strategy to maximize your time and energy in a given day?
     
    Chris Bailey was so determined to find out that he turned down two lucrative job offers and devoted a year of his life to a quest for the holy grail of productivity.
     
    In addition to his research and interviews with leading experts, the business school graduate used himself as the test subject in a series of experiments.
     
    Bailey lived in isolation for 10 days, worked 90-hour weeks and gained 10 pounds of muscle mass. 
     
    He documented the experiments on his blog and then compiled the upsides and pitfalls of his pursuits in the book "The Productivity Project" (Random House Canada).
     
    Bailey said there is no one-size-fits-all strategy for increased productivity. He learned that firsthand when the habitually late riser forced himself to wake up at 5:30 a.m. for three months.
     
    "It didn't work for me, and I accomplished less in that experiment than I would have otherwise," Bailey said during a recent interview in Toronto. 
     
    "I had to go to bed when I had the most energy, when I was the most productive — because I don't view productivity as how much we produce, I view productivity as how much we accomplish. The best way I found to do that while doing my project was by managing our time, our attention and our energy."
     
    Bailey also tried drinking only water for an entire month and found he had more energy than he had in years.
     
    While he still drinks caffeine and said it can offer productivity benefits, he added that people should be smarter about their consumption habits and not continuously rely on the stimulant.
     
     
    "Being able to find that energy boost whenever you need it, when you have something important you're working on ... is something huge that you can do."
     
    Bailey writes in his book about the benefits of assessing your Biological Prime Time (BPT) for performing one's highest-impact tasks.
     
    "It's during your peak energy hours that you're able to bring more to whatever it is that you're doing, so that you can spend your energy wisely, in addition to spending your time wisely if you have the flexibility to do so."
     
    A strategy Bailey has maintained is to unplug from digital devices from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. He also suggested shrinking "support tasks" that can consume considerable time, like answering emails.
     
    "If you check them every hour — even for 12 hours — over the course of the day, that's still 12 times a day and more than enough time to keep on top of everything that you have to do."
     
    Bailey said among the best tactics for him were those that allowed him to work "more deliberately and with intention."
     
    "When we have more work to do than the time to do it in, it becomes crucial that we take that step back to figure out what's important," he said.
     
    "When you only work on auto-pilot in response to whatever tasks get sent your way ... other people have control over your work."
     
    Another of his favoured approaches is "the rule of three"— looking ahead to the end of the day to determine which three things you'd like to accomplish.
     
    "On days where you have a ton of meetings, maybe those meetings are what you intend to accomplish — or maybe they limit what you intend to accomplish.
     
     
    "Just taking that step back is something huge someone can do for their productivity."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New $7 Million Gurdwara Coming Up In Guelph City, Ontario

    New  $7 Million Gurdwara Coming Up In Guelph City, Ontario
    200,000 Canadian dollars were raised over the weekend while hundreds of thousands of dollars had been donated by devotees previously

    New $7 Million Gurdwara Coming Up In Guelph City, Ontario

    5 Things To Know About Diesel Cars Amid The Volkswagen Emissions Shocker

    5 Things To Know About Diesel Cars Amid The Volkswagen Emissions Shocker
    The emissions scandal that's engulfed German car manufacturer Volkswagen has shone a light on diesel cars. Who makes them? How popular are they? Here are five things to know about diesel vehicles:

    5 Things To Know About Diesel Cars Amid The Volkswagen Emissions Shocker

    Double Trouble, Not Double-Double For Suspected Vancouver Van Thief

    Double Trouble, Not Double-Double For Suspected Vancouver Van Thief
    Brian Phillips faces various charges after a delivery van was stolen from downtown Vancouver early Monday morning.

    Double Trouble, Not Double-Double For Suspected Vancouver Van Thief

    Tough Decisions Loom As Crews Seek White Rock Man Lost 10 Days In Cypress Mountain

    Tough Decisions Loom As Crews Seek White Rock Man Lost 10 Days In Cypress Mountain
    Rescue efforts didn't begin until the weekend when an abandoned vehicle in the Cypress Mountain parking lot was traced to Jewell.

    Tough Decisions Loom As Crews Seek White Rock Man Lost 10 Days In Cypress Mountain

    B.C. Coast Should Brace For 'Monster' El Nino Year: University of Victoria Professor

    B.C. Coast Should Brace For 'Monster' El Nino Year: University of Victoria Professor
    Ian Walker's warning comes out of part of a larger study by a group of researchers from five countries bordering the Pacific who looked into El Nino and La Nina weather systems. The study was published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience

    B.C. Coast Should Brace For 'Monster' El Nino Year: University of Victoria Professor

    Convicted B.C. Pimp Reza Moazami Fires Lawyers Again, Judge Raises Concerns Over More Delays

    Convicted B.C. Pimp Reza Moazami Fires Lawyers Again, Judge Raises Concerns Over More Delays
    It's the third time Reza Moazami has dismissed his defence counsel since his arrest in 2011.

    Convicted B.C. Pimp Reza Moazami Fires Lawyers Again, Judge Raises Concerns Over More Delays