I've tried the fancy productivity systems, but here's what works: This 3x5 notecard... Each evening, I sit down at my desk and write down the 3-5 highest impact to-dos for the following day. These are the "important" tasks that directly contribute to my long-term projects or goals. The list is pure—I specifically avoid writing down all of the miscellaneous urgent and unimportant to-dos (more on that later). In the morning, I sit down at my desk for my first focus work block and start at the top of the list, working my way down and crossing off the important items as I get through them. My primary goal is to cross each item off the list by the end of the day. I am intentionally conservative in the number of items I write on the list. It's usually 3, sometimes 4, and very rarely 5. I never want to end the day with open items, so being conservative helps me accomplish that (and get the extra rush from getting through more than I expected). As I go through the day, I stole an idea from Marc Andreessen to use the back of the card to write down and cross off any minor to-dos that I complete (the urgent or unimportant tasks that are not welcome on the front of the card). The process of writing and crossing off an item on the back of the card is a further boost of momentum, so I find it to be a worthwhile exercise. My notecard productivity system is painfully simple, but it's grounded in five powerful realizations: 1. 15 minutes of prep in the evening is worth hours the next morning. By setting out your priority tasks the night before, you eliminate any friction from having to decide what to work on. You hit the ground sprinting. 2. Important > Urgent. By tackling the important to start the day, you guarantee progress against the big picture projects and goals. If my day went to hell after that morning focus block (which it sometimes does with a 1-year-old at home!), it would be ok, because I know I've gotten through much of my important work. 3. Momentum is everything. Crossing important items off your list to start the day immediately creates a winning feeling that you keep with you. Success begets success. 4. Simple is beautiful. If you're spending time thinking about your productivity system, you're studying for the wrong test. That's movement for the sake of movement. You should be focused on progress. 5. Find what works for you. It used to stress me out that I didn't have a beautiful productivity system that would impress others. Then I realized that whatever works for me is the best productivity system. Identify how you operate and find the system that works for you. To get started, just buy a stack of simple 3x5 notecards and give it a shot. If you've ever been overwhelmed by productivity systems and advice, this is an approach to try. Follow me Sahil Bloom for more ideas like this in the future and join 800,000+ others who get these in my weekly newsletter: https://lnkd.in/esGsF85Q
Tips to Build Momentum for Starting Tasks
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Most motivation advice for burnt-out tech leaders is garbage. 'Cold plunge!' they advise. 'Take a vacation!' they say. 'Meditate more!' they suggest. 'Find your why!' they preach. After decades of building global tech teams, I've discovered the real secrets aren't Instagram-worthy. They're weird, counterintuitive, and they actually work. Here are 5 lesser-known strategies that kept me and my teams shipping when motivation tanks: 1. Cultivate "Micro Excellence" ↳ Forget big wins. Chase tiny victories. ↳ One clean code commit ↳ That 2-sentence update ↳ The quick config fix Your brain can't tell the difference between planned small wins and accidental momentum. Start tiny and watch how quickly you're back in flow. 2. Run "Invisible Sprints" ↳ Set private 30-minute challenges ↳ No announcements, no ceremony ↳ Just you vs. the problem ↳ Build momentum in stealth mode Your focus time is your most valuable currency. A short burst of hidden productivity can recharge motivation faster than any pep talk. 3. Invest in "Time Debts", Not Technical Debt ↳ Borrow 15 minutes from today ↳ Learn one keyboard shortcut ↳ Fix one process bottleneck ↳ Collect hours of future payback The motivation comes from knowing you've planted seeds that automatically make tomorrow easier. 4. Build Non-Obvious Support Networks ↳ Skip the usual tech circles ↳ Connect with artists, athletes, writers ↳ Fresh perspectives unlock stuck thinking ↳ Innovation lives at intersections My most powerful motivation boosts have come from conversations with a chef friend who thinks about team dynamics in ways no tech blog ever covered. 5. Engineer a "Dopamine Debugger" ↳ Track what actually excites you ↳ A/B test your motivation triggers ↳ Replicate winning conditions ↳ Debug your drive like production code Motivation isn't about inspiration. It's about engineering the right conditions for momentum. The beauty of uncommon methods is they slip under the radar of ordinary burnout. They work because they're personal and unexpected. What's your weirdest productivity hack that actually works? Share below. 👇 And if you're looking for a partner to help design unique systems that keep your team energized through growth and scaling challenges, let's connect. #TechLeadership #Innovation #ProductivityHacks
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Delete your to-do list. My clients use this instead: The 5-25-5 Productivity Stack Elite performers don't manage time. They stack it. (Save this 5-25-5 Method) After coaching 200+ executives, here's what actually works: 1/ The Power Preview (5 mins) ↳ Rate your energy level (1-10) ↳ List your top 3 priorities ↳ Stack similar tasks together ↳ Pick ONE breakthrough move → 25% daily productivity improvement 2/ The Focus Lock (25 mins) ↳ Clear all notifications ↳ Set a non-negotiable timer ↳ Attack your biggest priority ↳ Use pressure as fuel → 46% reduction in daily distractions 3/ The Strategic Close (5 mins) ↳ Review what got done ↳ Stack tomorrow's tasks ↳ Schedule your next block ↳ Celebrate small wins → Save an average of 498 hours per year 4/ The Stack Multiplier ↳ Start with ONE block before 11am ↳ Protect it like a board meeting ↳ Stack blocks as you build momentum ↳ Reset timer if interrupted → 30% faster decision-making 5/ The Reality Check ↳ Progress beats perfection ↳ Energy management > time management ↳ Small wins compound ↳ Systems beat willpower → Target 85% effort for productivity balance Reality check: You don't need more time. You need better systems. Which tip will you implement tomorrow? 🔖 Save this productivity stack 🎯 Follow me (Loren) for more on leadership, workplace culture, and personal growth. ♻️ Share with to help others thrive
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