Time, energy, attention: what you manage in practice
Day 2 of 30 · Productivity 2026: How to Manage Teams and Time
The three pillars of productivity: time, energy, attention
Learning goal
- Understand how time, energy, and attention work together.
- Identify your personal time, energy, and attention patterns.
- Create a daily schedule that accounts for these constraints.
Why it matters
- Time: Finite resource. You can't create more, only manage it better.
- Energy: Variable resource. Changes throughout the day, and different activities require different energy levels.
- Attention: Most valuable resource. Easily lost, hard to restore.
- The interaction of all three determines your real productivity.
Explanation
Managing Time
Time blocking: Block time in your calendar for important tasks. Don't just react, plan.
Timing: Identify when you're most effective. Most people peak between 9-11 AM and 2-4 PM.
Buffer time: Leave 20-30% buffer time for unexpected things. Overpacked calendar = stress.
Managing Energy
Energy levels: Identify your day's energies:
- Peak energy (high): Hard, creative, strategic work
- Medium energy: Meetings, email, administration
- Low energy: Routine tasks, reading, archiving
Energy recharge: Identify what energizes you (movement, short break, social interaction) and what drains you (long meetings, multitasking).
Managing Attention
Deep work blocks: Block 90-120 minute blocks for deep work. During this time: no email, no phone, no meetings.
Attention restoration: After every interruption, it takes 15-20 minutes to restore your attention. Minimize interruptions.
Environment design: Create an environment that supports concentration (quiet, tidy desk, notifications off).
Practical Example
Wrong approach: "Today I'll work 8 hours, doing whatever!"
Right approach:
- 9-11: Deep work block (strategic planning) - peak energy
- 11-12: Email, administration - medium energy
- 12-13: Lunch, rest - energy recharge
- 14-16: Deep work block (creative work) - peak energy
- 16-17: Meetings - medium energy
- 17-18: Routine tasks, archiving - low energy
Practical exercise (20-25 min) — Daily energy and attention map
- Energy log (1 week): Record your energy level (1-10 scale) at 3 times daily (morning, mid-day, afternoon) for a week.
- Attention log: Record how many times your attention was interrupted daily, and what caused it (email, phone, colleague, etc.).
- Timing analysis: Identify when you're most effective (which hours, which days).
- Daily schedule design: Create a daily schedule that:
- Uses your peak energies for hard tasks
- Includes deep work blocks (90-120 min)
- Leaves buffer time (20-30%)
- Includes energy-recharging activities
Self-check
- ✅ You understand how time, energy, and attention work together.
- ✅ You've identified your personal energy and attention patterns.
- ✅ You have a daily schedule that accounts for these constraints.
- ✅ You know the goal is optimizing all three resources, not just managing time.
Optional deepening
- Cal Newport: "Deep Work" — about deep work and attention management
- Tony Schwartz: "The Energy Project" — about energy management
- Daniel Pink: "When" — about biorhythms and optimal timing