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Leverage in Time Management
Principle of maximizing output per unit of time by focusing on high-impact activities, delegating, automating, and avoiding low-value work.
Monotasking Principle
Productivity approach that involves focusing on one task at a time rather than multitasking, based on research showing that human brains are not designed for effective multitasking.
Pareto Principle (80/20 Rule) for Time Management
Time management principle stating that 80% of results come from 20% of efforts. Guides focus toward high-impact activities by identifying which tasks, projects, or activities generate disproportionate value relative to time invested.
80/20 Calendar Rule
Time management guideline suggesting never scheduling more than 80% of your available work hours, leaving 20% for unexpected tasks, meeting overruns, breaks, and flexibility to handle the unpredictable.
10/90 Planning Rule
A time management principle stating that spending the first 10% of your time planning and organizing work before starting can save up to 90% of execution time, emphasizing that 10 minutes of planning can save up to 2 hours of wasted effort throughout the day.
90/10 Outcomes Rule
A productivity principle stating that 10% of your actions account for 90% of your outcomes, related to the Pareto Principle but specifically applied to daily activity selection, suggesting strategic focus on the highest-impact 10% of possible tasks.
One-Touch Rule
A productivity principle stating that when you pick up a task or item, handle it completely rather than putting it down to deal with later, reducing clutter and mental load.
Parkinson's Law
Observation coined by Cyril Northcote Parkinson in 1955 stating that work expands to fill the time allotted for its completion. Used in time management to set tighter deadlines and avoid unnecessary complexity.
Hofstadter's Law
Cognitive principle stating that tasks always take longer than expected, even when accounting for Hofstadter's Law itself. Proposed by Douglas Hofstadter in 1979, this recursive law helps explain chronic underestimation in project planning.
Parkinson's Law of Time Management
The principle that work expands to fill the time available for its completion, suggesting that setting tighter deadlines and constraints can increase efficiency and reduce procrastination.
90/10 Productivity Rule
Time management principle stating that 10% of activities produce 90% of outcomes. This rule, also known as the Pareto Principle applied to time, encourages identifying and prioritizing high-impact tasks while eliminating or delegating low-value work.
10/90 Rule of Time Management
Productivity principle from Brian Tracy stating that the first 10% of time spent planning and organizing work will save 90% of the time in execution, emphasizing the importance of preparation over rushing into tasks.
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