Read on Blinkist:
Nothing I haven’t seen elsewhere, but like the focus on quadrants. Probably not a system that can work for every job, but a good place to start when looking to claw back your time to be more productive.
Highlights:
“To avoid distraction, organize your tasks using a time matrix, a productivity tool consisting of four quadrants, each accounting for a different portion of your time.
Q1 includes important, urgent work. For example, this is the time you spend handling emergencies or last-minute requests.
Q2 consists of time spent working on important tasks that aren’t urgent: that report for an important strategy meeting next week, for example.
Q3 time is for work that’s urgent but not important; e.g., constantly checking your email."
Q4 is the time you waste on pointless things, like playing games on your phone or checking Facebook.
All in all, you should spend most of your time in Q2. After all, although you may feel productive when you’re in Q1 and Q3 – you’re handling urgent business! – that’s not actually the case. Because we too often mistake the urgent for the vital, rarely leading to top-notch work. (For proof, just consider the misspelled, hastily constructed emails you’ve surely sent out in your life.)
On the other hand, we do our best work in Q2. It’s where we can focus and think, instead of simply reacting to whatever comes our way.
So, in order to stay in this quadrant, use the Pause-Clarify-Decide method to determine rationally whether the task is important
energy largely depends on the health of our social connections (in other words, relationships and friendships). Thus, it’s crucial that you take the time to develop and maintain strong connections with other people."