"This book will help you own your calendar, block time for what matters most and reclaim your life." --Paula Rizzo, author of Listful A List-Making Journey to a Less Stressed You
You want more time to spend with family, to achieve big goals, and to simply enjoy life. Yet, there seem to be more and more things competing for your time, and more distractions interrupting your day.
Craig Jarrow has spent many years testing time management tactics, tools, and systems and written hundreds of articles on productivity, goals, and organization, Through it all he's learned a simple Time management should be easy, not complicated and unwieldy. And it shouldn't take up more of your precious time than it gives back!
Time Management Ninja offers 21 rules that will show you an easier and more effective way to take control of your time and manage your busy life. Follow these simple principles and get more done with less effort. It's no-stress, uncomplicated time management that works.
"Read this book, apply its rules, and you'll find freedom." --Hyrum Smith, bestselling author of Purposeful Retirement
Short, simple, and sweet. I liked the approach to teaching the reader "the ninja ways." There is nothing mind-blowing, BUT there are some great principles to reflect and review. Like it made me ponder how much I waste time strolling through my phone and what I look at. Am I spending more time with my phone than with my spouse or family? What would I do if I could get 2 hours or more back in a day or even 10-20 hours back in a week? What would I want to accomplish? Does my schedule look like a list of others' obligations? Do I schedule time for me and my goals first? If not, why should I feel guilty? What dreams are being put off for someday? What would make me fulfilled every day/week--even if I am only accomplishing just a bit of that dream/goal a little each day?
It was interesting to me to compare and contrast this book with the Get-Things-Done (GTD) method. Due the references to the "absurdity" of next action lists and flow charts, this book is anti-GTD. This ninja method focuses on making things super streamlined and simple-- back to to just using ONE notebook for notes, ONE calendar (whether that be paper or pencil) etc. It harps on the importance of being organized and working to get rid of the clutter.
I felt like both the GTD and this method have their merits. I appreciate both self-help books that encourage me to want to do better and to write things down--including all the dreams and goals I procrastinate for later but never plan out deadlines or smaller steps to accomplish.
I would recommend to those needing a good pick-me-up, you-can-do this book. It's a 3.5 hour audiobook.
Short, sweet, and to the point. It's a fast read that gives the reader tips on how to plan more effectively in order to save time. In all honesty, I think everyone should read this. Especially those who have tons of to-do lists or don't plan at all and still find no time to do anything.
Good, short, useful read. A lot of the things I've already kind of mastered. Especially when it comes to any of the organizational features, there were a lot of other things that I found to be useful.
I read another book on productivity by Tim Challies that made a passing comment of "I've read like all the productivity books, and they all spend a lot of time saying a lot of the same things, so here's like 3 things you can do so you don't have to read them all."
That always stuck out to me, but I wasn't sure if it was true or not. I'm now roughly 4 productivity books deep, and Challies' musing has only become truer with each read.
Craig Jarrow offers some fine tips, like keeping things clean, and getting organized with your scheduling and note-taking. Do it all in once place instead of multiple. This is true. I've seen this happen multiple times to me in the past, and moving to a single note-taking software/calendar/todo list/etc has saved time and headaches.
But, now I've basically told you most interesting takeaways from this book. It's a short read, but honestly is topped in every way by Do More Better by Tim Challies.
Terrible joke aside, this was a quick and easy read. The five stars is earned due to that fact. It’s not an overly complicated self-help book, everything is spaced out in a very informative and clean way, and the concepts are easy to grasp. There isn’t anything really ground breaking in this book, but the way that it is presented makes it easy to commit to memory.
Loved it! Good advice in chunk-sized bites. Easy to understand and apply to daily life. I'm thinking of getting several copies and giving them to my kids. I'm interested in seeing what else this author has written and checking out the website. Very recommended!
An excellent yet humourous book that calls you out but in a way that cares for you and wants to see you succedd and reach your best! Definitely a book worth revisiting every years just to keep up that consistency and be reminded to keep learning
I knew most of what was covered here already, but it was still nice to be reminded of how I can manage my time better. Regardless of how long I will remember the advice.
Some good takeaways - listened on audio. I resist the idea of combining my personal and work todos, notes, and calendars, but I can see some advantages as well. I'm starting to use the tip of tackling one to-do each day that I've been putting off. I wonder if the print version has some recommended apps - not so much in the audio.
A concise book helps people confused how to manage time by themself apply easily. My mom is a good example about 21 rules in this book. she taught me like that. A good self-helf book !!
The whole"ninja" approach/catch phrase, I found a bit annoying and there were some cheesy parts, but overall lots of good idea and advice. Nothing necessarily mind blowing, but true principles that are easy to forget but would make your life better if implemented. Helped me identify some places I'm failing in time management, which is always a good thing.
I love reading time Managment books. I find them satisfying and they do increase my productivity or at least my morale. This one is quick and divided nicely into 21 tips. I liked how brutal he was on social media, iPhones, netflixs- we all need that wakeup call: are you using tech or is tech using you? There were a few great one liners and lots of cliches. I enjoyed it.
To The point. Practical. I am already doing a loyt of the things but I also learned new ways to organize. A must read if you want to become 1 % better every day.
If you have followed his blog, the book is a great review. If not, it is a practical, actionable start to recognizing it is up to us to deal with our commitments!