If you are fearful of offending people go to an online or in person marketplace and start low-balling people...
That… is a great idea and I can see how to expand on it into other arenas.
Since I posted this question I’ve been working primarily on strategy and through that have realized improving my productivity would be a wise decision. Since they seem so intertwined (productivity is the strategic use of time and resources) I’ve split my time up into 40% strategy, 40% productivity, 20% execution of other goal-oriented tasks.
If I could go back and redo the work, how long would it take me to make the same amount of progress? Divide the time-to-redo by the original duration.
Ex. I spent 4 hours writing a draft. Looking back I could have saved 1 hour by researching more thoroughly before starting to write. Score: 75% efficient.
Tracking Method
Record what I did during the day in the evening. Score it with the above method and add a hidden confidence score. Score it again 3 days later. Track the difference for calibration. Ask why that score was selected.
Also Track:
Time spent working. Consistency of adhering to my work schedule: 5 days a week.
Strategy
Tracking Method
Rate of changes to strategy guide. (little iffy on this one). I win more than I lose. (Games, negotiating, etc.) Goals accomplished.
I’m glad you appreciate the advice. It seems to me that you’ve developed a very effective, structured way to improve your productivity and I’m going to try to emulate your strategy here with a few upcoming projects I have to work on and see how efficient I’m being.
That… is a great idea and I can see how to expand on it into other arenas.
Since I posted this question I’ve been working primarily on strategy and through that have realized improving my productivity would be a wise decision. Since they seem so intertwined (productivity is the strategic use of time and resources) I’ve split my time up into 40% strategy, 40% productivity, 20% execution of other goal-oriented tasks.
I’ve drafted some ways to measure progress:
Productivity
Largely derived from: Thank you notes from my future self.
If I could go back and redo the work, how long would it take me to make the same amount of progress? Divide the time-to-redo by the original duration.
Ex. I spent 4 hours writing a draft. Looking back I could have saved 1 hour by researching more thoroughly before starting to write. Score: 75% efficient.
Tracking Method
Record what I did during the day in the evening.
Score it with the above method and add a hidden confidence score.
Score it again 3 days later.
Track the difference for calibration.
Ask why that score was selected.
Also Track:
Time spent working.
Consistency of adhering to my work schedule: 5 days a week.
Strategy
Tracking Method
Rate of changes to strategy guide. (little iffy on this one).
I win more than I lose. (Games, negotiating, etc.)
Goals accomplished.
Thanks again for the advice.
I’m glad you appreciate the advice. It seems to me that you’ve developed a very effective, structured way to improve your productivity and I’m going to try to emulate your strategy here with a few upcoming projects I have to work on and see how efficient I’m being.