The Most Productive Days and Times In 2017 (rescuetime.com) 31
In a blog post, personal analytics service RescueTime revealed exactly what days and times we were most productive in 2017, by studying the anonymized data of how people spent their time on their computers and phones over the past 12 months. From the report: Simply put, our data shows that people were the most productive on November 14th. In fact, that entire week ranked as the most productive of the year. Which makes sense. With American Thanksgiving the next week and the mad holiday rush shortly after, mid-November is a great time for people to cram in a few extra work hours and get caught up before gorging on Turkey dinner. On the other side of the spectrum, we didn't get a good start to the year. January 6th -- the first Friday of the year -- was the least productive day of 2017.
One of the biggest mistakes so many of us make when planning out our days is to assume we have 8+ hours to do productive work. This couldn't be further from the truth. What we found is that, on average, we only spend 5 hours a day working on a digital device. And with an average productivity pulse of 53% for the year, that means we only have 12.5 hours a week to do productive work. Our data showed that we do our most productive work between 10 and noon and then again from 2-5pm each day. However, breaking it down to the hour, we do our most productive work on Wednesdays at 3pm. RescueTime has a separate blog post detailing how they calculate their productivity scores.
One of the biggest mistakes so many of us make when planning out our days is to assume we have 8+ hours to do productive work. This couldn't be further from the truth. What we found is that, on average, we only spend 5 hours a day working on a digital device. And with an average productivity pulse of 53% for the year, that means we only have 12.5 hours a week to do productive work. Our data showed that we do our most productive work between 10 and noon and then again from 2-5pm each day. However, breaking it down to the hour, we do our most productive work on Wednesdays at 3pm. RescueTime has a separate blog post detailing how they calculate their productivity scores.
Re: (Score:2)
Fake news maybe?
Here is my personal experience from a recent laptop purchase - I bought a laptip with A12 processor and 16GB RAM running Windows 10 on a 1TB HDD. First two days it was on, it was so slow I couldn't bear it. I sent it back and exchanged for i7 , rest of specs same, and that one was faster.
It was no benchmark but the experience was significantly better on i7 for home office type work.
You really can't dispute solid evidence-based testimony like that.
Only 5 hours!? (Score:2)
we only spend 5 hours a day working on a digital device
I don't think anyone who only spends that amount of time in front of a digital device.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I suppose it would also not include, spreadsheets, cad/cam machines, animation, coding et al. Lots of people spend twelve hours a day in front of computers, lots as in large numbers, not lots as in large percentages but when you start with 7 billion, even a tiny percentage is millions.
However there measure is not a measure of productivity but a measure of technological based time wasting, definitely not one of producing some thing other than perhaps large measures of social angst https://en.wikipedia.org/w [wikipedia.org]
I call BS (Score:2)
Most Boring Article of 2018 - and it's only Jan. 4 (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
One size fits all is almost never appropriate. I know I'm most productive at the start of the morning before people start interrupting me for questions, and usually through a good part of the afternoon before 4 PM.
You realize that "people start interrupting" because that's when they're working, right? I understand your perspective, except I'm the polar opposite who usually gets things done in the late afternoon but I'm under no illusion that's when most work is done company-wide. I get work done because it's quiet. And to be honest I think you are the exception, most people seem to take a long time to "boot" to get into work again. That goes for Mondays, mornings and just coming back from lunch. Or they're procrastin
Re: (Score:2)
This is a double edged sword.
If management would take it at face value and say "okay, this is when people are productive, so lets make that time easier for them" it'd be okay.
We all know management instead will say: "Shit! they're only 'working' 12.5 hours a week but we're paying 40?" ignoring that a lot of the not work time is meetings/overhead and the games/social media time is often a case of "This problem is thorny, I'm going to take a break and come back to it." and while on said break our brain is act
Re: (Score:2)
One size fits all is almost never appropriate. I know I'm most productive at the start of the morning before people start interrupting me for questions, and usually through a good part of the afternoon before 4 PM.
Not me. I work for an international company with the main office being in EMEA and with our team being global. Which means that the majority of my mornings (afternoons in Europe) are taken up by early morning meetings, usually from 8:00am to noon. Tuesday's and Thursdays are completely taken up by meetings.
I am the most productive on Wednesdays as it's one of the only full days that I have no meetings scheduled. Friday comes in second place. So, for me, it's pretty close.
The results may not exactly fit
Thinking is working so basic metric fail. (Score:1)
Before I retired (early), I *often* outproduced my co-workers because I took more time to think and much less time to "do".
Spending time learning is also productivity. I would often know a way of doing things which took 1% (or less) as long as co-workers.
So you really need to watch the questions you are asking and the assumptions you are making about what is work, what is productivity, and so on.
Sometimes, the best thing you can do for your productivity is to take a break and go for a walk.
You just have to
WAYYY too many task switches (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This.
For quite a while I have been tasked with customer support for *one* customer and primary QA at my current gig.
"But it's only one customer!" -management
"Yeah and when they interrupt the super complex test case I was running I have to very nearly start over." -me
6 months later I have an offer at a new company on the way, where I can focus on what I'm genuinely good at.
Long hours != productivity (Score:2)
After 8 hours of work, productivity drops precipitously. Accrue too much overtime, and you'll be so tired your productivity is negative: you'll just be introducing errors you'll have to fix later.
Re: (Score:2)
Eh, with version control, you won't go negative in productivity. Your breadcrumbs will help the next day. Now, it's probably not worth the loss of free time and mental strain*, but at least you won't move backwards.
* Or it can be. I have no idea what your compensation structure looks like.
These slaves are lazy... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
and the smart slaves use out of band devices for comms, social media, etc. all while remaining logged in at their proscribed station.