Paul Minors

A detailed summary of how I spent my time in 2019 [PMP #158]

a detailed summary of how I spent my time in 2019

One of the reasons I love to track my time is because of the power you get from having an awareness of where your time goes. As 2019 comes to a close, I wanted to know how I’ve spent my time this year so I can make better choices going into 2020.

And I thought it would be fun to share some of the insights with you. Enjoy this detailed summary of how I spent my time in 2019.

NOTE: This analysis covers the period from January 1st to December 9th. So although the year isn’t over, it gives me a pretty good idea of how I’ve spent my time this year.

Don't want to read this post, listen to the podcast instead:

How I track my time

Before I get into the analysis, I’d like to explain the methods I use to track my time.

As you may know, I’m a big proponent of time blocking. By planning out when I’m going to work on specific tasks, this creates a nice time log and at the end of the week, I can go back and look at all the blocks on my calendar to see how I spent my time.

Time blocking is great but I want to get a big-picture overview as well as a detailed breakdown of where my time is going. So for that, I’m going to use Timing (affiliate link). Timing is a time tracking tool I’ve been using for the last few years to track my time. It watches the apps, websites and files you use while you do your work and categorises them into projects.

This is what I’ve used to produce the analysis below.

Summary of my year

Observations:

NOTE: If you’re wondering why I seem to be working in the middle of the night, I believe this is because I’ve travelled this year and so when I was in the US, it looks like I’m working in the middle of the night New Zealand time.

Hours worked per month

Here’s a breakdown of how many hours I worked each month this year:

You’ll see my hours were lower in April and May when we were travelling the US and Canada and working less. Likewise in September when I had two weeks off.

Overall, I worked an average of 153 hours per month which is about 35.7 hours per week. This is great to see as I made a goal at the start of the year to get my working hours down to 35 hours per week.

Work-life balance is something a lot of people strive to achieve. And I know a lot of people reading have full-time jobs don’t have as much control over their hours. But you always have options. Whether that’s going part-time or starting a side-business. You CAN have more balance if you choose to make it a priority.

A perfect example is Angelo, one of the members in my Slack community. This year he’s reduced his hours after taking his work remote and travelling the US with his family from their RV.

I made a goal at the start of the year to lower my hours (which I’ve done). This might mean I have to sacrifice growth (sales actually still grew this year despite the reduced hours). But I’m happy to do this if it means I have balance in all aspects of my life. It means I can end my day at 3 or 4 pm and go to CrossFit or spend time with my family.

Projects I worked on

Here are the top “Projects” I worked on. These are basically the categories of my work:

Top 5 projects:

  1. Client Work (495 hours, 28%) – Client work took up most of my time this year. What’s interesting is that consulting and client work actually makes up around 58% of my income. You might look at this and think I should spend more time on client work so I can increase my income. What people often don't realise is all the support and marketing work that goes into creating this income (which is the next few items on this list).
  2. Sales (256 hours, 14%) – I spent 14% of my time on sales e.g. on introductory calls, following up with people and writing proposals. This is about half the time I spent on actual client work but is necessary to create my overall consulting income.
  3. Content (149 hours, 8%) – I spent 8% of my time creating content. For example, this post you're reading now. This also includes all the videos I make for YouTube that help me to get clients and sell products.
  4. Planning (148 hours, 8%) – I spent just under 10% of my time planning. I’d say this is more than most people. As a productivity geek, I’m constantly jumping into Asana and my calendar to plan my time and work out next steps on a project. It was Abraham Lincoln that once said: “Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe.”
  5. Email (123 hours, 7%) – I’m happy to report that overall time spent managing email is quite low. However, I should point out that a lot of time I am responding to an email, say from a client, this may get categorised as “Client work” not “Email”. So while I am technically responding to an email, really the thing I’m doing is helping a client so that’s how it gets categorised.

Most used apps

Here are the apps I’ve used the most this year:

Some observations:

Most used websites

Finally, here are the websites I’ve visited most often:

Observations:

Closing thoughts

As the year comes to an end, I’d highly encourage you to look back at how you’ve spent your own time this year. If you haven’t actively tracked your time, even just journalling about what you’ve spent time on is a useful way to reflect before you set your goals and start the new year. Good luck!

Exit mobile version