Close
Close
0% completed

Unlock Free CIMA® Membership Until !

Register in for up to free membership on the Self-Tailored Learning Pathway.

Start your journey to the CGMA designation with exclusive savings.

Find out more

United Kingdom
Close

Select your country or region

Europe

Andorra Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Gibraltar Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Latvia Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Monaco Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania Russia Slovak Republic Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland United Kingdom

Africa & the Middle East

Africa Egypt Mauritius Middle East Seychelles South Africa

Asia Pacific

American Samoa Asia Pacific Australasia Australia Bangladesh China Guam Hong Kong SAR India Indonesia Japan Malaysia Myanmar New Zealand North Asia Pakistan Singapore South Korea Sri Lanka Vietnam

The Americas

Americas British Virgin Islands Canada Cayman Islands Puerto Rico South America USA Virgin Islands (U.S.)
Menu
Start your career in management accounting The CGMA Certificate in Business Accounting CIMA’s CGMA Professional Qualification CIMA Apprenticeships Research and insights CGMA Podcasts
Request more information

Get more insight on how CIMA’s professional qualifications will help you build a successful career in business or finance.

Request more information
CGMA Finance Leadership Programme (FLP)

Register now for the digital-first pathway to completing CIMA’s CGMA Professional Qualification. 

Earn CGMA designation with guided learning.

Register Now
Register for an apprenticeship

Register with CIMA and start studying apprenticeships today

Register Now
Back To Research and Insights

How to find your most productive time of day

01 February 2019
There are “night owls” who do their best work late at night and “morning larks” who perform best in the early hours of the day.

Tagged in:

School Leaver
Postgraduate
Graduate
IFAC Member
AAT Member
ICWAI Member
ICMAB Member
ACT Diploma
Performance Management
Articles

But how does that translate to the workplace? Most offices operate roughly from 9am to 5pm. Does that mean employees should be expected to have eight hours of highly productive time each day within that window?

Many experts say it does not.

“Society is sending us a variety of messages about when we are supposed to be productive,” said Vanessa Kettner, a coach with Personal Best, a productivity training organisation in the UK. “We are supposed to be productive for X number of hours a day, and we are supposed to be productive at these times during the day. Many work environments dictate when we should start and stop working — and when we need to be at our best. But we’re not all the same.”

 

Workers may be aware that they have times when they feel “in the zone” at work and times when they do not, said Barbara Green, president of Ontario, Canada-based Think Productive North America, which provides productivity workshops to companies across Canada and the US. And that, Green said, is OK.

“They appreciate that they can’t perform at a high intensity all day,” she said. “That’s a healthy perspective — we’re human, not superhuman.”

The key is to find a rhythm to those highly productive times and use that to one’s advantage, said Green.

 

So just how can we find our most productive times of day? Kettner and Green offered these tips:

Experiment. Try doing your most important piece of work for the day as soon as you get into work for a couple of weeks and see how that feels, Kettner suggested. Then, try doing it right after lunch or early evening for a few weeks. Kettner herself said she knew she was not a morning person and asked for leniency from her boss to follow an alternative to “typical work hours” for a year.

“I knew it was difficult for me to wake up early, so I wanted to see what would happen if I let my body lead, instead of fighting against it,” she said. “I discovered that my most naturally productive times are in the afternoon and evening, and that by nature I prefer to warm up — do the lower-priority things — in the morning.”

 

Keep a journal. Write down or keep a journal detailing when you start and stop a task. “If you are able to maintain focus for 60 to 90 minutes, you’ve identified a time of day when you are highly productive,” Green said. By keeping a written record for a number of days, a person will begin to see a pattern to the times when they are most productive, she said.

However, Green cautioned against tracking your most productive times when work is very busy and you are feeling stressed. “You can’t do it when you’re in crazy mode; you’re driven by outside things rather than your own internal rhythms.”

 

Note patterns of inactivity. Green said everyone will cycle through rhythms of proactive, active, and inactive times throughout the day. Note those inactive times as well — when you find yourself on Facebook instead of working, for example. Apps can be installed on computers to show where you are spending your time to help track those inactive times, Green said. RescueTime is one such tool. “If people are addicted to social media or email as a way of not focusing, this shows quite vividly,” Green said of the app.

 

Be aware of your ecosystem and continue to reassess. Kettner suggested that a person needs to evaluate their entire “ecosystem” in trying to understand their productive rhythms and peak performance times. “What this means is that the bedtime routine you have with your 2-year-old is going to possibly affect your performance in your 8am meeting the next day, or that traumatic 4pm deadline you had every day in that job ten years ago might still be exercising its influence today,” she said.

“Take the time, perhaps via trial and error, to figure out what works for you and why, and use that to leverage your productivity and your work contentedness,” Kettner said.

 

Lea Hart is a freelance writer based in the US. To comment on this article or to suggest an idea for another article, contact Drew Adamek, an FM magazine senior editor, at Andrew.Adamek@aicpa-cima.com

This article was originally posted by FM Magazine.

View Original

Explore more

Leadership skills for life with CIMA

Two CGMAs talk about how their CIMA Qualification has helped them forge successful leadership careers.
Watch video

Music Meets Finance: Shirley Henrick’s journey to the CGMA designation

CIMA member Shirley Henrick shares how the CGMA FLP, a learning pathway to the CGMA designation, made it possible to balance studying with a full-time career in the music business.
Read More
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 8849 2251
Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy Accessibility Modern Slavery Statement
© 2023 Association of International Certified Professional Accountants