|
Hey, Reader! Confession time. I’ve been preaching the power of time tracking for years. I tell clients it’s one of the fastest ways to gain clarity and kill procrastination. Yet for a while, I wasn’t doing it myself. Even Mister Productivity falters sometimes. After a recent speaking engagement, I got convicted. I realized I was telling others to do something I had quietly stopped doing. So I made a decision: I’m back to tracking my time. But I wanted to keep it simple. Complexity is the gateway to procrastination, remember? The Simple System I’m Using NowI found two shrink-wrapped Grant Cardone 10X Planners in my office and decided to put them to work. Here’s how I use it: Every day has two pages. The left side is broken into time blocks: 6–9 a.m., 9 a.m.–noon, noon–3 p.m., 3–6 p.m., 6–9 p.m., and 9 p.m.–later. As I go through my day (not at the end), I simply write down what I actually did. I don’t use this planner to plan—I use it to record reality. The right side has space for morning goals, a quote of the day (which I usually cross out and replace with a gratitude list), daily targets, and successes. I write successes as they happen, not at night. I also keep my small 3.5" x 5.5" Moleskine Bullet Journal for other notes, so this planner doesn’t eat up those pages. What I’m LearningTracking my time is holding me accountable in a powerful way. Even when I waste time—scrolling, distractions, or low-value tasks—I write it down. The truth really does set you free. I can now see exactly where my time is going instead of telling myself stories about how “busy” I am. That honesty is uncomfortable at first, but it’s incredibly clarifying. It’s also helping me protect my energy. When I see how I actually spend my hours, I make better decisions about what deserves my attention. ConclusionTime tracking isn’t about perfection. It’s about awareness. You don’t need a complicated app or perfect system. You just need to start recording what you’re actually doing. If you’ve been avoiding it like I was, consider this your gentle nudge. Grab a simple notebook or planner and start writing down your real day—one block at a time. The clarity you gain is worth the small discomfort. Which part of your day do you suspect needs more honest tracking? Reply and tell me—I read every one. If you want help building a simple time-tracking habit that actually sticks (without overcomplicating it), reply with your biggest current blocker. I’ll personally book you a 5-minute Clarity Fit Chat to sort through it. You’ve got this. Mark |
"I went from scattered to national speaker thanks to Mark’s clarity coaching." — Kristie Ondracek
Hey, Reader! You can't stop procrastinating. Here's what works instead. I used to teach people how to stop procrastinating. I don't anymore. Not because I've gone soft. Because I've gone honest. Here's the truth I've come to terms with after years of coaching, studying, and—yes—procrastinating myself: Everybody procrastinates. Everybody. The difference between people who get things done and people who don't isn't that some magical breed of human never delays a task. It's that high performers...
Hey, Reader! Most people think productivity is something you do at work — calendars, task lists, and crushing goals during business hours. But here’s the truth I’ve learned after 15+ years coaching others and living it myself: Real productivity is about living intentionally across every area of your life — not just your job. I used to keep my “productivity tools” in one box and my personal life in another. That separation created stress, guilt, and imbalance. The shift happened when I started...
Hey, Reader! I’ve never been a fan of “The Big 3.” You know the advice — every productivity coach seems to say it: “Pick your three most important tasks for the day and crush them.” I get why it’s popular. It sounds simple. It sounds focused. But in real life? It often creates more pressure than progress. Some days I only need to accomplish one thing. Other days it’s four. And some days the most important thing is simply to rest and recover. Forcing a fixed number doesn’t respect the reality...