Calendar Audit
Practice of reviewing past calendar to analyze how time was actually spent in meetings and commitments. Identifies which meetings add value, where time is wasted, and opportunities to reclaim schedule control.
Last updated: 2026-03-20 03:48
Overview
A calendar audit involves systematically reviewing past weeks of your calendar to understand how time is actually being spent, particularly in meetings and scheduled commitments. This reveals patterns and opportunities for improvement.
How to Conduct a Calendar Audit
Step 1: Export Calendar Data
- Review last 4-8 weeks of calendar history
- Include all meetings, calls, and scheduled blocks
Step 2: Categorize Events
- Internal vs external meetings
- Strategic vs tactical discussions
- Recurring vs one-off meetings
- Your meetings vs others' meetings
- Decision meetings vs information sharing
- Necessary vs optional attendance
Step 3: Calculate Time Allocation
- Total hours in meetings per week
- Percentage of time in each category
- Average meeting duration
- Number of context switches daily
Step 4: Evaluate Value For each recurring meeting, ask:
- Is my attendance necessary?
- Could this be an email or async update?
- Is the duration appropriate?
- Are the right people attending?
- Does it have clear outcomes?
Common Findings
- 40-60% of work time spent in meetings
- Many meetings lack clear purpose
- Attendance at meetings where not needed
- Meetings scheduled without buffer time
- No blocks reserved for focused work
- Reactive rather than proactive scheduling
Taking Action
Eliminate:
- Decline unnecessary meeting invitations
- Cancel recurring meetings that lost relevance
- Send regrets with offer to review notes
Reduce:
- Shorten meeting defaults (25/50 min instead of 30/60)
- Reduce frequency of recurring meetings
- Limit attendees to essential participants
Protect:
- Block focus time on calendar
- Create no-meeting days or half-days
- Build buffer time between meetings
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