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Does Time Management Work? (Meta-Analysis)

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A comprehensive meta-analysis (PMC7799745) evaluating the effectiveness of time management on performance and well-being across 158 studies and 490 effect sizes. Findings show time management is moderately related to job performance, academic achievement, and well-being, with life satisfaction showing a particularly strong correlation.

Last updated: 2026-04-04 22:53

Overview

A comprehensive meta-analysis assessing the impact of time management on performance and well-being, analyzing 158 studies for a total of 490 effect sizes. Published in PMC (PMC7799745).

Key Findings

Performance Outcomes

Wellbeing Outcomes

Distress (Negative Wellbeing)

Individual Differences

Methodology

Time Management Dimensions

The analysis defines time management through three components:

Key Measures Analyzed

Publication Trends

Implications

The findings challenge the common perception that time management first and foremost enhances work performance, and that well-being is simply a byproduct. Instead, time management seems to enhance well-being — particularly life satisfaction — to a greater extent than it does performance.

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