Ideal Week Planning
Strategic planning method where you design a template for your ideal week by pre-scheduling recurring activities and protecting time for priorities. Creates structure while allowing flexibility.
Last updated: 2026-03-14 17:34
Overview
Ideal Week Planning is a time management strategy where you create a template calendar showing how you'd ideally spend your time each week. This template becomes a guide for scheduling and helps ensure your time aligns with your values and priorities.
How to Create Your Ideal Week
Step 1: Identify Your Priorities
- List your key roles (professional, personal, relationships)
- Define what success looks like in each role
- Identify your top 3-5 priorities
- Consider energy levels and work patterns
Step 2: Block Non-Negotiables
- Sleep and wake times
- Exercise and health activities
- Family commitments
- Commute times
- Meal times
Step 3: Add Work Commitments
- Regular meetings and calls
- Deep work blocks (2-4 hour chunks)
- Administrative time
- Email and communication time
- Planning and review sessions
Step 4: Include Personal Time
- Hobbies and recreation
- Relationship time
- Learning and development
- Household responsibilities
- Buffer time for flexibility
Step 5: Review and Adjust
- Check for balance across priorities
- Ensure adequate rest and recovery
- Leave white space for flexibility (20-30%)
- Align with energy patterns
- Test for one month, then refine
Example Ideal Week Structure
Monday
- 6:00-7:00am: Morning routine, exercise
- 7:00-8:00am: Breakfast, family time
- 8:00-12:00pm: Deep work block (highest priority project)
- 12:00-1:00pm: Lunch, walk
- 1:00-3:00pm: Meetings and collaboration
- 3:00-5:00pm: Admin and email
- 5:00-6:00pm: Planning for Tuesday
- 6:00pm+: Personal and family time
Friday
- Similar morning routine
- 8:00-11:00am: Week wrap-up, email, admin
- 11:00am-12:00pm: Weekly review
- 12:00-1:00pm: Lunch
- 1:00-3:00pm: Learning, skill development
- 3:00-5:00pm: Lighter work, planning ahead
- 5:00pm+: Weekend begins
Using Your Ideal Week
- Use as a template, not a rigid schedule
- Compare actual vs. ideal weekly
- Protect the most important blocks
- Notice patterns of deviation
- Adjust quarterly as priorities shift
- Share with family/team for alignment
Benefits
- Ensures time for all priorities
- Reduces decision fatigue about scheduling
- Makes trade-offs visible
- Helps say no to non-essential commitments
- Creates better work-life balance
- Provides clarity on time allocation
- Makes planning easier
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Scheduling every minute (leave buffer time)
- Ignoring energy levels and chronotype
- Not including personal priorities
- Being too rigid (aim for 70% adherence)
- Forgetting transition and setup time
- Not reviewing and adjusting regularly
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