Leverage in Time Management
FeaturedPrinciple of maximizing output per unit of time by focusing on high-impact activities, delegating, automating, and avoiding low-value work.
Last updated: 2026-03-19 20:45
Overview
Leverage in time management means maximizing the value created per hour invested. High-leverage activities produce disproportionate returns compared to time spent. Understanding and applying leverage is the difference between being busy and being impactful.
The Leverage Formula
Leverage = Value Created รท Time Invested
High Leverage Examples
- Hiring great person: Hours invested, years of value
- Building reusable system: One-time effort, infinite use
- Strategic decision: Minutes deciding, massive impact
- Training team: Hours teaching, scaled productivity
Low Leverage Examples
- Attending unnecessary meetings
- Personally handling delegatable tasks
- Perfectionism on low-stakes work
- Responding to every request immediately
Types of Leverage
1. Time Leverage
Activities that save future time:
- Automation
- Documentation
- Templates
- Standard processes
2. People Leverage
Multiplying capacity through others:
- Delegation
- Training
- Hiring
- Collaboration
3. Technology Leverage
Tools that multiply your capabilities:
- Software automation
- AI assistants
- Productivity tools
- Integration systems
4. Knowledge Leverage
Ideas and insights that change everything:
- Strategic decisions
- Learning new frameworks
- Solving root causes
- Systemic improvements
The 80/20 of Leverage
Typically:
- 20% of activities create 80% of value
- 20% of clients generate 80% of revenue
- 20% of features drive 80% of usage
High-leverage time management focuses relentlessly on the 20%.
Leverage Questions
Before committing time, ask:
- Is this the highest-leverage use of my time right now?
- Could someone else do this 80% as well?
- Will this create value beyond the immediate output?
- What's the opportunity cost?
- Am I doing this because it's important or just comfortable?
Building Leverage
Focus on Outcomes
Don't optimize activity; optimize results.
Ruthless Prioritization
Do less, but what matters more.
Eliminate Low-Leverage Work
Say no to requests that don't move needles.
Invest in Multipliers
Spend time on things that create permanent efficiency gains.
Delegate and Develop
Build team capability for scaled impact.
Measuring Leverage
Track time spent vs. value created:
- Revenue per hour worked
- Projects completed vs. hours invested
- Impact of decisions made
- Systems built that continue working
The Leverage Mindset
Shift from:
- "How can I do this efficiently?" to "Should I do this at all?"
- "How fast can I complete this?" to "What will this make possible?"
- "I'm so busy" to "Am I working on what matters?"
Related Items
10/90 Planning Rule
A time management principle stating that spending the first 10% of your time planning and organizing work before starting can save up to 90% of execution time, emphasizing that 10 minutes of planning can save up to 2 hours of wasted effort throughout the day.
10/90 Rule of Time Management
Productivity principle from Brian Tracy stating that the first 10% of time spent planning and organizing work will save 90% of the time in execution, emphasizing the importance of preparation over rushing into tasks.
80/20 Calendar Rule
Time management guideline suggesting never scheduling more than 80% of your available work hours, leaving 20% for unexpected tasks, meeting overruns, breaks, and flexibility to handle the unpredictable.
90/10 Outcomes Rule
A productivity principle stating that 10% of your actions account for 90% of your outcomes, related to the Pareto Principle but specifically applied to daily activity selection, suggesting strategic focus on the highest-impact 10% of possible tasks.