What Would You Do with an Extra 1000 Hours This Year?

by Carey Nieuwhof

So here’s a question that sounds a little far-fetched, but hear me out. It’s really not. 

Would you:

  • Read your kids bedtime stories most night?
  • Have a regular date night with your spouse?
  • Develop your speaking and preaching to new levels?
  • Read books?
  • Work out?
  • Finally get those long term projects done at work and at home?
  • Take up a hobby?

I’m talking about 1000 hours in the middle of raising kids, working full time, running the kids to soccer and leading a growing ministry or business. I’m talking about real life.

I found those 10000 hours a year over a decade ago, and I’ve enjoyed them every year since.

I also believe it’s possible for you to carve 1000 extra hours out of 2018.

As some of you know, a few times a year I offer an online course called The High Impact Leader. In the course, I outline the principles and strategies I’ve used to help me gain about 3 hours a day in productivity, and I share three of them below.

I came by it honestly, because, for the first decade of ministry, I worked way too many hours as our church grew.

Ironically, even though our church was less than half the size it is now, I worked more hours than I work today.

Plus I never felt like I had the time to write books, blog, podcast or speak to leaders in the wider church or even optimally hang out with my family. I was working way more hours but at a fraction of my actual capacity in terms of results.  All of it led me to burn out after 10 years in ministry.

By the grace of God (and I mean that), I recovered from burnout.

But as soon as I began to recover, I realized that I had to develop a new rhythm and pattern. If I returned to my old ways I knew I would simply end up in the same place.

New Normal = Less Time, More Results

As I tried to find that new normal, I invested a lot of time and thousands of dollars in coaching and counseling to figure out new patterns that could make me far more effective and productive leading at a higher level.

I knew that reaching more people couldn’t equal more hours. Because if it did, I was toast.

As I gained new insights into time, energy and priority management, I was able to work fewer hours and get far more accomplished.

Not only did we start reaching more people than ever at our church, but I discovered time to do other things like write books, blog, launch podcasts, speak to church leaders and have more time at home with my wife and kids.

So, how do you arrive at 1000 hours a year you ask?

Simple. Just make changes that add up to 3 hours a day in increased effectiveness. That’s what happens when you learn how to stop the interruptions, work in a focused way, learn how to say no nicely, and build your calendar around your top priorities, your peak energy and focus zones and start doing what you’re best at when you’re at your best.

Gaining back 3 hours a day adds up to 1095 additional productive hours a year.

It’s more than possible.

So how do you find 1000 hours to lead with much greater impact in life and leadership?

1. Admit You’ve Got The Time

So many leaders just assume they don’t have the time to do what they want to do. It’s even reflected in the way we talk.

Think about it: how many times in the last month have you caught yourself saying or thinking I don’t have the time for that? 

I realized that, over time, that phrase had become one of my most frequently uttered responses anytime someone asked me to do anything new or extra.

Get involved in a new project? Sorry, I don’t have the time for that. 

Take on one more event? Sorry, I really don’t have the time. 

Come over for dinner Friday? Man, I’d love to. I just don’t have the time. 

Then one day I woke up and realized…all high impact people I admire who produce so many great things with their life don’t get any special treatment. They get 24 hours in a day. Just like me. Just like you. Nothing more. Nothing less.

Think about it: it’s not like when your church grows to 10x the size, somebody gives you 10x more hours. We all get the same amount of time.

So I made a key shift that helped me so much.

I stopped saying that I don’t have the time. And I started admitting I didn’t make it.

That sounds like a small thing, but if you do it consistently, it can be revolutionary.

Try it for a week. Stop saying you don’t have the time (because you do). Start admitting you didn’t make it.

That will force you to have some hard conversations with yourself when you realize the most productive person on planet earth got the same hours you did today.

You may not want to always say you didn’t make the time out loud. After all, if your mom invites you to dinner and you tell her you’re not going to make the time, well…that’s not great at all.

But you should admit it to yourself.

When you (silently) admit you aren’t going to make the time, it forces you to ruthlessly evaluate your priorities. You’ll realize that never making time for your mom, or your most important priorities—or a life dream—is a mistake.

And when you’re dead honest with yourself about not making the time to work out, or do proper sermon prep, or have a date night with your wife, or work on your top priorities it’s so much easier to change.

Begin here: Stop saying you don’t have the time. Start admitting you didn’t make it.

2. Stop Cheating Your Gift

You’re gifted at something.

It might be communication or strategic thinking. It could be music or administration. Bottom line, your gifting is what you’re naturally best at.

When you’re gifted at something, that also means it’s easier for you to do that thing that it is for most people. You can likely do it faster and with far greater ease than most.

And that’s exactly how leaders get trapped. Under constant time pressure, leaders who are good at say, preaching, might give their best time away to meetings, email, projects and other pressing tasks knowing that they can probably write a decent message after hours or in the cracks of a busy week.

Instead of blocking out 10 or 20 hours to study, pray, research, wordsmith, test ideas and even practice, too many preachers whip something off quickly and let it go at that. What happens when you do that year after year after year?

Well, you use your gift. But you never develop it. And as a result, you cheat your gift. You will be good. But you will never be great.

Now don’t miss this. Once you know your key gifting, developing it is the key to growth.

I know you’re thinking…but I don’t have 10 or 20 hours to develop my gift.

I get that. But here’s what happens when you actually budget the time.

First, it forces you to ruthlessly evaluate all your priorities and eliminate so many things you’re merely good at, but don’t have the potential to be great at. As our church has grown and my leadership has developed, I’ve stopped doing almost everything except communicating, casting vision, honing strategy and leading a handful of people close to me.

Second, having a teamwork in the area of each member’s key giftedness is a church or organization’s key to growth.

If your gift is leadership development and you spend most of your time developing leaders, you will develop an amazing leadership culture.

If your gift is structure, you’ll be able to scale and organize as you grow. Or, if your gift is preaching, you’ll get so much better when you focus.

And as a result, you can (and probably will) grow.

3. Stop Reacting

Ever notice your Monday to-do list rarely gets accomplished on a Monday…or sometimes even by Friday?

Too many leaders remain baffled at why this happens day after day, week after week.

I’m a huge technology fan, but technology isn’t helping you and me when it comes to keeping your priorities straight.

Work life these days is a series of constant interruptions, from the person who knocks at your door or cubicle wanting ‘just five minutes of your time’ to a constant flood of emails, text messages and phone calls.

And you know what every one of those interruptions does?

It pushes somebody’s else’s priorities ahead of yours.

Think about it. Nobody ever asks you to accomplish your priorities; they only ask you to accomplish theirs.

Which is why it’s so hard to get things done.

If you want to lead with high impact, decide that you will not succumb to constant interruptions.

Decide ahead of time how to spend your time. Block and tackle your key priorities. Schedule them in your calendar. Ignore email. Shut your office door. Turn off notifications on your phone. And get what matters most done.

When I started doing this (I’ll show you in the course how to calendar this and how to say no nicely), it revolutionized my productivity.

Here’s what hit home. If you don’t decide how to spend your time, someone else will decide how to spend it for you.

I just decided I needed to steward my time the way I steward money and resources.

www.careynieuwhof.com. Used by permission. 

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