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Step-by-step guide to blocking your calendar. Includes common mistakes people make and how to fix them before they waste your week.
Time blocking isn’t complicated. You’re essentially dividing your day into distinct chunks and assigning specific tasks to each chunk. That’s it.
Here’s the thing though — most people get the concept right but mess up the execution. They create beautiful color-coded calendars, follow them for three days, then abandon the whole system. We’re going to show you why that happens and how to actually make it stick.
The best part? You don’t need fancy apps or expensive software. A notebook and a pen work just fine. The system matters more than the tools.
You’ll want to divide your day into blocks that match your natural energy levels. Most people work best with 60-90 minute blocks, then take a 10-15 minute break. But honestly, you’ll figure out what works for you through trial and error.
Start simple. Don’t try to schedule every single minute — that’s a trap. Leave gaps. You need breathing room for the unexpected stuff that’ll definitely happen.
Deep work blocks (90 min) Administrative blocks (45 min) Meetings/Collaboration (varies). Rotate through these throughout your day instead of doing them all at once.
One thing people miss: you’re not locking yourself into a prison. If something genuinely urgent comes up, you move the block. The system serves you, not the other way around.
The biggest mistake? Over-scheduling. People block every single minute and then get frustrated when reality doesn’t cooperate. You need white space. Slack in the system is actually a feature, not a bug.
The fix? Start with a 2-week trial where you only block 60-70% of your day. The rest is reactive time for emails, messages, and surprises. You’ll see what actually works for you.
Here’s what actually works. On Sunday evening, spend 20 minutes blocking out your week. Not your entire week in detail — just the big pieces. Your deep work blocks, your meetings, your admin time.
Then every morning, spend 5 minutes reviewing today’s blocks and adjusting as needed. That’s it. Two quick planning sessions.
Review your week ahead. Block deep work first, then meetings, then admin time. Realistic time estimates matter here.
5-minute review of today’s blocks. Move things around if needed. This is your chance to respond to what happened overnight.
Spend 2 minutes noting what actually happened vs. what you planned. You’re collecting data to improve your estimates.
This guide presents general productivity principles for educational purposes. Everyone’s schedule, work environment, and energy patterns are different. What works for one person might not work for another. We recommend starting with the basic framework and adjusting it based on your actual experience. If you’re working in a highly collaborative environment or have unpredictable demands, time blocking may need significant adaptation to suit your specific situation.
Time blocking works because it forces you to make decisions about your priorities upfront. You’re not deciding what to do in the moment when you’re tired and distracted — you’ve already decided when you were fresh.
It’s not a magic system that’ll solve all your productivity problems. But it’ll probably give you back 4-5 hours per week. That’s enough time to actually work on something that matters instead of being constantly reactive.
Start simple. Give it three weeks before you judge whether it works. And remember — the system that works is the one you’ll actually use, not the one that looks perfect in theory.