The Diary of a CEO has featured hundreds of conversations with some of the world's most productive people — founders running billion-dollar companies, neuroscientists who study peak performance, athletes who compete at the highest level, and authors who've spent decades researching what makes humans effective.
We've distilled the 20 best productivity tips from DOAC — not the generic "wake up at 5 AM" advice you've heard a thousand times, but specific, science-backed strategies that the show's guests actually use and recommend. Each tip includes the reasoning behind it and exactly how to implement it.
Source: Multiple guests including Steven Bartlett and Cal Newport discussions
The single most consistent productivity advice across DOAC episodes: your first two hours of the day are your most cognitively valuable. Don't waste them on email, social media, or meetings. Use them for your most important creative or strategic work — the work that actually moves your business or career forward.
How to implement: Block 8-10 AM (or whenever your day starts) as "deep work" time. Put your phone in another room. Close email. Tell your team you're unavailable. Use this time exclusively for the one task that would make the biggest difference if completed today.
Source: Referenced across multiple entrepreneurship episodes
Before you do anything else each day, identify your single Most Important Task — the one thing that, if completed, would make the entire day feel productive even if nothing else got done. Do that first. Everything else is secondary.
How to implement: Each evening, write down your MIT for tomorrow. When you sit down to work, start with it immediately — no checking email, no "quick" tasks first. The MIT gets done before anything else touches your attention.
Source: Neuroscience and health episodes
Multiple health experts on DOAC have emphasized that getting natural sunlight in your eyes within the first 30 minutes of waking is one of the most impactful things you can do for energy, focus, and sleep quality. Sunlight triggers cortisol release (which you want in the morning) and sets your circadian clock, which improves sleep that night — creating a positive cycle.
How to implement: Step outside for 5-10 minutes within 30 minutes of waking. No sunglasses. You don't need to stare at the sun — just be outdoors. On cloudy days, you need more time (15-20 minutes). If you can combine this with a short walk, even better.
Source: Performance psychology episodes
Human attention operates in roughly 90-minute cycles (called ultradian rhythms). Multiple DOAC guests have recommended structuring work in 90-minute blocks of intense focus followed by 15-20 minute breaks. This isn't arbitrary — it's based on how your brain naturally cycles between high and low alertness.
How to implement: Set a timer for 90 minutes. During that block, work on a single task with zero distractions. When the timer goes off, take a genuine break — walk, stretch, get fresh air. Don't check your phone during the break; let your brain genuinely rest. Then start another 90-minute block.
Source: Behavioral psychology discussions
Willpower is not the answer to distraction. Environment design is. Multiple guests on DOAC emphasized that the most productive people don't resist temptation — they eliminate it. They design their environment so that the default action is productive, and distractions require effort to access.
How to implement:
Source: Productivity-focused episodes
If a task takes less than two minutes to complete, do it immediately. Don't add it to a list, don't schedule it, don't think about it later. Just do it. This prevents the mental clutter of dozens of tiny unfinished tasks occupying space in your working memory.
How to implement: When a small task comes in (a quick email reply, filing a document, making a brief call), assess: can this be done in under two minutes? If yes, do it now. If no, schedule it or add it to your task list for later.
Source: Neuroscience episodes
Neuroscientists on the show have been unequivocal: multi-tasking is a myth. What people call multi-tasking is actually rapid task-switching, which reduces your cognitive performance by up to 40% and dramatically increases error rates. The guests who accomplish the most are the ones who do one thing at a time with complete focus.
How to implement: When you start a task, commit to it fully until it's done or until your focus block ends. If another thought or task pops into your head, write it on a notepad (physical, not digital) and return to your current task. Process the notepad during a break.
Our AI prompt packs help you take DOAC productivity frameworks and create a customized daily system based on your specific work, goals, and constraints.
Get the Prompt Pack →Source: Performance and health episodes
This fundamental shift was discussed repeatedly across DOAC episodes: time management is incomplete without energy management. You can have a perfectly organized calendar, but if you're exhausted, distracted, or mentally drained, those hours are worthless. The most productive people optimize for high-energy states, then schedule their most important work during those peaks.
How to implement: Track your energy levels for one week. Note when you feel most alert, creative, and focused (usually morning for most people) and when you feel sluggish (usually mid-afternoon). Schedule your most important work during high-energy windows and routine/administrative tasks during low-energy periods.
Source: Every health-focused DOAC episode
If there's one productivity tip that every single health expert on DOAC agrees on, it's this: sleep is the foundation of productivity. Not caffeine. Not willpower. Not time management systems. Sleep. Getting 7-8 hours of quality sleep improves decision-making, creativity, emotional regulation, and physical health — all of which compound into dramatically higher output.
How to implement: Set a non-negotiable bedtime and wake time. Keep them consistent even on weekends (the biggest sleep mistake most people make). Create a wind-down routine: no screens 60 minutes before bed, cool bedroom (65-68°F), dark room, no caffeine after 2 PM.
Source: Neuroscience and health episodes
Multiple guests discussed the science of caffeine timing. The key insight: don't drink coffee immediately upon waking. Your cortisol (natural alertness hormone) peaks in the first 60-90 minutes after waking. Drinking caffeine during this window provides minimal benefit and can cause an afternoon crash. Wait 90 minutes after waking for your first cup.
How to implement: Delay your first coffee until 9:30-10:00 AM (assuming a 7-8 AM wake time). Have your last caffeine by 2:00 PM at the latest — caffeine has a half-life of 5-6 hours, meaning half of your 2 PM coffee is still in your system at 8 PM, disrupting sleep quality even if you fall asleep fine.
Source: Health and performance episodes
Exercise isn't just for physical health — it's one of the most powerful cognitive enhancers available. DOAC guests consistently recommended short movement breaks as a way to reset focus and boost creativity. Even a 10-minute walk can restore your ability to concentrate.
How to implement: Schedule a 20-30 minute workout or walk in the morning before your deep work block. Between 90-minute focus sessions, take a 5-10 minute walk. If you're stuck on a problem, walk away — literally. Movement activates different brain networks and often unlocks solutions that sitting at a desk won't.
Source: Multiple entrepreneurship episodes
When deciding whether to commit to an opportunity, meeting, or project, use this filter: if it's not a "Hell yes!", it's a "No." This framework, discussed by multiple DOAC guests, prevents the gradual accumulation of commitments that fill your calendar with things that are merely "good" instead of great.
How to implement: Before saying yes to anything new, pause for 24 hours. If you're not genuinely excited about it after a day of reflection, decline. This applies to meetings, partnerships, projects, and social commitments alike. Your default should be "no" unless something clearly deserves a "yes."
Source: Business strategy episodes
Most people try to do the same things faster when they should be asking whether those things need to be done at all. Multiple guests emphasized that the biggest productivity gains come not from optimization but from elimination — cutting tasks, meetings, and commitments that don't directly contribute to your most important goals.
How to implement: List everything you did last week. For each item, ask: "What would happen if I stopped doing this entirely?" If the honest answer is "not much," stop doing it. You'll be surprised how many tasks you perform out of habit rather than necessity.
Source: Productivity and time management discussions
Context switching — jumping between different types of tasks — is one of the biggest hidden productivity killers. Every time you switch from creative work to email to a meeting and back, you lose 15-25 minutes of focus. Batching similar tasks together minimizes this switching cost.
How to implement: Designate specific time blocks for specific types of work. Example: deep creative work from 8-10 AM, email and communication from 10-11 AM, meetings from 1-3 PM, administrative tasks from 3-4 PM. Never mix categories during a block.
Source: Entrepreneurship and habit episodes
Goals tell you where to go. Systems tell you how to get there. Multiple DOAC guests argued that people who build daily systems consistently outperform people who set ambitious goals without systems. A goal is "lose 20 pounds." A system is "walk 30 minutes every morning and eat protein with every meal."
How to implement: For each goal you have, define the daily system that would make it inevitable. Then forget the goal and focus entirely on executing the system. Check your progress monthly, but give your daily attention to the system, not the outcome.
Source: Steven Bartlett and multiple guests
Several high performers on DOAC described spending 30-60 minutes every Sunday planning the upcoming week. This isn't about filling every hour — it's about identifying the 3-5 things that would make the week a success and ensuring they're scheduled with protected time blocks.
How to implement: Every Sunday evening, review your goals and identify your top 3-5 priorities for the week. Block time for each one on your calendar. Review what went well and what didn't from the previous week. This single habit creates more clarity and focus than any productivity app.
Source: Performance psychology discussions
High performers don't just start their days well — they end them intentionally. An evening shutdown ritual signals to your brain that work is done, preventing the "always on" state that leads to burnout and poor sleep. It also sets you up for a faster start the next morning.
How to implement: At the end of your workday (pick a time and stick to it): review what you accomplished, write down your MIT for tomorrow, close all work-related tabs and apps, and physically leave your workspace. Say to yourself: "Shutdown complete." The ritual gives your brain permission to disengage.
Every person's ideal productivity system is different. Our AI prompt packs help you take these DOAC strategies and build a personalized daily routine that fits your work style, schedule, and goals.
Get the Prompt Pack →Source: Entrepreneurship episodes
Perfectionism is one of the most socially acceptable forms of self-sabotage. Multiple DOAC guests — especially founders — emphasized that shipping imperfect work consistently beats shipping perfect work occasionally. Perfectionism disguises itself as quality standards, but it's usually just fear of judgment.
How to implement: Set a "good enough" threshold for every task. If it's 80% of the quality you want, ship it. The feedback you get from releasing it will improve the next version more than another week of polishing. Apply the mantra: "Progress, not perfection."
Source: Multiple high-performer episodes
The most productive people on DOAC share a common trait: they say no to almost everything. Warren Buffett says "The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything." This was echoed by multiple DOAC guests who guard their time fiercely.
How to implement: Create a "not-to-do" list alongside your to-do list. Include things like: checking email more than twice a day, attending meetings without a clear agenda, saying yes to "quick calls" that have no defined purpose, and working on tasks that could be delegated. Protect your time like it's your most valuable asset — because it is.
Source: Health, psychology, and performance episodes
Perhaps the most counterintuitive productivity tip from DOAC: rest is not the opposite of productivity. It's a prerequisite for it. Your brain consolidates learning, processes complex problems, and restores focus during rest — especially during sleep, but also during intentional downtime. The entrepreneurs who burn out aren't working too hard; they're recovering too little.
How to implement: Schedule rest with the same intentionality you schedule work. Take at least one full day off per week with no work at all. Take real vacations (not "working vacations"). During the workday, take genuine breaks — not scrolling social media, but walking, stretching, or simply doing nothing. Your future productivity depends on your current recovery.
You don't need to implement all 20 tips at once. That's a recipe for overwhelm. Instead, pick the three that would have the biggest impact on your current situation and commit to them for 30 days before adding more.
The key insight from every productivity conversation on DOAC: productivity isn't about doing more. It's about doing what matters most with full focus and adequate recovery. The busiest person in the room is rarely the most productive. The most productive person is the one who's clear on their priorities and ruthless about protecting their time and energy.
Last updated: March 2025. We add new productivity tips as relevant episodes are released. Bookmark this page for updates.