The most valuable asset any salesperson has is time.

How much time do I have, and how much can I get done? Whether it's prospecting, sourcing, or sending out those introductory emails, salespeople have to ask themselves tough questions every day to ensure their priorities are in check.

Which is why I was excited when I came across the daily routine of Benjamin Franklin:

routine_ben_franklin

Inspired by his strict routine, I wondered how itfeelsto live a day in his shoes.So I decided to recreate his daily routine, with a 21st century twist. How much could I get done during this day, and how would my priorities shift?

After putting away my feathered ink pen and canvas paper, I grabbed my MacBook and produced two resources:

1.A Google Calendar template, mirroring his daily routine

2.An Evernote file to record goals every morning and accomplishments every evening

Thus, I'm encouraging you all to join me in an experiment and try Benjamin Franklin's daily routine.

Wanna try it out?

Sweet! Grab theGoogle Calendar and Evernote resources here.

不可否认,我有一个本田而不是一匹马prefer light bulbs over oil lamps, so I won't liveexactlylike this Founding Father, but I'm going to get as close as possible.

Chances are I won't invent a lightning rod or eye spectacles, but itcouldtransform my daily work habits.

The reality is I won't understand if his method works ... unless I try it myself.

Here's how I'm doing it -

Step 1: Download his daily routine to Google Calendar.

Click here todownload the calendar. You'll quickly notice every day is the same and that each day repeats until infinite. After downloading, you'll be prompted to select a destination calendar. Just select "New Calendar" and click OK.

add-new-event-calendar-ben-frankline-routine.png

Although you can customize each block to how you want, here's how it's currently structured for me:

5am - 8am:Somehow wake myself up at 5am, exercise for 45 minutes, shower, eat breakfast, then meditate for 10 minutes. Afterward, I'll write down my daily goals in Evernote. If time still remains, I'll listen to an audiobook or read until 7:30am. Then I'll commute to work.

8am - 12pm:Work on myhighest prioritized taskstasks.

12pm - 2pm:Eat lunch, read, walk around outside, and maybe call a friend or two I haven't talked to in a while.

2pm - 5pm:Continue to work on high-priority tasks.

5pm - 9pm:Go home, make dinner, read or listen to audiobook, meet my girlfriend or friends, and write down today's accomplishments in Evernote.

After creating my rough schedule for each day, based on Mr. Franklin's routine, I'll use his self-reflection process.

Step 2: Import his daily planning and self-reflection journal into Evernote.

Every morning he asked himself, "What good shall I do today?"

Every night he asked himself, "What good have I done today?"

With this thought process in mind, I created thisEvernote templateto jot down daily goals and accomplishments.

His process is profound because it's more than merely setting goals. It's about being honest with himself on what heactuallyaccomplished.

But here's the thing - productivity techniques arenota one-sized fits all solution. It truly relies on personal experimentation and self-reflection. Try this routine out; it may or may not work for you, but there's only one way to know.

orange-quotes

We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.

ALBERT EINSTEIN,[CLICK TO TWEET]

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Originally published Feb 27, 2015 5:53:00 PM, updated June 15 2021

Topics:

Sales Productivity Hacks Task Management Software