My Favourite Tip: Lisa Leong - How a colour-coded calendar can help you both on and off the clock - podcast episode cover

My Favourite Tip: Lisa Leong - How a colour-coded calendar can help you both on and off the clock

Jun 06, 20227 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:

Episode description

You might not be surprised to find out Lisa Leong has a colour-coded calendar. She’s the host of hit ABC podcast This Working Life, after all. But what might surprise you is how her attention to diaristic detail helps her when she’s not at work.

Her ABC work is orange, and the sessions working on her new book were red. But she also blocks out her e-bike commutes and social activities. Why? 

For one thing, it ensures nobody schedules her into a meeting when she’s meant to be out for dinner. But perhaps more importantly, it means she has something like a birds-eye-view of her life, one week at a time. 

Too much orange and red? Not enough yellow and blue? At a glance, Lisa knows whether she’s overworking (or spending a bit too much time on the town!).

Lisa also gives you what she calls a “compassionate challenge,” and asks you to work if you might have more autonomy at work than you initially thought. 

Pick up a copy of Lisa’s book, This Working Life

Or connect with her on Instagram or Twitter

You can find the full interview here: Lisa Leong wants you to forget work-life balance and cultivate work-life cohesion instead

***

Connect with me on the socials:

Linkedin

Twitter

Instagram 

 

If you’re looking for more tips to improve the way you work, I write a fortnightly newsletter that contains three cool things I have discovered that help me work better, which range from interesting research findings through to gadgets I am loving. You can sign up for that at http://howiwork.co

Visit https://www.amantha.com/podcast for full show notes from all episodes.

Get in touch at [email protected]


CREDITS

Produced by Inventium

Host: Amantha Imber

Sound Engineer: Martin Imber

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

You're about to listen to My Favorite Tip episode, where I select one of my favorite tips that I've heard on this show. But I want to know what your favorite tip has been that you've heard on How I Work, because I'm putting together a short series of listeners favorite tips that I'll be releasing next month. To submit a tip, email me a voice memo or a note to Amantha at inventium dot com dot au. That's Amantha at inventium dot com dot au and you can get my email

from the show notes. You might even want to mention how you've applied the tip in your own life. Lisa Leong is the host of the hit ABC podcast This Working Life, and therefore you might not be surprised to find out that Lisa has a color coded calendar. But what might surprise you is how her attention to diaristic detail helps her when she's not at work. Her ABC work is orange, and the sessions working on her new book were read. But she also blocks out her e

byte commutes and social activities. So how does her rainbow colored diary help her live a better life. My name is doctor Amantha Imber. I'm an organizational psychologist and the founder of behavioral science consultancy Inventium, And this is how I work, a show about how to help you do your best work. On today is my favorite Tip episode, we go back to an interview from the past and

I pick out my favorite tip from the interview. In today's show, I speak with Lisa Leon about color coding her calendar.

Speaker 2

So if you look at my calendar, you could be frightened because every hour is accounted for, so looks scary. However, the color codes make it okay. So blue is actually on a space in my calendar, but because I've scheduled it in, it's just got a block of space. And so the block of space could be transit and I commute by e bike, so all of those beautiful blue blocks in my diary are actually me enjoying my bike ride as I'm going between events or between activities. So

that's blue. There's a lot of blue in my calendar. Actually there's a lot of other things. And then ABC, so that's orange, so you know, I'll know, okay, I've got these interviews, and so my eye is now accustomed to knowing, you know, where the interviews are in my diary because it's orange and then the book was red, so you know I had red there. And then yellow is like social activities. So there was not a lot of yellow in my diary at one point, but now

there's more yellow. And then sometimes there's too much yellow, Amantha, so Lisa needs to tone it down. So that's an example, and then different projects might have different colors. Orthough I am running out of colors in my Google calendar, I must say I have a few duplicates.

Speaker 1

That's funny. I use color coding so I time block, but not as extreme as you. But I do love using colors just so I can look at the week and get a sense as to am I like putting enough energy into the things that matter to me? So I use it as a bit of a check for that, and also just thinking about what kind of energy am I going to need for the day. So the main activities that don't go to the default color, which is a sort of a soft pastor purple. Yeah, is podcast interviews,

so they are in blue. And what I call delivery, which generally is keynote speaking, whether that be virtual or starting to get back into face to face, which cris a different kind of energy. And then also sales meeting. So part of my job is sales or business development, and I like to know that I'm just doing regular activity with that because that obviously feeds into inventory. Yeah, that's proactive. So they're the things that I color code at the moment, and I find that really very useful.

Like given given, I am a time blocker or a time boxer like you, but I like what you've done in terms of color coding non work activities to see if you're almost having enough time for replenishment and rejuvenation and those sorts of things.

Speaker 2

So and it means that meetings don't go in there over the top of a space that I really need yes, yes for other And it's about how do you prioritize things as well. So let's say you've decided, okay, so I really do you know health is the most important thing, family is the most important thing. Then I will go into my diary and make sure that they go in first,

and then everything actually goes around that. So in my anti rotting phase, I you know, doctor appointments are really important and don't they just get you know, delayed when you're not prioritizing health. So they go in first and then around that you know, then I'll start scheduling other things because I mean I can because I have control over my diary. So there is an autonomy thing. I mean, one of my questions is, you know how much autonomy

do you have? And I still believe, and this is what I call a compassionate challenge, that you probably have more autonomy than you think. So this idea of job crafting, so you can cognitively craft, you can relationship craft, and you can task craft. If you look at those dimensions and you think, actually, how much budge do I have? And you know, do I need to have a common

with my manager around it? I think that you might have a little bit more sway than you think if you can align it to the greater goals and the objectives.

Speaker 1

Especially I hope that after listening to Lisa, you are up for taking her compassionate challenge. Maybe you might schedule a conversation with your boss this week to take back some more control over your diary and insure that your

calendar aligns with what matters most to you. If you're looking for more tips to improve the way that you work, I write a short fortnightly newsletter that contains three cool things that I've discovered that helped me work better, ranging from software and gadgets that I'm loving through to interesting research findings. You can sign up for that at Howiwork

dot code That's how I Work dot co. How I Work is produced by Inventing with production support from Dead Set Studios, and thank you to Matt Nimba who does the audio mixed for every episode and makes everything sound so much better than it would have otherwise. See you next time.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file