Maximize Your Time; Elevate Your Life

27 The 80/20 Principle: Do Less, Achieve More

6 min · 1. juni 2026
episode 27 The 80/20 Principle: Do Less, Achieve More cover

Description

Most people don’t have a time problem. They have a focus problem. If 80% of your results are coming from 20% of your effort, then staying “busy” can be the most expensive habit you have. We walk through the 80/20 rule (the Pareto principle) in plain language and make it practical across three areas: revenue, execution, and stress. First, we look at clients and relationships. A small slice of clients often generates most of your revenue, and an even smaller slice of relationships drives referrals and opportunities. We talk through how to identify those highest value clients, double down on service and trust, and stop letting the wrong demands dominate your day. Next, we shift to productivity and time management. We compare high-impact work like strategic thinking, business development, key client conversations, and real decision-making with the loud distractions like admin, inbox churn, and low-value meetings. The takeaway is simple: schedule the top 20% first, batch it, and guard your calendar aggressively so the noisy 80% doesn’t steal the week. Finally, we tackle stress by going after root causes. One broken system, one bottleneck, or one difficult client can create most of your friction. Fix the source, and the symptoms fade fast. If you want more output with less chaos, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend who’s always slammed, and leave a review. What’s the one task, client, or problem you’re eliminating this week? Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, P.C. - WoodsandBates.com

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28 episodes

episode 28 The Habit Overhaul artwork

28 The Habit Overhaul

Your life isn’t determined by what you do once in a while, it’s determined by what you do on repeat. That’s why we’re digging into habits as the invisible architecture behind your health, productivity, focus, and even how you handle stress. We lean on the core idea from James Clear’s Atomic Habits: you don’t rise to the level of your goals, you fall to the level of your systems and once you see your routines as a system, you can actually change them.  We break down the difference between good habits that compound in your favor and bad habits that compound against you, then we get practical about behavior change. Instead of betting everything on motivation or willpower, we talk about cues, routines, and environment design. You’ll hear simple ways to add friction to the stuff you want to do less of: logging out of apps, moving distractions, removing trigger foods, turning off notifications, and setting boundaries like no phone in the bedroom.  Then we flip it and make good habits easier. We walk through habit replacement so you don’t leave an empty gap, plus tools like the two-minute rule and habit stacking to make consistency feel almost automatic. We also share how to “upgrade” habits you already do well with batching, better meeting structure, and intentional planning before you open your inbox. Finally, we tie it all to identity-based habits, because the fastest way to change what you do is to change who you believe you are becoming.  If this helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s trying to reset their routines, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s the one habit you’re improving this week? Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, PC - WoodsandBates.com

Yesterday8 min
episode 27 The 80/20 Principle: Do Less, Achieve More artwork

27 The 80/20 Principle: Do Less, Achieve More

Most people don’t have a time problem. They have a focus problem. If 80% of your results are coming from 20% of your effort, then staying “busy” can be the most expensive habit you have. We walk through the 80/20 rule (the Pareto principle) in plain language and make it practical across three areas: revenue, execution, and stress. First, we look at clients and relationships. A small slice of clients often generates most of your revenue, and an even smaller slice of relationships drives referrals and opportunities. We talk through how to identify those highest value clients, double down on service and trust, and stop letting the wrong demands dominate your day. Next, we shift to productivity and time management. We compare high-impact work like strategic thinking, business development, key client conversations, and real decision-making with the loud distractions like admin, inbox churn, and low-value meetings. The takeaway is simple: schedule the top 20% first, batch it, and guard your calendar aggressively so the noisy 80% doesn’t steal the week. Finally, we tackle stress by going after root causes. One broken system, one bottleneck, or one difficult client can create most of your friction. Fix the source, and the symptoms fade fast. If you want more output with less chaos, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend who’s always slammed, and leave a review. What’s the one task, client, or problem you’re eliminating this week? Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, P.C. - WoodsandBates.com

1. juni 20266 min
episode 26 No Is A Complete Sentence artwork

26 No Is A Complete Sentence

One word can be the difference between a life that feels constantly rushed and a life that feels intentional: no. We talk through why so many capable, busy people end up overwhelmed not because they lack discipline, but because they say yes too quickly and too often. A full calendar can look like success while quietly draining your focus, your energy, and your ability to do your best work. We get practical about boundaries and time management with simple, respectful language you can use right away. We also explain why over-explaining backfires, how silence can be a tool, and why clarity is actually kinder than long justifications that invite negotiation. If you’ve ever said yes out of guilt, fear of missing out, or a desire to avoid awkward moments, you’ll recognize the patterns and learn a better way to respond. We also connect “no” to productivity and priorities like your ideal week, your current season of life, your values, and the difference between rejecting a person and declining a request. The goal isn’t to become unavailable, it’s to create margin so you can choose commitments that truly fit and avoid resentment, poor performance, and burnout. If this helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs stronger boundaries, and leave a review telling us what you’re practicing saying no to this week. Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, P.C. - WoodsandBates.com

25. maj 20265 min
episode 25 The Put Through List artwork

25 The Put Through List

Your day doesn’t fall apart because you have “too much to do.” It falls apart because everyone else gets a vote on what you do next. Today, we tackle a practical time management problem most professionals quietly accept: constant interruptions that break focus, trigger reactive decision making, and turn the workday into firefighting. We share a simple system we call the put-through list, a short, intentional list of people and organizations who can interrupt you immediately. Everyone else follows a clear process for handling. We talk through how to keep the list small, how to define what’s truly urgent, and how to train your team so the system is consistent and respectful. From there, we zoom out into the productivity habits that make this work long term: batching callbacks at set times, setting expectations through voicemail when you don’t have staff, and using delegation to solve problems before they escalate to you. You don’t need to be instantly available to be reliable. With the right filters, you can stay accessible, responsive, and effective while protecting deep work and getting control of your schedule back. If this helped, subscribe for more practical productivity systems, share the episode with someone whose phone never stops ringing, and leave a review so more people can find it. Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, P.C. - WoodsandBates.com

18. maj 202610 min
episode 24 Interruptions: The Hidden Killer of Your Day artwork

24 Interruptions: The Hidden Killer of Your Day

Your calendar can look packed and you can still feel like you accomplished nothing. Tiny interruptions that seem harmless but quietly wreck your focus. A quick email check, a “fast question,” a notification you didn’t need to see. Once your attention breaks, it can take 15 to 23 minutes to fully recover, which turns a two-minute distraction into a serious productivity killer. If you’ve been trying to “work harder” and it’s not helping, this conversation is the reset. On this episode, we walk through what interruptions really are, separating external distractions (coworkers dropping in, phone calls, last-minute meetings, inbox pings) from the internal ones we create ourselves (phone checking, task switching, doomscrolling, multitasking). We talk about why this often feels like productivity while it’s actually procrastination, and why being constantly available without boundaries creates chaos. You’ll hear how tools like batching, the Pomodoro method, and planned email processing fit into a larger time management strategy built around protecting deep work. We will challenge you, for one week, to track every interruption, how long it lasted, and whether it was necessary. That data reveals patterns you can fix with simple systems like scheduled check-ins, clearer delegation, better documentation, and communication rules that protect focus blocks. If you want better results without longer hours, listen now, share this with someone who keeps getting interrupted, and subscribe and leave a review with your biggest daily distraction. Blinn Bates - BlinnBates.com Woods & Bates, P.C. - WoodsandBates.com

11. maj 20267 min