Colter Reed

5 Types of Productivity Debt

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto/tadamichi

The point of productivity (as an art/science) is to do less, not more. You focus on getting done the things you have to do so you can spend more time doing what you want to do. Greg McKeown addresses this in Essentialism: identify the essential things you need to do without creating extra “work” that just keeps you busy without adding anything meaningful or beautiful to your life.

In Take the Stairs, Rory Vaden describes The Rent Axiom:

There are plenty of things to keep us truly busy and engaged. Our vocation is the obvious source of things we need to do, but any role we take on—employee, entrepreneur, husband, father, church, volunteer—has its payments we need to make.

This payments metaphor helps to illustrate why procrastination is (usually) bad. When we put off making payments, the bills pile up, complete with late fees and interest. If we develop a habit of choosing short-term gains with long-term consequences, we’re committing to future payments that will come due sooner or later.

Paying back these debts has a real impact on our productivity. It’s that much more that we have to take care of before we can spend our time and attention on the things that matter most to us. Here are five kinds of productivity debt that you should pay off as quickly as you can.


If debt weren’t enough, there’s also inflation. Tomorrow’s problems can’t be solved with the same level of thinking we have today. The world is getting more complex, and we have to keep getting better at what we do just to keep up. The only way to do this is to regularly take time to sharpen the saw. Learn new skills. Reduce clutter. Read. Never stop learning.

Just as you (should) have a budget to tell every dollar you earn where to go, you should similarly budget your time and attention. Your weekly review is where you plan how you’re going to spend your week. Things seldom go according to how we plan, either with our time or our money, but it’s essential. Without a plan, we end the month wondering what just happened.

Question: How do you pay down your productivity debt? Share your thoughts in the comments, on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.

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