Privacy Policy

At Work Ignited, your privacy is very important to us!

Work Ignited LLC ("Company", "we", or "us") respects your privacy and is committed to protecting it through this Privacy Policy.

This Privacy Policy governs your access to and use of workignited.com, including any content, functionality, and services offered on or through workignited.com (the "Website"), whether as a guest or a registered user.

When accessing the Website, the Company will learn certain information about you, both automatically and through voluntary actions you may take. during your visit. This policy applies to information we collect on the Website and in email, text, or other elextronic messages between you and the Website.

Please read the Privacy Policy carefully before you start to use the Website. By using the Website or by clicking to accept or aagree to the Terms of Use when this option is made available to you, you accept and agree to be bound and abide by the Privacy Policy. If you do not want to agree to the Privacy Policy, you must not access or use the Website.

Children Under the Age of 13

Our Website is not intended for children under 13 years of age. No one under age 13 may provide any information to or on the Website. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13. If you are under 13, do not use or provide any information on this Website or on or through any of its features/register on the Website, make any purchases through the Website, use any of the interactive or public comment features of this Website or provide any information about yourself to us, including your name, address, telephone number, email address, or any screen name or. user name. you may use.

If we learn we have collected or received personal information from a child under 13, we will delete that information. If you believe we might have information from or about a child under 13, please contact us at [email protected].

What We Collect

When you access the Website, the Company will learn certain information about you during your visit.

INFORMATION YOU PROVIDE TO US: The Website provides various places for users to provide information. We collect information that users provide by filling out forms on the Website, communicating with us via contact forms, responding to surveys, search queries on our search feature, providing comments or other feedback, and providing information when ordering a product or service via the Website.

We use information you provide to us to deliver the requested product and/or service, to improve our overall performance, and to provide you with offers, promotions, and information.

The Company does not use automatic data collection techology or other means to collect information about your equipment, browsing actions, location, or patterns.

Use of Cookies and Pixels

Similar to other commercial websites, our website utilizes a standard technology called "cookies" and server logs to collect information about how our site is used. Information gathered through cookies and server logs may include the date and time of visits, the pages viewed, time spent at our site, and the websites visited just before and just after our own, as well as your IP address.

A cookie is a very small text document, which often includes an anonymous unique identifier. When you visit a website, that site's computer asks your computer for permission to store this file in a part of your hard drive specifically designated for cookies. Each website can send its own cookie to your browser if your browser's preferences allow it, but (to protect your privacy) your browser only permits a website to access cookies it has already sent to you, not the cookies sent to you by other sites.

Third Party Use of Cookies

Some content or applications, including advertisements, on the Website are served by third-parties, including advertisers, ad networks and servers, content providers, and application providers. These third parties may use cookies alone or in conjunction with web beacons or other tracking technologies to collect information about you when you use our website. The information they collect may be associated with your personal information or they may collect information, including personal information, about your online activities over time and across different websites and other online services. They may use this information to provide you with interest-based (behavioral) advertising or other targeted content.

We do not control these third parties' tracking technologies or how they may be used. If you have any questions about an advertisement or other targeted content, you should contact the responsible provider directly.

Email Information

If you choose to correspond with us through email, we may retain the content of your email messages together with your email address and our responses. We provide the same protections for these electronic communications that we employ in the maintenance of information received online, mail, and telephone. This also applies when you register for our website, sign up through any of our forms using your email address or make a purchase on this site. For further information see the email policies below.

Email Policies

We are committed to keeping your e-mail address confidential. We do not sell, rent, or lease our subscription lists to third parties, and will not disclose your email address to any third parties except as allowed in the section titled Disclosure of Your Information.

We will maintain the information you send via e-mail in accordance with applicable federal law.

In compliance with the CAN-SPAM Act, all e-mails sent from our organization will clearly state who the e-mail is from and provide clear information on how to contact the sender. In addition, all e-mail messages will also contain concise information on how to remove yourself from our mailing list so that you receive no further e-mail communication from us.

Our emails provide users the opportunity to opt-out of receiving communications from us and our partners by reading the unsubscribe instructions located at the bottom of any e-mail they receive from us at anytime.

Users who no longer wish to receive our newsletter or promotional materials may opt-out of receiving these communications by clicking on the unsubscribe link in the e-mail.

How and Why We Collect Information

The Company collects your information in order to record and support your participation in the activities you select. If you register to download a book or resources, sign up for our newsletter, and/or purchase a product from us, we collect your information. We use this information to deliver your product and to keep you informed about the products and services you have selected to receive and any related products and/or services. As a visitor to this Website, you can engage in most activities without providing any personal information. It is only when you seek to download resources and/or register for services that you are required to provide information.

If you are outside the European Union and opt to receive any free resources, participate in any free training programs, register for a webinar, register for a live event, register for a seminar, or purchase any products sold by the Company on this Website, we will automatically enroll ​you to receive our free email newsletter. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter, you can unsubscribe anytime. We include an “unsubscribe” link at the bottom of every email we send. If you ever have trouble unsubscribing, you can send an email to [email protected] requesting to unsubscribe from future emails.

If you are in the European Union and opt to receive any free resources, participate in any free training programs, register for a webinar, register for a live event, register for a seminar, or purchase any products sold by the Company on this Website, we will only enroll ​you to receive our free email newsletter if you affirmatively consent to it. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter, you can unsubscribe anytime. We include an “unsubscribe” link at the bottom of every email we send. If you ever have trouble unsubscribing, you can send an email to [email protected] requesting to unsubscribe from future emails.

HOW WE USE PERSONAL INFORMATION YOU PROVIDE TO US: We use personal information for purposes of presenting our Website and its contents to you, providing you with information, providing you with offers for products and services, providing you with information about your subscriptions and products, carrying out any contract between you and the Company, administering our business activities, providing customer service, and making available other items and services to our customers and prospective customers.

From time-to-time, we may use the information you provide to us to display advertisements to you that are tailored to your personal characteristics, interests, and activities.

Disclosure of your Information

As a general rule, we do not sell, rent, lease or otherwise transfer any information collected whether automatically or through your voluntary action. We may disclose your personal information to our subsidiaries, affiliates, and service providers for the purpose of providing our services to you. We may disclose your personal information to a third party, including a lawyer or collection agency, when necessary to enforce our terms of service or any other agreement between you and the Company. We may provide your information to any successor in interest in the event of a merger, divestiture, restructuring, reorganization, dissolution, or other sale or transfer of some or all of the Company’s asserts and/or business. We may disclose information when legally compelled to do so, in other words, when we, in good faith, believe that the law requires it or for the protection of our legal rights or when compelled by a court or other governmental entity to do so.

How we Protect Your Information and Secure Information Transmissions

We employ commercially reasonable methods to ensure the security of the information you provide to us and the information we collect automatically. This includes using standard security protocols and working only with reputable third-party vendors.

Email is not recognized as a secure medium of communication. For this reason, we request that you do not send private information to us by email. However, doing so is allowed, but at your own risk. Some of the information you may enter on our website may be transmitted securely via a secure medium known as Secure Sockets Layer, or SSL. Credit Card information and other sensitive information is never transmitted via email.

The Company may use software programs to create summary statistics, which are used for such purposes as assessing the number of visitors to the different sections of our site, what information is of most and least interest, determining technical design specifications, and identifying system performance or problem areas.

For site security purposes and to ensure that this service remains available to all users, the Company uses software programs to monitor network traffic to identify unauthorized attempts to upload or change information, or otherwise cause damage.

Policy Changes

It is our policy to post any changes we make to our privacy policy on this page. If we make material changes to how we treat our users' personal information, we will notify you by email to the email address specified in your account and/or through a notice on the Website home page. The date the privacy policy was last revised is identified at the bottom of the page. You are responsible for ensuring we have an up-to-date active and deliverable email address for you, and for periodically visiting our Website and this privacy policy to check for any changes.

Visitors' GDPR Rights

VISITORS’ GDPR RIGHTS

If you are within the European Union, you are entitled to certain information and have certain rights under the General Data Protection Regulation. Those rights include:

We will retain the any information you choose to provide to us until the earlier of: (a) you asking us to delete the information, (b) our decision to cease using our existing data providers, or (c) the Company decides that the value in retaining the data is outweighed by the costs of retaining it.

You have the right to request access to your data that the Company stores and the rights to either rectify or erase your personal data.

You have the right to seek restrictions on the processing of your data.

You have the right to object to the processing of your data and the right to the portability of your data.

To the extent that you provided consent to the Company’s processing of your personal data, you have the right to withdraw that consent at any time, without affecting the lawfulness of processing based upon consent that occurred prior to your withdrawal of consent.

You have the right to lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority that has jurisdiction over issues related to the General Data Protection Regulation.

We require only the information that is reasonably required to enter into a contract with you. We will not require you to provide consent for any unnecessary processing as a condition of entering into a contract with us.

Contact Us

If you have any questions, concerns or complaints about this Privacy Policy, please contact us:

  • By phone number: 716-276-8005

  • By mail: 8304 Main Street Williamsville, New York 14221

Effective: January 1, 2017

Last Updated: October 1, 2024

© 2024 Work Ignited LLC

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Get Time Back

How I Got My Time (And Energy) Back: 7 Strategies That Actually Work. 

June 02, 202611 min read

How I Got My Time (and Energy) Back:
7 Strategies That Actually Work

Personal Growth | Leadership

June 2, 2026 • 10 min read

Quick Answer:

Last week, I made the case that what most of us call a time problem is actually an energy problem in disguise. This week, I'm going to prove it with my own story. When I volunteered to babysit my granddaughter every Tuesday for three months, I didn't know if I could make it work. It forced me to get disciplined about how I structured my days, and what I discovered surprised me: I didn't need more time. I needed to be more intentional about how I spent the time I had. In this post, you'll get seven practical strategies for reclaiming your time and energy, plus the personal shifts that made the biggest difference for me.

The Experiment That Changed How I Think About Time

In my [last post](INSERT LINK TO 5/26 POST), I talked about the difference between a time problem and an energy problem and shared some practical DiSC tools that can give you hours back each week. I also shared my own motivators and stressors from Catalyst and challenged you to look at yours.

This week, I want to get more personal. Because the strategies I'm about to share didn't come from a book or a productivity course. They came from volunteering to babysit my granddaughter.

Here's what happened. My daughter-in-law, a teacher, returned to work this spring to finish out the school year. To avoid daycare for those few short months, she recruited babysitters. I raised my hand for Tuesdays.

The moment I committed, a wave of panic hit. Tuesdays are often one of my fullest days: client meetings, workshops, coaching calls. How was I going to hold a baby and run a business at the same time?

But something interesting happened when I was forced to work within a constraint. I got really intentional about how I scheduled my time. I stopped treating my calendar like a suggestion and started treating it like a strategy. I blocked, batched, delegated, and said no (or at least not yet) to things I would have previously said yes to out of habit.

And it worked. I had an absolute ball with our little bundle of joy. Some of you may have even caught a glimpse of her on a Zoom call, because it was pretty tough to avoid the occasional cameo. But for the most part, it worked beautifully, and I'm emerging from those months more productive, not less, because the challenge forced me to be honest about what actually mattered.

Start Where We Left Off: Motivators and Stressors

Before we get to the seven strategies, I want to pick up where we left off last week. I shared the energy booster exercise from Catalyst: go to your What Drives You section and look at your motivators and stressors. I promised I'd show you how I manage my stressors intentionally to keep them from draining me.

Here's what I mean. These are some of my biggest stressors and how I've structured my life to minimize their impact:

Stressor: Having little independence or private time.
Solution: For over a year, I've scheduled exercise on my calendar four early mornings each week. That time is non-negotiable. It's mine before anyone else gets a piece of me, and it fills my tank and lowers my natural intensity before the day even starts.

Stressor: Following inefficient procedures.
Solution: Our office is obsessed with process, systems, and quality. That's not an accident. It's by design, because I hate wasting time. If something feels clunky, we fix it. We don't tolerate workarounds when a better system exists.

Stressor: Dealing with people who don't meet my standards.
Solution: I'm blessed to have fabulous clients and followers like you who share my appreciation for people and my personal values. I've also eliminated toxic relationships from my life. Those were some of the hardest yet energy-giving decisions I've ever made.

Stressor: Moderating my quick pace and working methodically toward long-term goals.
Solution: I meet weekly with two accountability groups to stay focused on what's important and to keep my priorities from drifting. Left to my own devices, I'd constantly be coming up with new initiatives or sprinting through everything and burn out. The accountability keeps me moving at a pace that's sustainable.

Your stressors will be different from mine, and that's the point. The exercise isn't about copying my solutions. It's about being honest with yourself about what drains you and then making intentional choices to reduce those drains. Sometimes you can eliminate a stressor entirely. Sometimes you can automate it, delegate it, or restructure your day so it takes up less of your peak energy. Whatever the solution is for you, get started today!

Now, let's get into the seven simple strategies to build and focus your energy, while finding more time in your days.

7 Time Strategies That Actually Work

1. Decide Before You Do

Don't mistake activity for results. It's easy to feel productive when you're busy, but busy and effective are not the same thing.

Practice a Monday Reset each week. Ask yourself: "What must be true by the end of this week?" Not what do I need to do, but what must be true. The difference matters because it forces you to think in terms of outcomes, not tasks.

Here are some examples of what "true by Friday" might look like: a team member has clarity and confidence they didn't have on Monday. Stakeholders agree on the direction, even though the details haven't been worked out. The team feels supported after a tough situation last week. I am not the bottleneck for this decision.

Compare those to what most of us default to: finish emails, attend meetings, put out fires, get through the week. The first list creates momentum. The second list just creates exhaustion.

2. Limit Work in Progress

Fewer priorities equal faster progress because when everything is a priority, nothing is.

A good rule of thumb: no more than three to five active priorities at a time. Everything else is either scheduled for later, delegated to someone else, or parked until capacity opens up. This feels uncomfortable at first, especially for high achievers who pride themselves on doing it all. But the math is simple. Spreading your energy across ten things means none of them get your best.

3. Protect Your High-Impact Time

This is where the energy conversation becomes very practical. Not all hours are created equal. You have high-energy hours and low-energy hours, and the work you assign to each should match.

High-energy hours are for planning, coaching, problem solving, and creative thinking. Low-energy hours are for admin, email, and routine tasks. Most people do this backwards, spending their sharpest hours in their inbox and then trying to do strategic work when they're running on fumes.

Block one to two protected windows per week for thinking, planning, or people leadership. Even 60 minutes of protected, high-energy time can change the trajectory of your week.

4. Your Calendar Is Your Strategy

To-do lists are aspirational. If something matters, it must live on your calendar.

Ask yourself: does your calendar reflect your ideal day, or does it reflect everyone else's urgency? If your calendar is full of other people's meetings and requests, you're executing someone else's priorities, not your own. Then, you end up working on your to-do's at night, on weekends, or not at all.

Here's a practical shift. First, block time for leadership work like check-ins, coaching, strategic projects, and planning. Then take your to-do list and assign each item to a specific time slot on your calendar - like scheduling a meeting with yourself to do the tasks. If it doesn't have a home on the calendar, it doesn't have commitment behind it.

5. Build Margins on Purpose

Calendar white space is not wasted time. It's an intentional planning tool. The unexpected will happen, and if your calendar has zero breathing room, every surprise becomes a crisis.

Build in 10 to 15 minutes between meetings so you can decompress, process, and show up present for the next conversation. Schedule one "light" day per week if possible. Add buffer time before and after emotionally heavy work like difficult conversations, employee relations issues, or performance discussions. And build in contingency time for the things you know will come up but can't predict.

Margins help you respond instead of react, stay emotionally present, and make better decisions under pressure.

6. Delegate Using EDGE

Your time multiplies as your team grows, but only if you delegate well. Poor delegation actually costs you time because you end up redoing work or micromanaging.

Use the EDGE method:

Explain the why and the expectations. People do better work when they understand the purpose, not just the task.

Demonstrate what good looks like. Don't assume people know your standards. Show them.

Guide with feedback, recognition, and checkpoints along the way. Delegation isn't a handoff and disappear. It's a supported transfer.

Empower with trust and autonomy. Once someone has proven they can deliver, get out of the way and let them own it.

7. Work in Focused Sprints

If you struggle with focus or find yourself bouncing between tasks without finishing any of them, try the Pomodoro Technique. It's named after the tomato-shaped kitchen timer that its creator, Francesco Cirillo, used as a university student in Italy, and it's beautifully simple.

Set a timer for 25 minutes. During those 25 minutes, work on one thing and one thing only. No email, no Slack, no quick peeks at your phone. When the timer goes off, take a five-minute break. Walk around, refill your coffee, look out the window. Then start another 25-minute sprint.

It sounds almost too simple to work, but it does, for two reasons. First, 25 minutes feels manageable even when a task feels overwhelming. You're not committing to finishing the whole thing. You're just committing to 25 minutes of focused attention. Second, the built-in breaks prevent the kind of mental fatigue that makes everything take longer. You're essentially building margins (tip #5) right into your workflow.

I use this technique when I'm writing, building client proposals, tackling anything that requires deep thinking, and even decluttering my kitchen counters and cleaning the bathrooms. Four Pomodoro sprints with breaks in between gives you nearly two hours of genuinely focused work, and you'll be amazed at how much more you accomplish compared to two hours of scattered multitasking.

8. Choose Priorities and Be Okay with Deprioritizing

This is the hardest one and yet, the most important. Every "yes" is a "not now" to something else. That's not failure. It's math.

Here's an exercise I use myself and with my own coaching clients. Rank these areas of your life in order of priority from 1 to 10, and no ties allowed:

Career/Work, Finances, Health/Energy, Family, Relationships, Personal Growth/Learning, Spirituality/Faith, Fun/Recreation/Hobbies, Community/Service, Environment/Home.

What are your top 3 priorities? Realistically, you don't have time for the others, at this point in your life. And, that's okay. You have plenty of time ahead of you!

Now look at those top 3. How can you intentionally prioritize those 3 things more fully in your life right now? What can you intentionally deprioritize? The word "intentionally" is doing all the heavy lifting in that sentence, because there's a big difference between deprioritizing something on purpose and neglecting it out of guilt or avoidance. Get comfortable saying, "this just isn't a priority for me at this point in my life." Then, love your priorities even more fully.

When I volunteered for Tuesdays with our bundle of joy, I was intentionally prioritizing family. That meant intentionally deprioritizing some client availability on that day. I didn't feel guilty about it because it was a conscious choice, not an accident. Remove guilt. Replace it with intentional choices.

It's About Energy, Not Hours

Every strategy on this list comes back to the same idea: when you're intentional about where your energy goes, time takes care of itself. You stop spending your best hours on things that drain you. You stop saying yes to everything out of obligation. You start protecting the time and activities that fill your tank, and you build systems so the rest doesn't fall apart.

I didn't find more hours in the day when I started babysitting on Tuesdays. I found more energy by being honest about what mattered, what didn't, and what I could let go of without the world ending.

You can do the same thing. Start small. Pick one strategy from this list and try it this week. Just one. Small actions create momentum, and momentum creates energy.

What's Next

This is the second in a three-part series on reclaiming your time and energy. Next week, I'll shift the focus to your teams: how to give them a simple, efficient mid-year energizer to help them push through the second half of the year with renewed focus and connection.

And if you want to take this even further, join us for DiSC-a-Palooza on June 12th from 11:00 - 1:00 Eastern Time. This is our annual virtual mini-conference for assessment lovers like you, whether your a DiSC user or not. This year's theme is all about time-saving, energy-boosting strategies to help you and your teams finish the year strong. You'll see what's new, connect with other professionals who love this work as much as you do, and walk away with practical ideas you can use immediately both at work and at home.

[Register for DiSC-a-Palooza here.](INSERT REGISTRATION LINK)

Time ManagementEnergy ManagementProductivityWork-Life BalanceLearning and DevelopmentPomodoro Technique
blog author image

Amy A. Pearl

Amy Pearl is Work Ignited's Chief Optimizer, bringing strategic solutions and simple tools to your workplace.

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