The Procrastination Equation reveals the psychological forces determining whether you'll procrastinate on a task. The formula shows that your motivation level equals:
This equation provides multiple intervention points. You can increase motivation by boosting your confidence, finding more meaning in the task, reducing distractions, or creating shorter-term rewards—all of which tip the equation toward action rather than delay.
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<p>Tired of feeling busy but not productive? This refreshing guide cuts through the productivity noise with evidence-backed strategies tested in real life. Chris Bailey spent a year as his own guinea pig—meditating for 35 hours, working 90-hour weeks, living in isolation—to discover what actually works. Spoiler: it's not about doing more things, but about doing the right things with deliberate attention. Perfect for overwhelmed people who want to accomplish what matters.</p>
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Similar ideas to The Procrastination Equation
Procrastination boils down to how motivated we are to complete a task. The motivation to complete a certain task consists of four elements: Expectancy, Value, Impulsiveness and Delay.
Odds of Overcoming Procrastination = Self-Efficacy x Value / Impulsiveness x Delay.
Our likelihood to resist procrastination on a specific task is equal to the product of our self-efficacy and the value of the task divided by the product of how impulsive we are and the amount ...
First pick your goals, then figure out which motivation hacks to use on the subtasks that lead to those goals—and then use far more of them than you need, so that you not only succeed, but that you do so with excitement and joy.
The Formula: Motivation = (Expectancy x Valu...
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