Scheduling Tips
Best practices for effective task scheduling with Samvise
Scheduling Tips
Get the most out of Samvise with these proven strategies for effective task scheduling and time management.
Daily Habits
Morning Review (5 minutes)
Start your day by reviewing your schedule:
- Check what's scheduled for today
- Verify times still make sense
- Move anything that needs adjustment
- Lock blocks that must stay fixed
Evening Planning (10 minutes)
End your day preparing for tomorrow:
- Review tomorrow's schedule
- Adjust priorities if needed
- Add any new tasks from today — the schedule updates automatically
Quick Checks Throughout Day
Glance at your schedule when:
- Starting a new task
- Context switching
- Coming back from breaks
- Major interruptions occur
Time Estimation
Start Conservative
When estimating task duration:
- Overestimate by 25-50% initially
- Tasks almost always take longer than expected
- Include buffer for interruptions
- Factor in context switching time
Common Estimate Guidelines
- Quick email: 15 minutes (the minimum block size)
- Short meeting prep: 15-30 minutes
- Code review: 30-45 minutes
- Writing task: 1-2 hours
- Complex problem-solving: 2-3 hours
- Large project work: Break into smaller tasks
Task Management
Keep Task List Lean
Quality over quantity:
- 10-20 active tasks is ideal
- More than 30 = overwhelming
- Archive completed tasks regularly
- Delete tasks you won't do
Use Due Dates Wisely
Set realistic deadlines:
- Only set due dates for tasks with real deadlines
- Allow buffer before actual deadline
- Update due dates when priorities shift
- Don't set arbitrary deadlines for everything
Break Down Large Tasks
Tasks over 3-4 hours should be split:
- Easier to schedule
- More satisfying progress
- Better tracking
- Clearer action steps
Review Weekly
Every week, review your tasks:
- Update priorities
- Adjust due dates
- Delete irrelevant tasks
- Promote approaching deadlines
- Archive completed work
Time Window Configuration
Match Your Energy
Align windows with natural energy patterns:
- High energy periods: Deep work, high-priority tasks
- Medium energy: Meetings, collaboration
- Low energy: Admin, email, planning
Don't Over-Segment
Fewer, broader windows work better:
- 2-4 windows is usually optimal
- Too many = scheduling inflexibility
- Can always manually override when needed
Leave Flexibility
Don't pack windows too tight:
- Allow gaps for interruptions
- Build in buffer time
- Leave room for urgent tasks
- Keep some unscheduled time daily
Priority Management
Use the Full Range
Don't cluster around one priority:
- Most tasks should be Medium
- Reserve High for work that genuinely needs to jump the queue
- Use Low for nice-to-haves
Promote as Deadlines Approach
Adjust priority as urgency changes — a Medium task can become High as its deadline nears. Or simply set an accurate due date: within the same priority, sooner deadlines are scheduled first, and overdue tasks always go to the front.
Avoid Priority Inflation
If everything is high priority:
- Nothing is actually prioritized
- The scheduler can't make good decisions
- You're probably over-committed
- Reduce commitments or extend timelines
Calendar Integration
Keep Calendar Current
Sync regularly with Google Calendar:
- Add all commitments immediately
- Don't skip personal appointments
- Include travel time
- Mark tentative events
Be Honest About Availability
Block time you're not available:
- Lunch breaks
- Exercise time
- School pickup
- Regular meetings
Use Recurring Events
For regular commitments:
- Weekly team meetings
- Recurring 1-on-1s
- Regular office hours
- Personal routines
Dealing with Over-Scheduling
Signs You're Over-Committed
Watch for:
- Tasks consistently not getting scheduled
- Having to manually schedule everything
- Working late regularly
- Feeling overwhelmed
- Missing deadlines
Solutions
- Reduce task load (delete or defer)
- Extend due dates
- Increase time window hours
- Reduce task time estimates (you may be overestimating)
- Say no to new commitments
Handling Interruptions
Plan for Interruptions
Assume you'll be interrupted:
- Build buffer between tasks
- Don't schedule 100% of available time
- Leave 20-30% unscheduled
- Have backup tasks for fragments
When Interrupted
If schedule gets disrupted:
- Pause active task
- Add urgent task if needed
- Trigger reschedule when dust settles
- Review and adjust manually
Protect Deep Work
For tasks needing focus:
- Assign to "Deep Focus" time window
- Schedule in morning when possible
- Lock the block
- Turn off notifications during block
Optimizing Scheduler Performance
Provide Good Data
Help the scheduler make better decisions:
- Set realistic due dates
- Accurate time estimates
- Appropriate priorities
- Correct time window assignments
Give Feedback
When scheduling is poor:
- Don't just accept it—reschedule manually
- Fix underlying issue (priority, window, due date)
- Unlock and let the scheduler try again
- Patterns improve over time
Balance Auto and Manual
Best approach:
- Auto-schedule routine tasks
- Manually schedule time-sensitive work
- Lock critical blocks
- Leave flexibility for the scheduler to optimize
Batching Similar Work
Group Similar Tasks
Schedule related work together:
- All emails in one block
- Batch phone calls
- Group similar project work
- Combine admin tasks
Use Projects for Batching
Group related tasks under a project, then filter your task list by project and schedule the work together.
Maintaining Work-Life Balance
Strict Time Windows
Separate work and personal:
- Work window ends at specific time
- Don't schedule work tasks in personal time
- Respect boundaries
- Lock personal time if needed
Schedule Personal Tasks
Treat personal tasks seriously:
- Add to system
- Set priorities
- Create "Personal" time window
- Respect personal commitments
Include Breaks
Schedule downtime:
- Lunch breaks
- Exercise
- Family time
- Hobbies
Dealing with Urgent Tasks
When Urgency Strikes
For truly urgent tasks:
- Create with High priority
- Set the due date to today
- The scheduler makes room automatically
Emergency Overrides
If the scheduler can't fit urgent task:
- Manually schedule it
- Push other tasks back
- Lock the urgent block
- Reschedule displaced work
Distinguish Urgent from Important
Not everything urgent is important:
- Urgent + Important = High priority, due today
- Important but not urgent = Medium priority with an honest due date
- Urgent but not important = Delegate or defer
- Neither = Delete
Continuous Improvement
Weekly Review Checklist
Every week:
- Archive completed tasks
- Update priorities
- Adjust due dates
- Refine time estimates
- Clean up task list
Monthly Assessment
Every month:
- Review time window configuration
- Check priority distribution
- Analyze scheduling patterns
- Adjust based on what's working
- Refine your system
Learn from Data
Check your metrics:
- Which tasks take longer than estimated
- What time of day are you most productive
- Which priorities you complete fastest
- Where time actually goes
Next Steps
- Creating Tasks - Apply tips when creating tasks
- Task Priorities - Use priorities effectively
- Time Windows - Optimize your windows