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Why is planning at the end of the day better than planning in the morning?

Presley Larson
Presley Larson
2025-07-10 00:09:05
Count answers : 10
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If you plan the day the night before you’ll be amazed at how much your overall productivity skyrockets. If you have no clarity about what is is you’re trying to get done in any given day, you’ll be busy, but probably not productive. If you plan your days the night before you, you’ll not only get more done in less time. When you plan the day the night before, there’s no guesswork as to what you’ll be doing when you sit down to work in the morning. The day I wrote this article, I actually put the 5 things I wanted to get done into my journaling software the night before. By about 9:30 am I’d completed everything on the list. But the failure has always been the result of poor planning the day before. The first hour of the day is one of the most critical. It sets the tone for what the rest of your your day will be like.
Cheyanne Schimmel
Cheyanne Schimmel
2025-07-04 09:57:40
Count answers : 10
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Review and revise. At the end of the day, review your entire day, asking what worked, where did you get distracted and what could help you be more productive tomorrow. Knowing where there are gaps in your day will make it easier to make room for the unexpected. Be realistic with your time. You only have 24 hours in a day. When you are asked to do something in the future, remember that even if your calendar looks clear, you will be as busy then as you are today. Ask yourself if you’d be willing to meet that commitment tomorrow, knowing how busy you are today.
Ludie Ankunding
Ludie Ankunding
2025-06-27 05:37:30
Count answers : 11
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When you plan out the next day in the evening, you set yourself up for a deeper relaxation and better sleep. Planning your day the night can help you to think more rationally about what you’ll need to do. Since planning your day is a low effort activity, especially if you have an efficient system set-up, you don’t want to waste that clear focus on it. At the end of your workday, you’re very much aware of what got done and what needs your attention next. Planning the next day can become a nice ritual to wrap-up your day and begin your evening routine. When you planned out your tasks the night before, you can jump right into getting work done. Having a productive morning will make you feel accomplished, increase your self-confidence, and most importantly it builds momentum to stay productive for the rest of the day.
Kieran Nikolaus
Kieran Nikolaus
2025-06-20 06:12:35
Count answers : 11
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Planning at the end of the day is better than planning in the morning because if you don’t plan your days the night before, you waste your willpower on deciding what your essential priorities are. By planning your days the night before you reduce decision fatigue, and preserve your willpower for your deepest most meaningful work. If you plan the day the night before, you’ll be amazed at how much your overall productivity skyrockets. If you plan your days the night before you, you’ll not only get more done in less time, you’ll also experience more flow. When you plan the day the night before, there’s no guesswork as to what you’ll be doing when you sit down to work in the morning. The one commonality between all my unproductive days was that I didn’t plan my day the night before.
Jacey Hintz
Jacey Hintz
2025-06-10 14:52:19
Count answers : 14
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I've always been a morning planner by default and wondered if planning in the evening is any better so I tried it out for a few days. The big surprise so far is that my mind works more effectively with a whole night to digest the next day's plan. I feel calmer moving through meetings and work. I think this happens because I've subconsciously rehearsed how the day will play out. Once the day comes, you can stay in a flow state of execution since you've already made decisions. Once the mind is trained on a problem, it gets to work and starts generating ideas and solutions in the background. An entire night of subconsciously solving a problem builds up a kind of potential energy that feels ready to burst into something tangible. Planning out the next day acts a separator and gives me permission to end the current workday which makes the evening feel more restorative.