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5 Simple Ways You Can Add Hours To Your Day Here are a few ways you can increase your reading and viewing speed, so you have extra hours to develop new skills, deepen relationships or just get an extra edge in your career.

By Michael Simmons

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Along with sleep, what do you spend most of your day doing? The answer is most likely consuming media -- everything from reading emails, articles and books to listening to podcasts and watching YouTube videos. Indeed, the average person spends more than eight hours consuming media online.

If you found a way to increase your reading (or viewing) speed, you could add extra hours to every day for the rest of your life. That's tens of thousands of hours you can use to develop new skills, deepen your relationships with close family or friends, or just get an extra edge in your career.

Related: 20 Ways to Make This Week the Most Productive Yet

Through research and talking to a few people, I have discovered a few ways to increase the speed in which you consume media:

1. Use a visual pacer when reading.

Image credit: Alannah Avelin

According to Jim Kwik, the founder of Kwik Learning and a speedreading and memory expert, you should use a visual pacer (your finger, a pen, the computer mouse) to underline every single word as you read it. Accodring to him, this approach immediately increases your reading speed by 25 to 50 percent by focusing your attention and reducing regression (where your eyes automatically reread words as you go along).

To see the power for yourself, do this simple before and after experiment:

Before: Time yourself for a minute and read a book the way you normally do. Once you're finished, count the number of lines you read and the average number of words in each line (generally about 10). Now multiply those two numbers. So if there were 10 words per line and you read 40 lines, your reading speed is 400 words per minute.

After: Time yourself for a minute using a visual pacer and count the words per minute again.

2. Expand your perceptual awareness.

Image credit: Andrew (Drew) Kelly

In a blog post, author and entrepreneur Tim Ferriss says training your vision to register your periphery more effectively can increase reading speed by more than 300 percent.

To get better at reading in your periphery, Ferriss suggests that instead of starting with the visual pacer at the first word of each line and ending with the last one, start one word in and end one word from the last word.

Next, move two words in, then three words in, and so on while keeping your speed the same.

Related: To Improve Productivity Tell Your Team to Go Take a Hike

3. Eliminate micro-distractions with a white noise app.

Image credit: Emerson Spartz

Emerson Spartz, the founder and CEO of Spartz Inc. spoke to us about what helps him. He points out that research finds that interruptions consume 28 percent of the average knowledge worker's day and dramatically slow down learning.

"The easiest and fastest way that I've found to eliminate these interruptions is with white noise (sounds like an air conditioner), he says. "I listen to white noise via the White Noise IOS app, and it helps me get in and stay in a state of flow." He says this tip has helped him increase his reading speed by at least 30 percent.

4. Skim before you read.

Image credit: Garth Dietrick

Most people were taught to read by reading fiction, as there is a beginning, middle and end. But with non-fiction, you don't have to read everything.

You can follow the 80/20 rule and focus on the parts of the book that are most relevant before you dive in deep. One academic study found that skimming first can improve the overall speed of normal reading.

Mortimer Adler's classic 1972 book How to Read a Book shares exactly how to skim:

  • Read the title page and preface to understand what the book is about.
  • Look at the table of contents to get a sense of how the book is organized.
  • Go to the index to see the topics in the book and the types of publications the writer cites.
  • Flip through the book, reading a few paragraphs, sentences and passages to understand the main themes of the book.
  • If provided, examine the writer's summary of the book (often found in the back).

5. Use the right tools for all forms of media

Image credit: Yutaka Tsutano Garth Dietrick
Speed reading is no longer just about technique. It's also about tools to consume all content including audio and video more quickly:

Reading

Spreed (desktop only): Instead of moving your eyes to read, you simply look at one area of the screen that feeds you words at a pre-determined words per minute. (max speed: 1600 words per minute)

Velocity (iOS) / Speed Reader (Android): Read any content online on your mobile phone in the same way as Spreed (see above).

Listening
Audible (desktop and mobile): The largest audiobook store in the world. Their mobile app has a feature that allows you to triple the reading speed.

Watching

YouTube: Many people aren't aware that you can double your video watching speed on Youtube. On the bottom of the video players, click on the icon and then select the speed you want from the "Speed' dropdown menu.

Enounce (desktop): Speed up video without getting the "chipmunk" effect.

Listening and watching

Podcast (mobile): The default podcast app for iOS allows you to double your listening speed. If you have an Android device, you have plenty of options as well.

Swift (mobile): Speed up video and audio from your favorite websites including Youtube. (Mobile, video and audio)

Related: All About Wellness: 5 Steps That Will Make Your Company More Productive



Michael Simmons

Co-Founder of Empact

Michael Simmons is co-founder of Empact, a Princeton, N.J.-based organization focused on supporting young entrepreneurs through culture and community. To receive his most popular articles by email, visit MichaelDSimmons.com.

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