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9 Ways To Get More Done in Less Time Life-hacking is about accomplishing more in less time, with less stress, at a lower cost with the use of simple digital tools.

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Martijn Aslander

When Martijn Aslander was 17, he was running a company that had 60 part-time employees from the back of a classroom. By the time he was 21 he had two companies, and was directing 140 people. At 27 he decided to sell his companies, and ended up bankrupt as a result of the experience.

What looked like a complete disaster actually ended up being the single best lesson Martijn could learn. He woke up the next day and everything was still there. He had his arms and legs; he had his health. And the worst had happened, which meant that nothing could go wrong anymore. From that moment, anything was possible.

He then asked himself a key question: How big is the chance you will do this again? The answer was simple: There was no chance. Big lessons had been learnt. At that moment, Martijn realised that there was no point in ever getting upset when something goes wrong. It happens. The next time you will fly.

Martijn believes that we are always looking for the next challenges. Millionaires want to be billionaires. Billionaires want to win a Nobel Prize. There is always another goal.

So how do you find success and happiness? By asking how you can contribute the most to mankind. In many ways, Martijn was already a life-hacker. At 17 he'd discovered a way to make money without doing much work, simply by being smarter and spotting a niche.

At 27 he learnt that possibilities are what you make of them, and the more you share, the greater your impact, and the more you will receive. These are his rules to becoming a life-hacker, and doing more in less time, with less stress, at lower costs.

These are Martijn's 9 lessons in becoming a life-hacker who accomplishesmore in less time, with less stress, at a lower cost with the use of simple digital tools.

1. Don't operate on untested assumptions

Most of the fears that people have, and particularly entrepreneurs, are based on assumptions that they haven't tested. And most untested assumptions are simply not true. They live as ghosts and monsters in your head, but they're not real.

We live in a very interesting time, where it's actually risky to be safe. Safe doesn't exist, and it never has, because you are never in charge of all the events that take place around you. Change is the only constant. For centuries we've operated on the notion of survival of the fittest. He who is strongest will win.

This is also a faulty assumption. Success today isn't about strength — it's about the ability to adapt to new circumstances. Over the last ten years more circumstances than ever before have changed, and the rate is just accelerating. You have to have an open mind; you have to learn to be flexible.

2. If you're in the business of doing business, you will soon be out of business

How do you measure business success? Be careful that your strategy isn't focused on possessions — fancy offices, a big building, or cars as status symbols. If you're too focused on things, you'll be too afraid of losing your stuff.

Entrepreneurs who are focused on a higher purpose concentrate on improving themselves, their people and doing the best for their clients. They're far less afraid of sudden changes and turmoil, because possessions aren't as important, which makes them agile and adaptable — exactly who you want to be in a changing world.

I see it as the rise of the "funpreneur'. The rise of a new breed of people who are focused on doing what they love, and who aspire to a higher cause, instead of just focusing on the business side of things. It's tough to compete with people who don't do business models, but focus on purpose instead.

3. Give your teams the freedom to adapt

There are two types of teams — those who are flexible, have an open mind, and are willing to adapt to new conditions and environments, and those who are terrified of making mistakes and therefore seldom venture out of the established norm.

The type of team that forms the foundation of your business is up to you. Are you hiring people with flexible, open minds and giving them the freedom to make mistakes, or do you stifle innovation in your organisation?

Remember that mistakes are often the only way to learn something. If people are really dissatisfied with their own errors and performance, they will internalise the experience far more deeply. There will always be some mistakes.

My advice is to create an environment where everyone learns from mistakes — their own and those that others make — and try to make mistakes that you will benefit the most from by encouraging your team to take chances. This doesn't mean it's okay to make mistakes on purpose, but create a safe environment and deal with mistakes in a way that shares the lessons, and instils the learnings in your business.

4. Make a "not-to-do' list

We're so busy making "to-do' lists that we forget to make "not-to-do' lists. Remember that you're in charge of your life, and you can go in any direction you want. Yes, there will be circumstances that influence your life, but ultimately you can change everything. There's less financial risk than ever before in doing business. You don't need big offices, buildings, or cars.

Everything you need to make an impact is at your disposal. The only things holding us back are our assumptions. While you are creating your to-do lists and strategies, take some time to write down what you shouldn't be doing — what you don't want to do, what you should avoid — the business or person you don't want to be. Focus on what you love, and build a great life around those principles. Don't allow yourself to live in fear.

5. Leverage the holy trinity of dynamics

I believe there are only three things you need for success: People, information and ideas. With these three things, you can set anything in motion.

An idea in itself is worthless. It's really nothing else but combined information; creatively connecting unconnected dots. The ability to make ideas materialise in this world however holds value, and for that you need people and information. Information is the bridge between ideas and the people who make them happen.

What's incredible is that we are living in an information society. There are more people connected than ever before. We're living in a network age and an information age, which means you can focus on all three, connect the dots, and unleash an unprecedented amount of ideas.

6. You don't need a budget to innovate

The Chief Commander of the Dutch Army approached me to help him find a way to innovate that didn't involve cutting into his budget. My question to him was, "Why do you need budget?' There are 50 000 geeks in the Netherlands who dream of flying in a jet fighter or being submerged under the ocean. Simply by redeploying assets they already have, the Dutch Army can make these dreams come true.

So many organisations miss this crucial point. Money is naturally scarce, and the dynamics of money are weird. People are afraid to spend it because it's scarce, and they're uncertain if what they're spending it on is a risk or not.

As soon as there's a financial risk, and you don't know the outcome, you're hesitant to jump in. And this ends up stalling innovation, because there's an over-riding belief that you need money to innovate.

But what about applying other resources other than money alone? Always consider what you can do with the resources you already have. This will take financial risk out the equation, which will lead to less fear. Once fear is gone, people step in, open up and contribute. If you get rid of the risk, you enable your team. In many cases, finance is not an enabler, it's a disabler.

Imagine if you could stop asking for money and setting your price, and instead asked your clients to pay what they believe your services are worth. You'd quickly either make more money, or realise you're helping the wrong businesses, or not demonstrating your value clearly enough.

Entrepreneurs know this — they're used to bootstrapping and being creative. The problem is that as we grow, we forget, and start becoming reliant on money to grow. And this stifles us.

So how do you begin to use the resources you have? Start by targeting the one percent of your clients that are able to do 100 or 1 000 fold what they are paying you in terms of money.

What can you barter or trade with them? What resources can you offer each other that are actually more valuable than money? What could your clients potentially do for you that would actually save you money? Or what would they love to pay for, that you potentially aren't offering right now?

Every single organisation has resources that they can deploy without financial loss. Start with 1% and build on it.

7. Build your social capital

Social capital builds monetary capital. It's not the other way around, and yet so often we focus on monetary capital first. Instead, focus on achieving something that will lead to monetary capital. I give away my social capital freely. I share my books and ideas for free.

It clears my mind, and I know that I can create ideas faster than you can steal them anyway. That's how you should view ideas. Giving away social capital gives you access, and then you don't need money — that's the secret to success.

People are too careful with their social capital — particularly their ideas. I promise you this — the chances of becoming a millionaire with just one idea are miniscule. If that's your strategy, it's not only dangerous, but you're wasting your time.

If you become someone who can share ideas freely, and focus on bringing people, knowledge and ideas together instead, your chances of success have grown exponentially.

Remember, people love to share, and you want to tap into that. Look for zero plus, not zero sum.

8. Become a life-hacker

The term "life-hacker' was coined in 2005 by tech journalist Danny O'Brien. He was covering a group of programmers who were very productive, and yet they weren't stressed. They were satisfied. How did they manage to be productive and stress-free? The secret wasn't only in what they were doing — but in how they were sharing those secrets and tools.

I personally use a few hundred tools that allow me to do a lot more in less time, and I'm happy to share the tactics that help me to work smarter. This is why I launched the lifehacking.nl website, but all the contributors on the site share the same philosophy — we freely share our insights to help others. This is a critical element to life-hacking.

There is so much information out there, so many ways to access insights and information. Are you using them? Are you learning and using the tools available?

There are tools that can save you hundreds of hours a year. Tap into them. We can learn so much from each other; get the best people possible in your posse and in your community.

9. Understand the dichotomies of knowledge workers

Knowledge work is something new. Traditional business systems are based on hands. You exchange time for money. But today we are working with our heads, and the reality is that you cannot work with your head for eight hours a day, particularly in artificially-constructed work hours.

One third of the population work best in the evening, and yet they're expected to arrive at the office at 8am sharp. Not only are they causing traffic jams, but they're not working in their optimal conditions either. We need to rethink the model.

We need to stop treating computers like modern typewriters. We seem to think that answering hundreds of emails is working. It's not. We're all just distracting each other.

Digital skills are nowhere on the strategic agenda of boards. The time and skills of your employees are the most valuable asset you have, and yet we aren't doing anything to help our employees become life-hackers.

Digital skills won't only help your teams to work smarter and save time, but become real assets, and not just glorified typists.

If you focus on digital skills, your ability to find information and ideas faster than anyone else will grow, allowing you to spread those ideas, learn faster than your competitors and entrench strategic skills in your organisation. Take these skills and invest in them heavily. It's a true differentiator.

Nadine von Moltke-Todd

Entrepreneur Staff

Editor-in-Chief: Entrepreneur.com South Africa

Nadine von Moltke-Todd is the Editor-in-Chief of Entrepreneur Media South Africa. She has interviewed over 400 entrepreneurs, senior executives, investors and subject matter experts over the course of a decade. She was the managing editor of the award-winning Entrepreneur Magazine South Africa from June 2010 until January 2019, its final print issue. Nadine’s expertise lies in curating insightful and unique business content and distilling it into actionable insights that business readers can implement in their own organisations.
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