# 8 Time Management Examples That Actually Work

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/time-management/time-management-examples/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/time-management/time-management-examples.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving time management at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

From the Eisenhower Matrix to the Pomodoro Technique, here are 8 concrete time management examples you can copy today—plus how to pick the ones that fit you.

## Key facts

- Title: 8 Time Management Examples That Actually Work
- Category: Time Management
- Primary skill: Time Management
- Related skills: Building Confidence, Decision-Making
- Primary keyword: time management examples
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/time-management/time-management-examples/

## What this page covers

- From the Eisenhower Matrix to the Pomodoro Technique, here are 8 concrete time management examples you can copy today—plus how to pick the ones that fit you.
- Practical guidance for time management examples
- How this topic connects to Time Management

## Detailed explanation

Time management examples are the concrete, copyable practices behind the vague advice to "use your time better" — sorting tasks by importance and urgency, blocking your calendar into fixed slots, working in short focused sprints, and tackling your hardest task first. Below are eight of them, each with enough detail to actually try.

If you've skimmed a few of these lists already, you've probably noticed they name the same handful of methods and then move on, leaving you to guess which one is worth your effort. The examples matter less than knowing which gap in your day each one closes — and that's where most articles stop and this one keeps going.

## Eight time management examples you can copy today

Almost every top-ranking list for this topic circles the same core set, so it's worth knowing them well rather than chasing exotic alternatives. What separates people who manage their time from people who just read about it isn't the method — it's using one consistently and knowing which problem it solves. Here they are, from the highest-leverage habit down to the one most lists skip.

### 1. Sort tasks by importance and urgency (the Eisenhower Matrix)

Draw four boxes and drop each task into one: important and urgent, important but not urgent, urgent but not important, and neither. The whole point is that important and urgent are not the same thing — most people spend their day on what's merely loud and never reach the work that actually moves things forward. Attributed to Dwight D. Eisenhower and later popularized by Stephen Covey, this is the single most transferable idea on the list. Protect the important-but-not-urgent box before it turns into a crisis.

### 2. Focus on the vital few (the 80/20 rule)

Named after the economist Vilfredo Pareto, the 80/20 rule notes that roughly 80% of your results come from about 20% of what you do. Applied to your day, it reframes the problem from "do everything faster" to "find the few tasks that actually matter and give them your best hours." For an overwhelmed week, this is the example that tells you [what to cut](/knowledge/time-management/prioritize-tasks/), not just what to squeeze in.

### 3. Block your calendar — and cap it (time blocking and timeboxing)

Time blocking means reserving named slots on your calendar for specific work and treating them like appointments you don't cancel. Timeboxing adds a hard limit: you give a task, say, 45 minutes, and stop when the time is up whether or not it's finished. The two get blurred constantly, but the distinction is useful — blocking decides *when* you work on something, timeboxing decides *how long*. Together they stop open-ended tasks from swallowing a whole afternoon.

### 4. Work in short, timed sprints (the Pomodoro Technique)

Created by Francesco Cirillo and named after the tomato-shaped kitchen timer he used as a student, the Pomodoro Technique breaks work into 25-minute focused intervals with 5-minute breaks, and a longer break after four. It works by making a big task feel small — you only have to commit to the next 25 minutes — which is why it's so effective for starting something you've been avoiding.

### 5. Eat the frog: do the hard thing first

Popularized by Brian Tracy in his book *Eat That Frog!*, this one says to do your most important and most-dreaded task first thing, before email and meetings can crowd it out. The "frog" is the task you'd most like to put off. Dressed as a scheduling rule, it's really a [procrastination example](/knowledge/time-management/procrastination/) — it removes the all-day dread of a looming task by getting it behind you early.

### 6. Batch similar tasks together

Instead of reacting to email twenty times a day, process it in two set windows. Instead of switching between writing, calls, and admin, group like with like and do each in one focused session. Every switch between different kinds of work carries a hidden re-focusing cost, and batching cuts that cost. Treat this less as a scheduling trick and more as a way to eliminate the [self-inflicted distraction](/knowledge/time-management/eliminate-distractions/) of constant task-switching.

### 7. The two-minute rule

If a task will take less than two minutes — a quick reply, a form, filing one document — do it now rather than writing it down for later. It's a staple of David Allen's *Getting Things Done* system, and it keeps trivial items from piling up into a backlog that costs more to manage than to clear. Your to-do list stays reserved for the things that genuinely need planning.

### 8. Say no, and guard your time off

Most time management examples are about taking work in more efficiently. This one is about keeping the wrong work out. Once you've built a bit of credibility, declining or renegotiating low-value requests — with a clear reason, not a vague "I'm busy" — protects the hours your priorities actually need. The same goes for a firm end to the day and genuinely [work-free evenings and weekends](/knowledge/professional-behaviors/setting-boundaries-at-work/). Managing your time includes protecting it, not just filling it.

No one uses all eight, and stacking every method at once is its own kind of chaos. The productive move is to pair one for planning (time blocking or the Eisenhower Matrix), one for execution (Pomodoro or timeboxing), and leave the rest. Which ones you actually need depends on where your day breaks down — whether you're losing time to poor priorities, constant interruptions, or simply not starting. It's worth [checking where you actually stand](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) before you copy a system that solves a problem you don't have.

## The skills that decide whether these examples stick

Hand the same eight examples to two people and one builds a calmer week while the other quietly abandons them by Wednesday. The difference usually isn't the method — it's a few underlying habits that make any method work, and each of them is something you can build rather than something you either have or don't.

**Time Management** is the obvious one, and these examples are simply what it looks like in practice: getting organized, cutting distractions, prioritizing, deciding what to say yes and no to, and setting boundaries around your hours. Seen this way, you're not learning tricks — you're building one coherent skill, one habit at a time. The examples are the visible surface; the skill is the thing that keeps them running when a busy week tests them.

**Building Confidence** is the quiet reason so many time systems fail. Most people who look up time management examples already half-know what to do — the real block is starting. This skill treats procrastination head-on: deciding in advance exactly when, where, and how you'll begin, and committing only to the first step rather than the whole task. That's why "eat the frog" and short Pomodoro sprints work — they're confidence-by-doing more than they're scheduling.

**Decision-Making** sits underneath every prioritization example here. Sorting by important-versus-urgent or applying the 80/20 rule is, at bottom, a judgment call about what to drop — and making those calls without endless second-guessing is a skill of its own: getting a quick second opinion, accepting "good enough," and not finishing a low-value task just because you already started it.

Those three are part of a wider set of twelve work skills that quietly shape almost any job, and a short, free [Work Skills Test](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) shows which of them is your real lever — so you can build the skill your time problem actually comes from, not just try another method.

## What this looks like for you

You might notice you already do a couple of these without ever calling it "time management" — a hard task you always clear first, a corner of the day you keep for focused work. The examples you don't yet use aren't talents you're missing; they're habits you can pick up one at a time, at whatever pace fits the week you're actually having. And this tends to matter more, not less, as you take on more — a rough system you can carry through a light workload starts to cost you real time once the demands stack up, which is exactly why it's worth sorting now while the stakes are lower. The fact that you went looking for concrete examples at all means you've already done the part most people skip: naming the problem instead of just feeling busy. From here it's less about willpower and more about knowing which habit to build next.

## Find your starting point

The only thing left is to see where your own time habits actually stand. The **free** Work Skills Test is a quick self-assessment of the work skills behind everything on this page — including time management, the confidence to start, and the judgment to prioritize — and it shows you which ones will make the biggest difference right now, so you can start with the habit that matters instead of guessing. No pressure to overhaul everything; take it whenever it suits you and just get a clear read on where to begin.

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

From the Eisenhower Matrix to the Pomodoro Technique, here are 8 concrete time management examples you can copy today—plus how to pick the ones that fit you.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Time Management. It also relates to Building Confidence, Decision-Making.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/time-management.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/confidence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/decision-making.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

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"From the Eisenhower Matrix to the Pomodoro Technique, here are 8 concrete time management examples you can copy today—plus how to pick the ones that fit you."

## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
