June 20, 2024

5 Habits that Will Put You Ahead of 99% of the Music Industry

The player is loading ...
5 Habits that Will Put You Ahead of 99% of the Music Industry
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconYoutube Music podcast player iconRSS Feed podcast player icon
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconYoutube Music podcast player iconRSS Feed podcast player icon

In this episode Travis breaks down the five productivity tips that help him find work life balance and still deliver on a high level for his clients.

πŸ“Ί WATCH THE SHOW ON YOUTUBE πŸ“Ί

https://www.youtube.com/@progressionspod

Connect with Me:

πŸ“¬ Newsletter: https://www.travisference.com/subscribe

πŸ“Έ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/progressionspod

🎡TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@progressionspod

🐦 Twitter: https://twitter.com/progressionspod

🌐 Website: https://www.travisference.com/

 

πŸ™ Leave a Review or Rating πŸ™

Apple: https://www.progressionspodcast.com/apple

Spotify: https://www.progressionspodcast.com/spotify

πŸ“’ Our Sponsors πŸ“’

Listen to Secret Sonics!

Sign Up for Complete Producer Network!

 

Credits:

Guest: N/A

Host: Travis Ference

Editor: Travis Ference

Theme Music: inter.ference

Speaker:

If there's one thing that will keep you working in the music industry, it's following

 

 


Speaker:

through on your word, aka getting

 

 


Speaker:

done. And this video will help make sure that happens. Whether you're a

 

 


Speaker:

full time audio professional already or working to get there,

 

 


Speaker:

these five productivity tips will help you hit your deadlines and balance your

 

 


Speaker:

life.

 

 


Speaker:

Welcome back to the show. I'm Travis Farents, a Grammy nominated blah, blah, blah doesn't

 

 


Speaker:

really matter for this one. What matters for this one is I work three days

 

 


Speaker:

a week and I probably mix close to 200 songs a year while doing this

 

 


Speaker:

podcast and YouTube channel and being a dad. There's a common

 

 


Speaker:

misconception that hard work is better work and that if you're

 

 


Speaker:

always working, then you must be productive. Now,

 

 


Speaker:

there's no denying that putting hours of hard work in will get things

 

 


Speaker:

done, but that definitely doesn't mean that you're productive. I've had seasons in my life

 

 


Speaker:

where I cranked 18 hours days regularly, and they definitely helped me learn a lot

 

 


Speaker:

and build my career to where it is today. But eventually, it's

 

 


Speaker:

just not sustainable. And even if it was, are you really

 

 


Speaker:

doing your best work on hour 17? So before we dive into these, I

 

 


Speaker:

have to say that I am fully a productivity nerd, but I am also

 

 


Speaker:

not perfect at times. I've taken these productivity hacks so far

 

 


Speaker:

that I think they've actually made me less productive. But these five tips

 

 


Speaker:

have proven to help me every time when I do them, and

 

 


Speaker:

that's the key. You've got to do this stuff. If you can't

 

 


Speaker:

sit here and commit to actually trying these things, then you should probably just click

 

 


Speaker:

on to whatever the latest plugin review is. So with that,

 

 


Speaker:

onto the five tips that I do every day that help me

 

 


Speaker:

deliver for my clients. First up, have a plan.

 

 


Speaker:

Nothing says failure to launch like walking into your studio with no

 

 


Speaker:

clue what you're gonna do that day. When I sit down at the computer without

 

 


Speaker:

a game plan, I immediately find myself in my email or

 

 


Speaker:

down some rabbit hole checking out some piece of gear or productivity trick,

 

 


Speaker:

which is pretty ironic, right? But my most

 

 


Speaker:

productive days start the day before I try to stay in the habit of

 

 


Speaker:

having a shutdown routine to help me close out my day. And part of that

 

 


Speaker:

routine is to look at what I was trying to get done that day and

 

 


Speaker:

decide what I need to focus on for the next day. And the bonus to

 

 


Speaker:

this is that it helps keep overwhelm at bay when you've

 

 


Speaker:

got an open loop, like not knowing when you'll find time to finish something.

 

 


Speaker:

Then you have this constant layer of stress just wearing you down

 

 


Speaker:

a little bit minute by minute. But if you

 

 


Speaker:

end your day by planning the next, you can rest easy that

 

 


Speaker:

night knowing that you've made time for everything. The last piece

 

 


Speaker:

of the have a plan equation is that you need to know what your priorities

 

 


Speaker:

are. And remember that priorities are not always goals. Goals

 

 


Speaker:

are often more long term. Example, one of my goals right now

 

 


Speaker:

is to hit ten k subs on this channel,

 

 


Speaker:

but that's not a priority. I have a priority based on that goal,

 

 


Speaker:

which is to put out the best content I can once a week. Now

 

 


Speaker:

this is a good time to pause the video and ask yourself, what are

 

 


Speaker:

my top three priorities? And more importantly, are they reflected

 

 


Speaker:

on your calendar? How would they be reflected on your calendar, you ask? Well, because

 

 


Speaker:

you do some form of time blocking, right? Which is our second tip.

 

 


Speaker:

Time blocking is the act of putting actual blocks of time in your calendar

 

 


Speaker:

for specific tasks or projects, essentially planning your day

 

 


Speaker:

from start to finish based on what you need to get done. Now, from my

 

 


Speaker:

experience, it is possible to overdo this and also very possible to

 

 


Speaker:

underdo it. I've tried going over the top blocking five minute intervals and

 

 


Speaker:

entering stuff like drive time or lunch into my calendar. When I went that far,

 

 


Speaker:

I found that I was mostly just wasting time physically entering all of these

 

 


Speaker:

things. And on the other side of that, I've put general blocks in my

 

 


Speaker:

calendar for 4 hours that just say podcast, and I find that leads

 

 


Speaker:

to very little forward progress because it's so vague.

 

 


Speaker:

When you time block, it has to at least be specific enough for you

 

 


Speaker:

to know what you're supposed to do during that block. Now, there is a

 

 


Speaker:

huge caveat to time blocking though, which is that you need to

 

 


Speaker:

understand how long things take you. Otherwise you'll be planning an

 

 


Speaker:

unrealistic day. And that's pretty self defeating when you never get what you need to

 

 


Speaker:

get done. I've spent years running a timer while doing projects, so I have a

 

 


Speaker:

pretty good idea of how long things take me. Let's look at a mix. For

 

 


Speaker:

example, I know that I need about 6 hours, give or take, to get a

 

 


Speaker:

solid first mix ready to go out to the client. I'll typically break that up

 

 


Speaker:

into two days, probably two three hour blocks. And do things take

 

 


Speaker:

longer? Sometimes, definitely regularly. But

 

 


Speaker:

rarely do they take double or triple my expectations. A couple hours here

 

 


Speaker:

or there is easy enough to manage if you're doing some kind of

 

 


Speaker:

end of day planning routine. Now, the answer to why time blocking

 

 


Speaker:

works lies in Parkinson's law, which states that

 

 


Speaker:

work expands to fill the time available for its completion. This is

 

 


Speaker:

essentially why we're always racing to hit a deadline, even if the project has

 

 


Speaker:

been going for weeks. If you don't set bounds on the work,

 

 


Speaker:

it'll drag on. I experienced the power of setting time bounds

 

 


Speaker:

firsthand when my daughter was super young. You'd be surprised how much

 

 


Speaker:

you can get done during a two hour infant nap if you set out with

 

 


Speaker:

a plan for that time. So, to summarize, if you understand your time and

 

 


Speaker:

block things in your calendar properly, then you can avoid overcommitting yourself.

 

 


Speaker:

And when you get really good at time blocking, schedule yourself some

 

 


Speaker:

downtime, which is our third tip. If you want to be more

 

 


Speaker:

productive, then you've got to be operating at your best.

 

 


Speaker:

The only way to do that is to actually take time off to

 

 


Speaker:

rest. If you push yourself to the limit every day, I

 

 


Speaker:

guarantee that you are not getting work done as fast or as well as you

 

 


Speaker:

could if you weren't. This quote from Greg McKeown is a pretty good rule

 

 


Speaker:

of thumb. Don't do more today than you can completely

 

 


Speaker:

recover from tomorrow. I caught that in an interview he did with Matt D'Avella,

 

 


Speaker:

I think, and they were discussing his new book, effortless, which was immediately added

 

 


Speaker:

to my reading list. And in that conversation he brought up a concept that really

 

 


Speaker:

resonated with me. He mentioned having not just a lower bound for

 

 


Speaker:

the amount of work, but also an upper bound, basically a

 

 


Speaker:

maximum. And he used an example from history, which was super interesting.

 

 


Speaker:

Two teams of explorers racing to be the first to reach the South

 

 


Speaker:

Pole. One, a british team who basically trekked as far as they

 

 


Speaker:

could every single day, regardless of the weather. And a norwegian

 

 


Speaker:

team who did no more than 15 miles every day,

 

 


Speaker:

even if they were physically able to. So by having that upper

 

 


Speaker:

bound, the norwegian team maintained a steady pace for

 

 


Speaker:

the entire journey and ultimately reached the South Pole

 

 


Speaker:

first, more than 30 days before the british team did. But more

 

 


Speaker:

importantly, they also had the energy and stamina to

 

 


Speaker:

return to their ship, unlike the british team,

 

 


Speaker:

who never made it back from the South Pole. Now that's obviously an

 

 


Speaker:

extreme example, but I think the point is pretty clear. In today's

 

 


Speaker:

super connected world, it has never been more important to make sure that you are

 

 


Speaker:

eventually done for the day. You need that upper bound so

 

 


Speaker:

that you can go home and recharge. And by the way, leaving the

 

 


Speaker:

studio and then checking your email on the couch all night, that doesn't

 

 


Speaker:

count. That keeps your brain in work mode the whole time. And I'm super guilty

 

 


Speaker:

of this. I often think about work long after I'm done, but I have

 

 


Speaker:

found that when I'm diligent about doing my shutdown routine,

 

 


Speaker:

I'm way more likely to actually be done working and be present for my

 

 


Speaker:

family. So you've got to close those open loops for yourself. Which brings us

 

 


Speaker:

to the next tip. Write things down. Now, it

 

 


Speaker:

sounds basic, but we just don't really do it. Here's an example.

 

 


Speaker:

What's the next thing you need to do for a current project? Who do you

 

 


Speaker:

need to text back? What do you need to invoice for? What do you currently

 

 


Speaker:

need from the grocery store? Okay, so how many of those things

 

 


Speaker:

I just mentioned do you have written down? If you had all that bouncing around

 

 


Speaker:

your head, then I'm guessing you also complain about having a hard time focusing.

 

 


Speaker:

David Allen, one of the OG productivity authors, says it best with

 

 


Speaker:

the mind is for having ideas, not holding them. Our brains

 

 


Speaker:

might be super powerful, but psychologists suggest that they function best

 

 


Speaker:

when only focusing on a few things, like two or three. So

 

 


Speaker:

if you want to be more effective at everything you're doing, then you don't want

 

 


Speaker:

to be storing every commitment and task you have in your mind.

 

 


Speaker:

Get all those things down on paper, calendar, or in a task manager

 

 


Speaker:

so that you can focus on the task at hand without your mind telling you

 

 


Speaker:

to get milk on the way home. Anytime I'm feeling stressed and overwhelmed, it's

 

 


Speaker:

usually because I need to do a huge task brain dump. Getting

 

 


Speaker:

all that down into a database and then assigning a time to do it

 

 


Speaker:

immediately relieves a ton of stress. So as you can

 

 


Speaker:

see, this is where all these steps start to come together.

 

 


Speaker:

If you're planning and in control of your schedule and you have a trusted to

 

 


Speaker:

do list, it all starts to snowball into actually becoming

 

 


Speaker:

more productive. And lastly, you've got to do

 

 


Speaker:

focused work. If pro tools crashes, the first thing I

 

 


Speaker:

do is grab my phone and start swiping,

 

 


Speaker:

which is probably the worst thing I could do. I was in the zone

 

 


Speaker:

and now I'm going to wander down 30 different rabbit holes. Here's a

 

 


Speaker:

shocking statistic that I think will really hammer the importance of this home. It

 

 


Speaker:

takes an average of 23 minutes to

 

 


Speaker:

refocus after a distraction, so that computer glitch and

 

 


Speaker:

swipe fest essentially just cost me a half hour, which is pretty

 

 


Speaker:

crazy. So here's what you do. Don't check your email while you're in the

 

 


Speaker:

middle of one of your work blocks. In fact, make a time block for

 

 


Speaker:

checking email, because it is the ultimate distraction. Next,

 

 


Speaker:

silence your phone. Better yet, leave it in another room or on the couch

 

 


Speaker:

behind you. Now, a lot of people might say I can't silence my phone. What

 

 


Speaker:

if my kids school calls or something like that? If you've got an iPhone,

 

 


Speaker:

the focus modes are now customizable. They have been for a while. I have one

 

 


Speaker:

called work. The only notifications that come through are from my

 

 


Speaker:

wife, my parents, and the home security and babycam apps. Remember,

 

 


Speaker:

99% of the notifications that pop up on your device are

 

 


Speaker:

not urgent, and they can for sure wait until you are out of

 

 


Speaker:

your deep work block. I mentioned earlier how much work I could get done during

 

 


Speaker:

one of my daughter's naps. This is why I had so little focused work

 

 


Speaker:

time then that I had to be sure that there were zero interruptions.

 

 


Speaker:

So now that you're a more productive music professional, it is time to fast track

 

 


Speaker:

your career. Shave a couple years off your journey with this video here.