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Why many super-successful people follow a simple rule created by Benjamin Franklin

Published by Business Insider on Thu, 01 Sep 2016


At the age of 10, Benjamin Franklin left formal schooling to become an apprentice to his father. As a teenager, he showed no particular talent or aptitude aside from his love of books.When he died a little over half a century later, he was Americas most respected statesman, its most famous inventor, a prolific author, and a successful entrepreneur.What happened between these two points to cause such a meteoric rise'Underlying the answer to this question is a success strategy for life that we can all use, and increasingly must use.SEE ALSO:Billionaire Charlie Munger's favorite life hack can help anyone be more successfulThe five-hourruleThroughout Ben Franklins adult life, he consistently invested roughly an hour a day in deliberate learning. I call this Franklins five-hour rule: one hour a day on every weekday.Franklins learning time consisted of: Waking up early to read and writeSetting personal-growth goals (i.e., virtues list) and tracking the results Creating a club for "like-minded aspiring artisans and tradesmen who hoped toimprove themselves while they improved their community" Turning his ideas into experiments Having morning and evening reflection questionsEvery time that Franklin took time out of his busy day to follow his five-hour rule and spend at least an hour learning, he accomplished less on that day. However, in the long run, it was arguably the best investment of his time he could have made.Franklins five-hour rule reflects the very simple idea that, over time, the smartest and most successful people are the ones who are constant and deliberate learners.Warren Buffett spends five to six hours per day reading five newspapers and500 pages of corporate reports. Bill Gates reads 50 books per year. Mark Zuckerberg reads at least one book every two weeks. Elon Musk grew up reading two books a day, according to his brother. Oprah Winfrey credits books with much of her success: "Books were my pass to personal freedom." Arthur Blank, co-founder of Home Depot, reads two hours day. Dan Gilbert, self-made billionaire and owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers, reads one to two hours a day.So what would it look like to make the five-hour rule part of our lifestyle'Empty space is central to the five-hourruleTo find out, we need look no further than chess grandmaster and world-champion martial artist Josh Waitzkin. Instead of squeezing his days for the maximum productivity, hes actually done the opposite.Waitzkin, who also authored "The Art of Learning," purposely creates slack in his day so he has "empty space" for learning, creativity, and doing things at a higher quality. Heres his explanation of this approach from a recent Tim Ferriss podcast episode:I have built a life around having empty space for the development of my ideas for the creative process. And for the cultivation of a physiological state which is receptive enough to tune in very, very deeply to people I work with In the creative process, its so easy to drive for efficiency and take for granted the really subtle internal work that it takes to play on that razors edge.Adding slack to our day allows us to:1. Plan out the learning. This allows us to think carefully about what we want to learn. We shouldnt just have goals for what we want to accomplish. We should also have goals for what we want to learn.2. Deliberately practice. Rather than doing things automatically and not improving, we can apply the proven principles of deliberate practice so we keep improving. This means doing things like taking time to get honest feedback on our work and practicing specific skills we want to improve.3. Ruminate. This helps us get more perspective on our lessons learned and assimilate new ideas. It can also help us develop slow hunches in order to have creative breakthroughs. Walking is a great way to process these insights, as shown by many greats who were or are walking fanatics, fromBeethoven and Charles Darwin to Steve Jobs and Jack Dorsey. Another powerful way is through conversation partners.4. Set aside time just for learning. This includes activities like reading, having conversations, participating in a mastermind, taking classes, observing others, etc.5. Solve problems as they arise. When most people experience problems during the day, they sweep them under the rug so that they can continue their to-do list. Having slack creates the space to address small problems before they turn into big problems.6. Do small experiments with big potential payoffs. Whether or not an experiment works, its an opportunity to learn and test your ideas.The difference the five-hour rulemakesFor many people, their professional day is measured by how much they get done. As a result, they speed through the day and slow down their improvement rate.The five-hour rule flips the equation by focusing on learning first.To see the implication of this, lets look at a sales call (note: replace sales call with any activity you do repeatedly).Most professionals do a little research before the call, have the call, and then save their notes and move on.Somebody with a learning focus would think through which skill to practice on the call, practice it on the call, and then reflect on the lessons learned. If that person really wanted an extra level of learning, he or she would invite a colleague on the call and have the colleague provide honest feedback afterward.Embracing a learning lifestyle means that every time we make a sales call, we get better at doing sales calls. Focusing on learning un-automates our behaviors so we can keep improving them rather than plateauing. Every event is an opportunity to improve.By focusing on learning as a lifestyle, we get so much more done over the long term.See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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