The
5-Hour Rule That Turns
Ordinary People
Into Successful Ones
You work hard day after day, but never see any long-term
improvement. You feel trapped at your current level, unable to move forward or
progress. You see friends and colleagues moving on and getting promoted, and
wonder what’s different about you.
If this sounds like you, then you need to start
using the 5-hour rule. Followed by successful people around the world,
including Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, and Mark Zuckerberg, this simple rule can
help you transform from ordinary to successful.
Read on to find out exactly what the rule involves and how you
can implement it in your own life.
Spend 5 Hours A
Week On Deliberate Learning
The 5-hour rule involves spending five hours a week, or one hour
each working day, focused on deliberate learning. This means setting aside time
to give your full attention to learning and development, without getting
distracted by other work. This learning can take different forms and a mix of these
will give you the most well-rounded experience.
Reading
Reading is a habit of many highly successful people and is an
easy and convenient way to learn. Try keeping a book in your bag at all times
and setting yourself up with reading goals each week. You could aim to read a
chapter a day or a certain number of books each month. The wide availability of
eBooks makes reading on almost any topic possible wherever you are. Bill Gates
is a famous advocate of reading and reads around 50 books each year, crediting
it as one of the main ways that he learns.2
Reflection
Reflection is a key part of learning. Trying to consume too much
information without reflecting on it can lead you to feel overwhelmed and
prevents you from picking up new skills. It’s important that your reflection
time is structured, or you could get distracted. Try keeping a journal, which
will allow you to reflect on what you’ve learned through reading. It will also
give you the chance to think about lessons you’ve recently learned during work
and develop ideas you have for the future.
Experimentation
Experimentation is essential if you want to progress in life.
Set aside some time each week to test out new theories or ideas, no matter how
crazy they are. Some of the most successful products in the world have come
about as a result of experimentation. Innovation never comes from doing the
same thing over and over. Even if your experiment fails, you’ll have learned
valuable lessons.
Don’t Confuse
Working With Learning
It’s easy to confuse working with learning, and this is how you
can end up feeling stuck. You might think that working for 40 hours a week
should be enough for you to see improvement, but that’s rarely the case. While
you’re focused on day-to-day problems, you’re not giving yourself time to
develop and grow. The 5-hour rule is about deliberate learning, not about going
to work everyday and hoping you might learn something. Set yourself specific
learning goals and give yourself time to achieve them, and you’ll see a vast
amount of improvement.
Focus On
Improvement, Not Just Productivity
You might believe that the more productive you are, the more
successful you’ll be. Productivity plays a role in success, but it’s nothing
without lifelong learning. If you’re constantly focused on your current work,
rather than on long-term self-improvement, you’ll never see much development.
It can be hard to allow yourself five hours a week for learning that doesn’t
come with an immediate reward, but you’ll thank yourself for it in the long
run. Try to look beyond your daily paycheck and dedicate time to becoming the
best possible version of yourself instead.
Take inspiration from some of the world’s most successful
entrepreneurs and spend 5-hours a week on deliberate learning. You’ll soon be
light years ahead of your friends and colleagues, and well on your way to
success.
Eloise Best
http://www.lifehack.org/538067/the-5-hour-rule-that-turns-ordinary-people-into-successful-ones?ref=mail&mtype=newsletter_tier_1&mid=20170622&uid=687414&hash=707e797f7e757e6d794c856d747b7b3a6f7b79&action=click
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