Podcasts about Timeful

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Best podcasts about Timeful

Latest podcast episodes about Timeful

The Model FA
Mind Management for Advisors with David Kadavy

The Model FA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 43:54


David Kadavy is a designer, podcaster, and writer. He is the author of Mind Management, Not Time Management, The Heart to Heart Start, and Design for Hackers. He previously served as a design advisor to Timeful, an AI-powered calendar app built upon his mind management principles. In 2015, Google bought Timeful and integrated some of its features into the Google Calendar app. David has spoken in eight countries and SXSW, TEDx, The New York Public Library, The Museum of Contemporary Art, and The University of Chicago. He is the creator and host of Love Your Work, a podcast where he dives into being productive, getting things done, and breeding Black Swans as a creative.   David joins me today to discuss mind management and how financial advisors can apply it to their businesses and lives for optimum results. He differentiates between top-down and bottom-up thinkers, and why breaking down a project into its most basic parts can be overwhelming and energy-draining to some people. He shares how you can audit your energy throughout a week to unlock your creativity. He also describes his approach to goal setting for a new year and underscores the power of letting your passive genius take over.   “Find pockets of time and energy and protect them so you can get the most value possible from that mental state.” - David Kadavy   This week on The Model FA Podcast:   David's background and journey to learning mind management What mind management is and why time management is a flawed concept How financial advisors can apply mind management in their businesses and lives David's “Prefrontal Mondays,” identifying your big rocks, and the value of identifying when you're most energetic and creative Different mental states for different activities and why the prefrontal cortex is adverse to creativity The importance of structuring your calendar and day according to your personal needs “Top-down” vs “bottom-up” thinkers and why SOPs can be intimidating MBTI types and the characteristics of Perceiving and Judging types The four stages of creativity and the value of giving yourself time to incubate ideas   Resources Mentioned:   Book: Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen   Our Favorite Quotes:   “Being diligent with your calendar and scheduling is freeing and helps you think less during the day.” - David DeCelle “Set aside particular time to proactively think through the things on your plate. Limit distractions and tackle whatever the topic is at hand.” - David DeCelle “Dedicating time and space to a particular task helps parse what mental state you need for that type of task. A certain time, place, and environment will be better suited to some mental states than others.” - David Kadavy   Connect with David Kadavy:   David Kadavy Website Book: Mind Management, Not Time Management: Productivity When Creativity Matters Book: The Heart to Start: Stop Procrastinating & Start Creating Book: Design for Hackers: Reverse Engineering Beauty Podcast: Love Your Work David Kadavy on LinkedIn David Kadavy on Instagram David Kadavy on Twitter   About the Model FA Podcast   The Model FA podcast is a show for fiduciary financial advisors. In each episode, our host David DeCelle sits down with industry experts, strategic thinkers, and advisors to explore what it takes  to build a successful practice — and have an abundant life in the process. We believe in continuous learning, tactical advice, and strategies that work — no “gotchas” or BS. Join us to hear stories from successful financial advisors, get actionable ideas from experts, and re-discover your drive to build the practice of your dreams.    Did you like this conversation? Then leave us a rating and a review in whatever podcast player you use. We would love your feedback, and your ratings help us reach more advisors with ideas for growing their practices, attracting great clients, and achieving a better quality of life. While you are there, feel free to share your ideas about future podcast guests or topics you'd love to see covered.    Our Team: President of Model FA, David DeCelle   If you like this podcast, you will love our community! Join the Model FA Community on Facebook to connect with like-minded advisors and share the day-to-day challenges and wins of running a growing financial services firm.

Writers, Ink
Rethinking Productivity with Bestseller David Kadavy

Writers, Ink

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022 63:42


Bestseller David Kadavy has dedicated his work to helping authors and creatives rethink productivity. In his bestselling book, Mind Management, Not Time Management, he explores the limits of creativity and the importance of structure, self-awareness, and self-control to writers. David is a bestseller author of mostly shorter nonfiction, but has also won praise for longer pieces like The Heart to Start and Design for Hackers. To purchase Mind Management, follow the link below. From Amazon.com: David Kadavy is a bestselling author whose books help people be productive when creativity matters. He was design advisor for behavioral scientist Dan Ariely's productivity app, Timeful, where David's “mind management” principles were applied to features now used by millions – in Google Calendar. He lives in Medellín, Colombia. Follow him on Twitter or Instagram at @kadavy. In this episode, you'll discover: What is dirty electricity The email that changed David's life How he transitioned from writing blogs to books The psychology of writing What makes stories memorable Links: J. D. Barker - http://jdbarker.com/ J. Thorn - https://theauthorlife.com/ Zach Bohannon - https://zachbohannon.com/ David Kadavy - https://kadavy.net Mind Management, Not Time Management - https://books2read.com/MindManagement David's Course - https://100wordwritinghabit.com Twitter - https://twitter.com/kadavy Three Story Method: Writing Scenes - https://books2read.com/threestorymethodws Best of BookTook - https://bestofbooktok.com/ Story Rubric - http://storyrubric.com Nonfic Rubric - http://nonficrubric.com Scene Rubric - http://scenerubric.com Proudly sponsored by Kobo Writing Life - https://kobowritinglife.com/ and Atticus - https://www.atticus.io/ Music by Nicorus - https://cctrax.com/nicorus/dust-to-dust-ep Voice Over by Rick Ganley - http://www.nhpr.com and recorded at Mill Pond Studio - http://www.millpondstudio.com Audio production by Geoff Emberlyn - http://www.emberletter.com/ Website Design by Word & Pixel - http://wordandpixel.com/ Contact - https://writersinkpodcast.com/contact/ *Full disclosure: Some of the links are affiliate links. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/writersink/support

KENSO
Las trampas del deseo de Dan Ariely

KENSO

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 63:56


¿A veces te arrepientes de tus decisiones o acciones del pasado? ¿Has pensado alguna vez: «¿Cómo he podido ser tan XXX (pon la palabra que quieras)»? ¿Quieres que esto no vuelva a suceder en el futuro?Ese es el tema principal del programa de esta semana, donde aprenderás cuáles son tus sesgos cognitivos de la mano del libro Predictably Irrational o «Las trampas del deseo» de Dan Ariely.Valoración Quique: ★★★★¼Valoración Raúl: ★★★★Valoración Jeroen: ★★★★Notas de programa(Las notas del programa están disponibles en https://kenso.es/episodio/216-trampas-deseo-dan-ariely)Índice de la reseña(01:47) ¿Qué vas a encontrar en este libro?(08:33) La relatividad y la elección(24:29) Cuidado con los regalos(37:22) Demasiadas opciones(52:45) Estilo y valoración(59:16) El siguiente libro(1:02:18) ¡Nos escuchamos muy pronto!Recursos mencionadosLibro: Las trampas del deseo de Dan ArielyReseña: El regalo de Eloy MorenoArtículo: Timeful es tu asistente inteligente para gestionar el calendario, las tareas y los hábitosLibro: Pensar rápido, pensar despacio de Daniel KahnemanVídeo: Redes: Somos predeciblemente irracionales de Eduard PunsetReseña: Lo único de Gary Keller y Jay PapasanVídeo. Ted Rath | The Art of the Get Back CoachLibro: Cuatro mil semanas de Oliver BurkemanLa página web de KENSONuestros cursos onlineSuscríbete al boletín electrónico de KENSOÚnete a KENSO CírculoKENSO Círculo es el club para personas centradas en mejorar su efectividad y vivir más felices.Un club a tu alcance porque a partir de 1€ al mes tendrás acceso prioritario a los episodios del podcast, recibirás cada mes un episodio especial donde haremos una reseña sobre un libro de efectividad, disfrutarás de descuentos en los servicios de KENSO y de nuestra eterna gratitud por ayudarnos a mejorar.Más información & InscripciónComparte tus sugerencias¿Qué te gustaría escuchar en futuros episodios del podcast?Déjanos tus sugerencias de personas a entrevistar o temas a tratar en los comentarios de las notas del programa. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

20 Minute Leaders
Ep867: Yoav Shoham | Co-Founder, AI21 Labs

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 41:14


Yoav Shoham is professor emeritus of computer science at Stanford University. A leading AI expert, Prof. Shoham is Fellow of AAAI, ACM and the Game Theory Society. Among his awards are the IJCAI Research Excellence Award, the AAAI/ACM Allen Newell Award, and the ACM/SIGAI Autonomous Agents Research Award. His online Game Theory course has been watched by close to a million people. Prof. Shoham has founded several AI companies, including TradingDynamics (acquired by Ariba), Katango and Timeful (both acquired by Google), and AI21 Labs. Prof. Shoham also chairs the AI Index initiative (www.AIindex.org), which tracks global AI activity and progress, and WeCode (www.wecode.org.il), a nonprofit initiative to train high-quality programmers from disadvantaged populations.

Attitudeable
Mind Management, not Time Management, a conversation with David Kadavy

Attitudeable

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 29:58


What an honor to speak with the author of three (3) best-selling books, David Kadavy! As an author, podcaster, and self-publishing coach, he heartily believes that one of the biggest challenges humanity faces in the age of AI is the ability to tap into our innate creativity. David shares with us what it takes to get the courage to do things that might not work, and how to find that one thing that only you can do for the world. His latest book: Mind Management, Not Time Management, The Heart to Start: Stop Procrastinating & Start Creating, Design for Hackers (which debuted in the top 20 on all of Amazon), and multiple “short reads”, as this weeks short read: Digital ZET TEL KAS TEN Principles, Methods & Examples. David has a weekly podcast, Love Your Work for almost 6 years in which he interviews icons, entrepreneurs, creators, and experts such as James Altucher, Dan Ariely, John Bokenkamp, Seth Godin, Noah Kagan, Joanna Penn, Laura Roeder, Tynan, Vanessa Van Edwards, Cy Wakeman, and many more. He is the creator of Timeful with Dan Ariely. Google bought Timeful, and now its features are a part of Google Calendar. Thanks for your time and for sharing your valuable insights with us, David! Please subscribe and share! Communicate and BE ATTITUDEABLE! Follow David! Website Books Instagram Twitter Follow US! Website Twitter: @liftvalue Instagram: @liftvaluetranslations LinkedIn: Lift Value Translations & Consulting Youtube

The Mosaic Life Podcast with Trey Kauffman
David Kadavy - Creating Consistently, Critical Feedback & Mind Management

The Mosaic Life Podcast with Trey Kauffman

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 76:31


“As a creator, you have to both believe that you aren't good enough, but that you are enough.”-David KadavyDavid Kadavy is the bestselling author of three books: Design for Hackers, The Heart to Start, and his latest, Mind Management, Not Time Management. David served as design advisor to Timeful, a productivity app that used behavioral science principles and David's “mind management” techniques. Google bought Timeful in 2015, and has integrated its features into Google Calendar.Connect with David@Kadavy on TwitterKDV.coSubscribe to The Mosaic Life Podcast Clips on YouTubeSign Up for The Mosaic Life Podcast Circle NewsletterTimestamps00:04:06 Welcome, David!00:06:06 Consistency is Key00:09:59 Building a Weekly Routine00:15:44 Hustle vs. Balance00:21:02 Moving to Colombia00:26:16 The Perception of Happiness Abroad00:32:25 Stoicism and Managing Adversity00:39:26 Unrealistic Expectations We Set for Ourselves00:45:12 Taking Criticism in Stride00:50:41 Asking What Can Be Improved00:56:14 Making the Big Asks01:07:56 Resources David is Looking For01:10:33 David's Life-Changing Book01:12:25 David's Personal Call to Action01:13:32 Connecting with David01:14:31 Thank You, David!David's Life-Changing Book“Your Brain at Work” by Dr. David RockBooks Mentioned“Born Standing Up” by Steve Martin“Story” by Robert McKee“So Good They Can't Ignore You” by Cal Newport“The Black Swan” by Nassim Nicholas TalebAdditional ResourcesGary VaynerchukHedonic TreadmillMedellín, ColombiaHappiness = Reality/ExpectationsRyan HolidayThe Black DeathSeneca the YoungerNaNoWriMoBob Dylan confirms non-attendance at Nobel Prize ceremony | BBCJerry Seinfeld — A Comedy Legend's Systems, Routines, and Methods for Success (#485) | The Tim Ferriss ShowSeth GodinRobert JohnsonDan ArielyEpisode #61: Nir Eyal on The Mosaic Life PodcastWords of Wisdom“Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.” -Gustave FlaubertSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Josh on Narro
Timeful Texts

Josh on Narro

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 8:57


How might one escape a book’s shackled sense of time, extending the authored experience over weeks and months? https://numinous.productions/timeful/ that’s already a challengespaced repetition memory systemsQuantum Countrymnemonic medium

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
Listener Favorites: Dan Ariely | Overcoming Learned Helplessness and Understanding Irrational Behavior

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2020 58:35


In one of our most insightful interviews we've had, Dan Ariely shared his perspectives on suffering, irrational behavior, and how most time management systems allow others to hijack our time. Learn how to overcome your own learned helplessness and how to separate your decisions from the outcomes. Take a listen!Dan Ariely is the founder of The Center for Advanced Hindsight and co-founder of BEworks, Timeful, Genie and Shapa. He is a three-time New York Times best-selling author.Listener TribeWe have our own private social network for listeners of the Unmistakable Creative podcast. You can meet other listeners, discuss episodes, and even have the opportunity to have your favorite episode re-aired on a Friday! Just visit https://unmistakablecreative.com/tribe to sign up.UNMISTAKABLE CREATIVE PRIMEWe have our own private social network for listeners of the Unmistakable Creative podcast. You can meet other listeners, discuss episodes, and engage with the creative community! Just visit https://unmistakablecreative.com/tribe to sign up. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Love Your Work
236. Time Worship

Love Your Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2020 13:07


When I was working with Timeful -- the productivity app co-founded by behavioral scientist and Love Your Work guest, Dan Ariely -- we had a great feature. You could put todo items on your calendar. You could estimate how long a todo item was going to take, and then you could drag that todo item onto your calendar. It would be right there on the timeline, along with any other events you had planned for the day. This todo-items-on-calendar thing was a handy feature. It makes sense, really. Too many of us have a todo list a mile long. We know what we intend to do, but we have no idea when we’ll actually do those things. When Timeful built this feature, and I finally got to use it regularly, I made a discovery. We’re really bad at estimating time. It shouldn’t have been a surprise. Our vision is distorted by our “time worship.” Our perception of time is warped My own faulty time estimates went both ways. I might think it would take me less than fifteen minutes to respond to an email. I’d be shocked to discover that it took half an hour. I might think it would take an hour to draft a blog post, and I’d be pleasantly surprised to see I could do it in only ten minutes. Instinctively, we know that our perception of time is warped. We know the saying that “time flies when we’re having fun.” Our perception of time changes. It changes according to our mood, our personality, or the number of events that happen within a certain amount of time. But if our perception of time is so warped, why is time so important to us? Why do we treat time as if it’s the only thing that matters? Why do we practice “time worship?” The way we measure time is arbitrary It turns out, the way we measure time is pretty arbitrary. There’s nothing in the natural world that says that we should divide our days up by twenty-four hours, with sixty minutes in each of those hours, with sixty seconds in each of those minutes. Our heart may beat about sixty times a minute, but if we’re exercising, it could be 160 times a minute. We breathe about fourteen times a minute, but if we’re running, it might be forty times a minute. Aside from the rotation of the earth and the earth’s revolutions around the sun, there’s nothing about the natural world that says we need to measure the time the way we do. Dividing the day up into twenty-four hours, sixty minutes an hour, sixty seconds a minute -- that’s leftover from a 4,000-year-old Babylonian numbering system. And hours weren’t even originally a fixed length of time! Back in the days of sundials, hours were relative to the amount of daylight in the day. Hours in one season were shorter than hours in another season. It wasn’t even until the late 16^th^ century that there was a mechanical clock that kept track of sixty minutes in an hour. To measure seconds, we had to wait until a century later -- the 17^th^ century. Even the earth’s rotations are unreliable Yet even with this mechanical precision, the way we measure time doesn’t totally match up with the natural world. In an atomic clock, 9,192,631,770 cycles of radiation in the caesium-133 atom represents one second. The atomic clock uses this atom’s radiation to keep time, because it’s one of the most reproducible and stable things in all of nature. Certainly more reliable than grains of sand falling through an hourglass, or even the vibrations of a quartz crystal. But still, even with the help of one of the most reproducible and stable things in all of nature, the atomic clock is not perfect. We still have to add an extra second -- a “leap second” -- to our measurement of time. We add a leap second eight times a decade. It’s hard to match mechanical or even atomic precision to time, in part, because even the thing that time is based upon isn’t perfect. There are tiny, portions of a millisecond, differences in the length of a day -- that is, the amount of time it takes for the earth to rotate. These differences fluctuate over the course of multiple years and throughout the year, as well as every several days. So why does time rule our lives? So if our perception of time is warped, if our measurement of time is arbitrary, if even the things upon which we measure time are unreliable, why are we so reliant on time? Most of us wake up to an alarm clock. We break for lunch at a certain time. We meet for coffee at a certain time, through synchronized clocks on our phones. We go to bed at a certain time. You probably looked at how long this podcast episode was before you decided to listen to it. One reason we’re so reliant on time is because keeping track of time is useful. It allows us to do more things in less time. It allows us to coordinate with others, so we can synchronize complex systems that make our world work. Keeping track of time helps us make connecting flights, it makes sure the grocery store shelves are stocked, and it even helps us remember to do things we might otherwise forget. Time is our “God value” (and it shouldn’t be) In a complex world, there are only so many ways you can make a decision. This is where values become critical. Values help us choose which factors are the most important in a given decision. The “right” decision in any situation varies according to our values. If we value family over money, we’ll decide one way. If we value money over our mental health, we’ll decide yet another way. We use different values in different situations to make different decisions. But we tend to have some values that dominate over all of the others. Whatever we value the most is what author Mark Manson would call our “God value.” Too often, time is our God value. Too often, time is the one big factor we use to make decisions. It’s time worship, and it’s bad. Time worship at work Think about the way time is used in many organizations. In many companies, you can see the open slots on the calendars of your coworkers. You can then fill those open slots by inviting your coworkers to meetings. This is easy to miss, so I’ll spell it out. The logic is as follows: This time is open. Time filled is better than time not filled. Therefore, I will fill this open time with a meeting. Time is the God value in this decision. When we’re on the receiving end of these invitations, we also tend to think of it only in terms of time. Again: Time filled is better than time not filled. There is unfilled time, therefore, I will fill it with this event. Again, time is the God value. Notice that we also tend to negotiate with time. Ever been really focused on something, only to have a coworker tap you on the shoulder and ask, “Got a minute?” A minute. That’s the thing they want from you. Time is the God value. If you hesitate, maybe they’ll assure you, “This will only take a minute.” Your focus is broken, and someone is impeding on that focus. Maybe you’re a little annoyed. But you don’t want to look uncooperative, so you go along with it. You stop what you’re doing, and help your coworker out. Then somehow, you burn away the rest of your afternoon trying to get back to where you were before that coworker tapped you on the shoulder. You lost a whole afternoon of productivity, all because time is the God value in your office. You lost a whole afternoon of productivity all because of time worship. Time worship in life There are some situations where other values take over. You won’t stop delivering a eulogy to check your stock prices because it will take “just a minute.” You won’t stop having sex to answer a text message because it will take “just a minute.” (The text-message response, that is.) It’s obviously inappropriate in both cases to treat time as the God value. Yet there are too many other situations where time shouldn’t be our God value, yet it is. Time worship permeates throughout our culture, affecting the way we treat one another. Am I the only one annoyed when a waiter slams a check on the table before you’ve finished chewing your last bite? The logic is a remnant of Taylorism, which I talked about on episode 226: The amount of time a table is open for business is a “production unit.” The more paying customers you can fit within that time, the better. It’s not the waiter’s fault. In the U.S., there’s a good chance I’m a “clock-time” person -- as I talked about on the previous episode -- ready to get moving to my next activity. There’s a good chance I’ll be annoyed if the check isn’t on my table by the time I’m done with the act of eating. Time worship in schools Consider the way we use time as a God value in schools. We send children to school not according to when they’re awake and ready to learn. Instead, we send them according to time. When can parents drop them off? When are busses available? Down with time worship. Up with performance. Daniel Pink’s When outlines a number of drawbacks for sending kids to school whenever it’s convenient: Testing kids late in the day leads to a reduced test performance on par with missing two weeks of school a year, or having parents with lower income or education. By contrast, rescheduling schooling according to what works with kids’ energy levels improve learning. Having math early in the day improved students’ math GPAs. Providing breaks improves performance. Overall, Pink finds, “delaying school starting times improves motivation, boosts emotional well-being, reduces depression, and lessens impulsivity.” Fortunately, both the American Academy of Pediatrics and the CDC have issued policy statements recommending that middle schools and high schools start later in the morning, to better accomodate the shifted sleep rhythms of adolescents. And it’s not just in schools that we could improve performance by reducing time worship. Olympic records tend to be broken in the late afternoon or early evening. Jurors produce less-discriminatory verdicts in the morning. Hospital workers who are well-rested and are working with fresh energy wash their hands more, diagnose diseases more accurately, and make fewer life-threatening errors. That’s right, time worship kills people. Think of time descriptively, not prescriptively What’s the alternative to time worship? Don’t think of time as prescriptive, think of time as descriptive. You can use time as a general guide, but using time as a mold into which to forcefully fit activities is unnatural, and ineffective. Next time you’re making a decision, and you start to think about how much time it’s going to take, try a mental shift. Instead of asking how the decision will affect your time, think about how it will affect your: focus, momentum, mood, motivation, mental state, energy level -- literally anything other than your time! Stop the time worship! Image: Separation in the Evening, Paul Klee Thanks for sharing my work! In Instagram, thank you to @letterbworld, @poor_bjorns_book_lab, @livroschatos. My Weekly Newsletter: Love Mondays Start off each week with a dose of inspiration to help you make it as a creative. Sign up at: kadavy.net/mondays About Your Host, David Kadavy David Kadavy is the author of The Heart to Start and Design for Hackers. Through the Love Your Work podcast, his Love Mondays newsletter, and self-publishing coaching David helps you make it as a creative. Follow David on: Twitter Instagram Facebook YouTube Subscribe to Love Your Work Apple Podcasts Overcast Spotify Stitcher YouTube RSS Email Support the show on Patreon Put your money where your mind is. Patreon lets you support independent creators like me. Support now on Patreon »     Show notes: http://kadavy.net/blog/posts/time-worship/

Morning Manna
Timeful - Morning Manna #3231

Morning Manna

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 7:43


OK... first of all this episode isn't a pitch for the Timeful app, though you may very well find some value in it. Rather today I'm talking about our proper understanding of the value of time and our strategic use of it.

Morning Manna
Timeful - Morning Manna #3231

Morning Manna

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 7:43


OK... first of all this episode isn't a pitch for the Timeful app, though you may very well find some value in it. Rather today I'm talking about our proper understanding of the value of time and our strategic use of it.

The Healthtech Podcast
Episode 50: The Story of Alpha, Women's Health and The Silicon Valley Formula

The Healthtech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019 50:29


What's the future of women's healthcare? Gloria Lau, cofounder and CEO of Alpha, believes that the future of health services and product delivery, whether prescription or OTC, insurance-covered or cash, will have a simple and personalised commerce experience supported by a team of AI-assisted doctors and pharmacies. Her current company, Alpha, is a health services brand that enables easy access to online diagnosis and prescription treatment, and focuses on healthcare's primary decision makers - women. Alpha believes that the healthcare journey starts with basic medical needs - offering hormonal contraceptives, acne & anti-aging treatment, and elective cosmetic therapy. Alpha patients have access to a team of doctors and nurse practitioners, support for both insurance-covered and outside-of-insurance conditions, along with free shipping right to the patients home. Previously, Gloria headed up data products at Linkedin and was VP of Data at Timeful which was acquired by Google. She is also a consulting faculty at Stanford, holds a Ph.D. and MSc from Stanford Engineering & Computer Science, a BSc from UCLA Engineering, is the inventor on 11 patents in the area of recommendation systems and data science and is author of over 40 academic papers on information retrieval systems. gloria@helloalpha.com | www.helloalpha.com | www.av8.vc For more information and content, check out our website www.hs.ventures. You can follow us on Twitter @HSVenture, on Instagram @hs.ventures, on Linkedin at HS. and you can email us at info@hs.live You can get our host, Dr. James Somauroo, at www.jamessomauroo.com and you can follow him on Twitter @jamessomauroo, on Instagram @j_soms and on Linkedin at james-somauroo

Love Your Work
203. Dan Ariely: Gamble With Your Time. Make Amazing Decisions.

Love Your Work

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2019 55:02


Dan Ariely (@danariely) has more opportunities than he knows what to do with. As a James B. Duke professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics at Duke University and author of New York Times best-selling books, such as Predictably Irrational, he has lots of demands on his time. Dan has to say “no” to a lot of opportunities that don’t have a clear payoff. But, surprisingly, he also says “no” to a lot of opportunities that do have a clear payoff. That’s because, as Dan tells us in this conversation, he gambles with his time. He intentionally does some small amount of things that don’t have a clear payoff. In order to have the space and time for those gambles, he needs to say “no” to some sure bets. In this episode, we’ll learn more about how Dan gambles with his time. We’ll also learn: How did “gambling” with his time lead Dan to publish his exciting new graphic novel, Amazing Decisions: The Illustrated Guide to Improving Business Deals and Family Meals? The creative process for Dan’s new graphic novel is a big departure from that of his research papers and books. How did he navigate the uncertainty when collaborating with an artist? With everything Dan knows about human behavior, how does he design his habits, rituals and routines to optimize creative output and spark motivation? This isn’t the typical conversation with the living legend of behavioral science, Dan Ariely. If you want to know more about his groundbreaking work on irrationality, check out our first conversation on episode 51. A quick note here: Dan and I talk about “Timeful” a number of times throughout this conversation. If you’re not familiar, Timeful was a productivity app that Dan and I collaborated on. It later sold to Google and some of the Timeful features are integrated into Google Calendar. Our Weekly Newsletter: Love Mondays Start off each week with a dose of inspiration to help you make it as a creative. Sign up at: kadavy.net/mondayss About Your Host, David Kadavy David Kadavy is the author of The Heart to Start and Design for Hackers. Through the Love Your Work podcast and his Love Mondays newsletter, David explores what it takes to make it as a creative. Follow David on: Twitter Instagram Facebook YouTube Subscribe to Love Your Work Apple Podcasts Overcast Spotify Stitcher RSS Email Facebook Messenger Support the show on Patreon Put your money where your mind is. Patreon lets you support independent creators like me. Support now on Patreon »     Sponsors https://offgridmindfulness.com https://honeybook.com/loveyourwork Show Notes: http://kadavy.net/blog/posts/dan-ariely/

Ask Win
David Kadavy

Ask Win

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2018 33:39


Ask Win is a podcast where you are a VIP. Win wants to focus and teach people more and Cerebral Palsy. You’re welcome to ask questions about anything that you want. CP questions but mainly life questions on how to deal with CP or not. Win can ask you base questions if you want. Please let us know or there will be no base questions. If you have any questions for Win please email her at askingwkelly@gmail.com. In 2018 let be open and honest on Ask Win. To learn more about Ask Win visit http://askwin.weebly.com.  To buy an Ask Win top go to https://www.bonfire.com/askwin/?utm_source=intercom&utm_campaign=L2C_launch_success&utm_medium=email. Be sure to FOLLOW this program https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wins-women-of-wisdom/id1060801905. To learn how Win walk and about Ekso go to http://www.bridgingbionics.org/, or email Amanda Boxtel at amanda@bridgingbionics.org.    On Ask Win today (Thursday, May 31, 2018), Best-Selling Author, Win C welcomes David Kadavy. David is the author of The Heart to Start and Design for Hackers: Reverse-Engineering Beauty (which debuted in the top 20 on all of Amazon). David also host a podcast called Love Your Work(iTunes), where he have interviewed entrepreneurs and creators such as Jason Fried, Dan Ariely, James Altucher, Ryan Holiday, Laura Roeder, Noah Kagan, and many more. David used to be a product designer in Silicon Valley, but he have since doubled down on his love for writing, after accidentally becoming an author. David’s writing has been featured in Observer, The Huffington Post, Inc.com, Quartz, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Upworthy, and Lifehacker. David currently do most of his writing and thought experimentation on Medium, and he is very active on Twitter, and have a Facebook Page. David offer a free email course to learn web design, a course to learn the principles of visual design, and an entire course about white space. In addition to David’s regular Design for Hackers email list, he have a book recommendations list. David worked with behavioral scientist Dan Ariely to reinvent Google Calendar. The company we worked on, Timeful, was bought by Google, and many of those features are now in Google Calendar. David currently live in Medellín, Colombia, which he chose as his home base after extended stays in many places around the world. David is originally from Omaha, Nebraska, and have also lived in San Francisco; Chicago; San Jose; Kearney, Nebraska; Ames, Iowa; and he have done month-or-longer stints in many other places. To learn more about David visit http://kadavy.net. To learn more about Win Kelly Charles visit http://wincharles.weebly.com/ and https://www.redbubble.com/people/wcharles. To talk to Win please call her at (970) 618-8840. To follow Win on Twitter go to @winkellycharles. To follow Win on Instagram go to winkcharles. To follow Win on Snapchat go to Wcharles422. To follow Win on Snapchat go to Wcharles422. To see Win's art go to https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/2-win-charles.html. Interview with Mel Marton: http://traffic.libsyn.com/winwisdom/LAF3494_08172017150526412_1189015.mp3. Type ASKWIN10 to git 10% off of your entire order at http://www.crownjewelers.com. ”Books for Books," you buy Win's books so she can purchase books for school. "Getting through school is a 'win' for her fans and a 'win' for her." Win is a professional writer and in 2018 she is going to get a new MacBook to write her books and do the podcast. With every book she sells and the donations from Ask Win will go to her new MacBook. Please support her in getting her new MacBook. Win Kelly Charles’ book “She is CP” will get to the New York Times somehow and to help her either by voting or send her good vibe. Please vote at https://soopllc.com/blog/book-ideas/cp-win-charles/. Please send feedback to Win by email her at winwwow@gmail.com, or go to http://survey.libsyn.com/winwisdom and http://survey.libsyn.com/thebutterfly. To be on the show please fill out the intake at https://goo.gl/forms/aS4L6FuHyDSUhvrj2. If you would like to support Ask Win go to https://www.patreon.com/wcharles. Ask Win is sponsor by The Teeki Ambassador Program: http://mbsy.co/teeki/35149532. Superwomen Secrets Revealed: Successful Women Talk About Fitting in Fitness and Dare You to Join Them on Amazon http://amzn.to/2gImve5. :) I have a Facebook page for the book http://facebook.com/SuperwomenSecretsRevealed Instagram http://instagram.com/SuperwomenSecretsRevealed and book page on the website: http://FitArmadillo.com/books. If you want to check out what Win’s friend, Dannidoll, is doing (a.k.a. Dannielle) go to https://www.facebook.com/dannidolltheragdollclown/?notif_t=page_invite_accepted¬if_id=1492366163404241. To learn more about Danielle visit http://www.dancanshred.com. For iOS 11 update: https://www.youtube.com/embed/HNupFUYqcRY. To learn about the magic of Siri go to https://www.udemy.com/writing-a-book-using-siri/?utm_campaign=email&utm_source=sendgrid.com&utm_medium=email. If you want to donate Ask Win, please send a PayPal donation to aspenrosearts@gmail.com or aspenwin@gmail.com. Please donate to the Bridging Bionics Foundation. Please send a check in the mail so 100% goes to Bridging Bionics Foundation.    In the Memo section have people write: In honor of Win Charles. Thank you in advance, Win.   Send to:   Bridging Bionics Foundation  PO Box 3767 Basalt, CO 81621   Thank you Win

Midday
Smart Nutrition: Weighing Those New-Year Weight-Loss Plans

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2018 49:42


It’s the beginning of a new year, and for many of us, that means following up on resolutions to shed those extra pounds. Today, on this edition of Smart Nutrition, Monica Reinagel, the Nutrition Diva, joins Tom in Studio A to talk about a few weight loss strategies. They also check in with Duke University behavioral economist Dan Ariely about a strategy he’s developed to ease the angst of weight reduction.Then, Monica and Tom discuss CRISPR-Cas9, a powerful new tool for genetically altering our foods, a new ranking of the best diets for 2018, and which ones might be worth trying.Monica Reinagel is an author and a licensed, board-certified nutritionist. She blogs at nutritionovereasy.com and she joins Midday for our Smart Nutrition segment every other month. Dan Ariely is the James B. Duke Professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, and is the founder of The Center for Advanced Hindsight and co-founder of BEworks, Timeful, Genie and Shapa.

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
Best of: Overcoming Learned Helplessness and Understanding Irrational Behavior with Dan Ariely

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2017 58:36


In one of our most insightful interviews we've had, Dan Ariely shared his perspectives on suffering, irrational behavior, and how most time management systems allow others to hijack our time. Learn how to overcome your own learned helplessness and how to separate your decisions from the outcomes. Take a listen! Dan Ariely is the founder of The Center for Advanced Hindsight and co-founder of BEworks, Timeful, Genie and Shapa. He is a three-time New York Times best-selling author.In one of our most insightful interviews we've had, Dan Ariely shared his perspectives on suffering, irrational behavior, and how most time management systems allow others to hijack our time. Learn how to overcome your own learned helplessness and how to separate your decisions from the outcomes. Take a listen! Dan Ariely is the founder of The Center for Advanced Hindsight and co-founder of BEworks, Timeful, Genie and Shapa. He is a three-time New York Times best-selling author. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Love Your Work
Dan Ariely

Love Your Work

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2016 62:12


Dan Ariely is a researcher on the forefront of behavioral science. He specializes in understanding irrational behavior, for example, why do people take less candy if you give it out for free, than if you charge a penny for all the candy you want?   Dan actively works to find ways to change behavior for the better using this knowledge. Dan is a professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics at Duke University. He's also the founder of the Center for Advanced Hindsight, which helps companies improve well-being using behavioral science. Dan has also co-founded many companies, including a productivity app called Timeful. I worked with Dan on Timeful, and Google bought the company. Now, some of Timeful's features, such as "Goals" have been integrated into Google Calendar, impacting what must be hundreds of millions of people. Dan's numerous TED talks have been viewed nearly 15 million times. He's the author of three New York Times best-selling books, including Predictably Irrational. He has a new book called "Payoff: The Hidden Logic That Shapes Our Motivations," which you can buy at kadavy.net/payoff.   In Dan's new book, he unlocks the secrets of motivation, whether you're motivating others, or yourself. Listen to this interview to learn why bonuses can reduce productivity, what is it that people really want from work? How does Dan – who is a self-proclaimed bad manager – manage a big lab of talented people? And how can you hack your own motivation using behavioral science research?     Sponsors http://wpengine.com/pre http://kadavy.net/freshbooks http://kadavy.net/video   Show notes: http://kadavy.net/blog/posts/dan-ariely-interview/    

Love Your Work
20. Kill Your Todo List – Sell Your Ideas to Google (overcoming decision fatigue for better creativity & productivity)

Love Your Work

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2016 21:35


Sometimes, the things you feel like you should do create so much cognitive burden you can hardly get anything done. When I feel that way, I know it's time for me to have a "Week of Want." I give myself a whole week where I can work on whatever project I want, without having to think about what goal I'm trying to achieve. This has brought me great results many times, including writing a blog post, which connected me with Timeful, which later sold to Google. I talked about the Week of Want a little in my interview with neuroscientist John Kounios, but in this mini-episode, I explain the technique in-depth. Sponsor: Get 50% off my White Hot Course when you use WHITEHOTLOVE at http://designforhackers.com/whitehotcourse before April 16, 2016. Show notes: http://kadavy.net/blog/posts/love-your-work-episode-20-kill-your-todo-list-sell-your-ideas-to-google/    

EGO NetCast
Summer Fix with Timeful App

EGO NetCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2015 12:31


I am trying to get a summer fix by taking a bit more vacation... ;) EGO NetCast will be back on track in mid-August with another solo cast and a new podcast interview. Show notes: 00 Timeful app 01 F.I.X IT! Timetable #ABeautifulMess #gtd 02 www.AudibleTrial.com/EgoNetCast 03 Two Awesome Hours: Strategies For Peak Productivity by Kevin Kruse - Forbes 05 Sleep Cycle 05 F.I.X IT! - WorkFlow on EGO Sole Trader 05 Inbox zero vs. Inbox 5,000... 07 Podcasting workflow... 08 Upcoming episodes: - New music jingle via The Free Music Archive. - SnapRecorder portable recording booth. - Review of Podcasting Good to Great by Jared Easley & shout out to Podcast Movement. - Affordable earphones for podcasters and listeners to podcasts. Podcasting services and products mentioned: BossJock Opinion Podcasting app Ringr PodClear   11 Tea kettle sound, sip of tea, mmm... 12 Radio EGO jingle - EGO NetCast podcast 12 Support EGO NetCast - www.EgoNetCast.com/support Click here for the Direct Download URL (MP3 file) on www.EgoNetCast.Libsyn.com You could also listen to EGO NetCast by subscribing to the podcast RSS feed via iTunes and Stitcher, or download EGO NetCast's standalone podcast app (Apple App Store / Amazon appstore for Android / Google Play).

Martin Lindeskog
Summer Fix with Timeful App

Martin Lindeskog

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2015 12:30


I am trying to get a summer fix by taking a bit more vacation... ;) EGO NetCast will be back on track in mid-August with another solo cast and a new podcast interview. Show notes: 00 Timeful app 01 F.I.X IT! Timetable #ABeautifulMess #gtd 02 www.AudibleTrial.com/EgoNetCast 03 Two Awesome Hours: Strategies For Peak Productivity by Kevin Kruse - Forbes 05 Sleep Cycle 05 F.I.X IT! - WorkFlow on EGO Sole Trader 05 Inbox zero vs. Inbox 5,000... 07 Podcasting workflow... 08 Upcoming episodes: - New music jingle via The Free Music Archive. - SnapRecorder portable recording booth. - Review of Podcasting Good to Great by Jared Easley & shout out to Podcast Movement. - Affordable earphones for podcasters and listeners to podcasts. Podcasting services and products mentioned: BossJock Opinion Podcasting app Ringr PodClear   11 Tea kettle sound, sip of tea, mmm... 12 Radio EGO jingle - EGO NetCast podcast 12 Support EGO NetCast - www.EgoNetCast.com/support Click here for the Direct Download URL (MP3 file) on www.EgoNetCast.Libsyn.com You could also listen to EGO NetCast by subscribing to the podcast RSS feed via iTunes and Stitcher, or download EGO NetCast's standalone podcast app (Apple App Store / Amazon appstore for Android / Google Play).

Radio Free Leader
0613 | Dan Ariely

Radio Free Leader

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2015 21:52


Dan Ariely is a behavioral economist and triple New York Times bestselling author. His most recent projects include Timeful, a calendar app aimed at using behavioral science to maximize productivity, a documentary on dishonesty, and Irrationally Yours, a compilation of essays on applying behavioral economics to every day life. In this interview, we discuss how to better bridge the gap between social science and everyday practice.

Breaking The Mold
Episode 10: Behavioral Economist Dan Ariely + FIFA's Strange Business Decisions

Breaking The Mold

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 56:32


Title: Dan Ariely, Duke University professor of psychology and behavorial economics and NYT best selling author.Dan Ariely's career started in a hospital bed. In his senior year in high school, while a trainee in the Israeli military, a magnesium flare exploded next to him. The resulting burns covered 70 percent of his body and left him in horrendous pain, trapped in bandages and isolated in a hospital for three years. During that time, he developed a sense of detachment. He watched the world around him and wondered why things were happening to him; why nurses and doctors were making certain decision and wondering if there was a better way. That sense of being an outsider continued as he healed and launched his path as a behavioral economist, studying why humans made the decisions they did. Ariely talks to Evan and returning guest-host Dan about how the experience shaped him, how it's influenced how he leads his life, and how he runs his business (he sold his management app, Timeful, to Google earlier this year). Along the way, he offers some surprising findings about what makes us save (and what doesn't) and more.Dan and Evan start the show talking about FIFA and the amazing corruption that soccer's governing body apparently reveled in. Dan asks: Could out-going president Sepp Blatter and his lieutenants still have accomplished their main goal — creating terrific soccer (just kidding! Creating tremendous wealth) — without running afoul of the U.S. government? Evan struggles to see the genius in Dan's business parallels. Let us know what you think: https://twitter.com/rothevan

The Bob Pritchard Radio Show
Five Mobile Apps To Enable You To Organize Your Day Your Way

The Bob Pritchard Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2015 58:52


We discuss five mobile apps for business, both Apple and android that make you totally organize your day way you want it organized. EasilyDo, TimeFul, Team Viewer, Doodle and WPs office will make your life a lot easier, both personal and business; technology is enabling athletes to really enhance the performance and reduce the chance of injuries. Some of the advances are incredible. We are against blood doping and using all forms of stimulants, but injecting chips into your body is okay. I think I'm missing something; a hacker in Germany has found that it is easier to hack fingerprints than it is to hack passwords. Oh well, back to the drawing board. brbr We also discuss how to create successful social media marketing campaigns and viral videos and how to do research on limited budget. brbr We also have our extremely popular email segment and answer questions from our listeners.

The Productivityist Podcast
A Look at Calendar Apps

The Productivityist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2015 18:56


In this episode Mike explores several calendar apps, offering his thoughts on each of them along with some tips and tricks that he uses when dealing with his calendar. (Note: This won't be the last time he looks at calendar apps, as they are under constant development.) Relevant Links http://neuyearnet.refr.cc/2VFNZ66 (NeuYear.net) http://www.neuyear.net/products/the-now-year (The NOW Year Calendar) http://www.timeful.com/ (Timeful) https://productivityist.simplecast.fm/9 (The Productivityist Podcast: Being Unmistakable with Srinivas Rao) http://www.busymac.com/busycal/ (BusyCal) https://flexibits.com/fantastical (Fantastical) http://whetstoneapps.com/ (DayMap) http://upto.com/ (UpTo) https://www.tempo.ai/ (Tempo AI) https://calendar.sunrise.am/ (Sunrise) Want to send Mike an app, book, or something similar to discuss on the show? Email him at info@productivityist.com and he'll give it a look. Want to listen on Stitcher? http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=53149&refid=stpr (Click here.) Support The Productivityist Podcast by becoming a patron! http://www.patreon.com/Productivityist (Click here) to visit The Productivityist Podcast's Patreon page and see what perks await those who pitch in a buck or more.

AwesomeCast: Tech and Gadget Talk
Episode 212: AwesomeCast 212: Commercial Weeds

AwesomeCast: Tech and Gadget Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2014 78:13


This week on Awesomecast 212, we talk awesome things in technology, including: An app that can help you with your to-do list; Timeful. A roku built right into a TV. The WWE Supercard app. The Ice Bucket Challenge for ALS. A replacement for turntable.fm! HP building a $199 Windows laptop. A discussion on the usefulness of a laptop like that. Google releasing another app for iOS; the Photo Sphere Camera. The role of social media in the situation in Ferguson. Changes to Facebook Likes and what information gets filtered on social media. After the show remember to: Eat at Slice on Broadway if you are in the Pittsburgh area! It is Awesome! (sliceonbroadway.com) Follow these awesome people on Twitter: Cynthia Closkey (@cynthiacloskey) , John Chichilla (@chilla) and Mike Sorg (@sorgatron). Also, check out sorgatronmedia.com and awesomecast.com for more entertainment; and view us livestreaming Tuesdays at 6:30 PM EST!

Product Hunt Radio
Product Hunt Radio: Episode 13 w/ Naval Ravikant & Joshua Slayton

Product Hunt Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2014 33:38


Before Product Hunt, I occasionally browsed AngelList, hunting for new startups for fun. As a long-time fan, I'm honored to have Naval Ravikant (Co-founder, AngelList) and Joshua Slayton (Venture Hacker, AngelList) on the show. We chatted about what AngelList really is, time-saving apps, and a few crazy products you wouldn't believe exist. Products mentioned: - Yo PRODUCT HUNTED (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/yo-producthunted) - Get a Yo whenever there's a Product Hunt with > 100 upvotes - Notational Velocity (http://notational.net/) - Modeless, mouseless Mac OS X note-taking application - Clear (http://realmacsoftware.com/clear) - Simple, beautiful mobile to-do list - Timeful (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/timeful) - Intelligent Time Management - Secret (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/secret) - Share anonymously with your friends. Speak freely. - Dark Sky (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/dark-sky) - Weather app that predicts when it will rain or snow - Yo (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/yo) - A simple app to say "yo" to friends - Inside 2.0 (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/inside-2-0) - Curating the best journalism in real-time - Sprig (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/sprig) - Hand-crafted dinners on demand - Spoonrocket (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/spoonrocket) - Most convenient meal ever. $6 delivered. - Order Ahead (https://www.orderaheadapp.com/) - Order pickup from great businesses nearby - HotelTonight (http://www.hoteltonight.com/) - Last-minute hotel deals. Tonight. - Homejoy (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/homejoy) - Get Your Place Cleaned - Flytenow (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/flytenow) - Go flying with local pilots - Hitch (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/hitch) - An affordable way to get around SF by sharing your ride. - Sidecar Shared Rides (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/sidecar-shared-rides) - Sidecar offers "Shared Rides" - Bandwagon (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/bandwagon) - Share cabs. Save money. - Sweetch (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/sweetch) - Park on-street instantly in SF - Faraday Bikes (http://www.faradaybikes.com/) - Lightweight, inconspicuous electric bicycles - Airpnp (http://www.producthunt.com/posts/airpnp) - Airbnb for toilets. Intro/outro music by eldienneproductions - https://soundcloud.com/eldienneproductions/hip-hop-beat-instrumental