- 2h extreme focus (solve problems by designing solutions, write code) - 2h casual work (answer slack, review code) - 1h meetings (if any) - 1h reading (tech books)
I don't work 8h/day anymore (even though my employee contract states 40h/week)... my productivity is the same as before (when working from the office) but my mental health has dramatically improved.
Spending as little as 15 minutes everyday is going to prove way more effective than spending 2 hours each day for only a week and then nothing for a year.
What you will realize after some time is that the 15 minutes that you spend everyday helps you know the overview of what's going on, and once you start discussing such things, you feel good that you know something. And knowing that small something will motivate you to know more.
So my answer - it is not fixed. But I make sure I spend at least 15 minutes each day studying/reading on something new and relevant to my work.
Before I used to learn whatever I needed for the job when required and I often kept a podcast in the background.
Instead of “studying” during work I write about my learning process and document my learnings. These are artifacts others find useful, so I’m still building work products.
But if it interests me enough I will read books on it in my own time.
Personally an hour a day sound like what I do, but it's not really planned ahead.
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I work at work. If I need to learn something to solve a problem then I take as little time as possible and do that entirely ad-hoc.