When founders ask how to be more productive, they're almost always asking the wrong question. The actual question is priority. The two get conflated all the time, and the conflation is expensive.
YC's group partners spent an episode pulling this apart, and the punchline lands hard: most of the founders they think are exceptional don't have elaborate productivity stacks. They aren't waking up at 5am to cold-plunge before journaling. They aren't comparing notion templates. They are just hyper-focused on the one or two things that move their business and aggressively saying no to everything else.
If you're reading articles about how to be more productive, you are probably engaged in what they call productivity porn. It feels like work because you are absorbing tactics. You aren't actually doing anything. The tactics are extreme, often performative, and the people most loudly evangelising them are usually not the people building the most valuable companies.
Fake work is more dangerous than goofing off. Watching Netflix for four hours is obviously a waste. You know you wasted it. What's deadly is the kind of work that feels like work — rebuilding your CRM, refining your notion architecture, tweaking the new AI chatbot for your sales reps — but doesn't move the needle on the only metric that matters. Pre-PMF, an elaborate doc system is the equivalent of cleaning your room because you don't want to do your homework. It looks productive. It is avoidance.
The trap is especially tempting for technical founders. It's draining to call ten VPs of sales and dig into their tedious operational pain. It's fun to fiddle with new tooling. The accessible thing is rarely the right thing.
Priority is just a few stupid simple questions
The questions are not clever. They are aggressively obvious:
- What is my number one goal?
- What is the bottleneck blocking it?
- Are the things I'm spending time on actually aligned with that?
Eighty percent of the gain comes from asking these out loud and answering honestly. The remaining twenty percent is having the discipline to actually audit your calendar against the answer.
A YC board member used to make founders stack rank their projects every quarter — one to ten, no ties. The forcing function did the work. Once you've ordered them, you realise you can only do the top three anyway, so the bottom seven get killed instead of starved. Most founders don't kill those seven; they let them limp along, taking partial attention from each. That partial attention is fake work in slow motion.
Steve Jobs's version of the same idea: focus is saying no. The best founders the YC partners have worked with all share one trait — they have no FOMO. They turn down interesting events, ignore non-priority emails, and disappoint people on purpose. Pretty aggressive about what is not a priority. That stance, more than any tool, is the productivity hack.
The maker / manager split
The one productivity concept the partners said is genuinely valuable comes from Paul Graham's old essay: maker schedule vs manager schedule.
Makers — engineers, writers, designers — need long uninterrupted blocks. You cannot write good code in thirty-minute slivers between meetings. Managers need the opposite — back-to-back meeting blocks so they can stay in conversation mode all day.
The mistake almost every founder makes is mixing them. A meeting at 10, a coding sprint at 11, a sales call at 1, more code at 2. Result: no real meetings happened and no real code happened. One YC partner's solution as a technical founder was to put every meeting in the morning and protect the entire afternoon and evening for six hours of uninterrupted code. That's how he kept shipping years into the company even after the engineering team scaled.
You do not have to mimic that exact split. You do have to pick a side per block and defend it.
Social media, validation, and which audience matters
Founder social media has a specific failure mode: you start believing the press-release version of your company instead of the real one. TechCrunch wrote you up, retweets are flowing, the conference invites are coming. None of that moves the product. The customer pain does. The best founders the partners know don't spend much time on social — they get their validation from customers, not comments.
There's a real exception. If your customers genuinely live on a platform — GitHub stars for an open source project, Hacker News for a dev tool, sometimes Twitter for a particular market — then go where they are. But link every social action back to the actual hypothesis you're testing. If it doesn't tie back, it's distraction dressed up as marketing.
Hyperfocus and self-awareness
Two more things separate the productive founders from the hustlers:
They don't multitask. Most people think they're great at it. They are not. The actual secret is hyperfocus on a tiny number of things. "My job is to talk to customers and build the product. Anything else is probably not a priority."
They know what they're uniquely good at. As the company scales, the best founders develop sharp self-awareness about which problems only they can solve — and which they should hand off completely. They protect the energy for what they do best and they empower other people to own the rest.
What it actually comes down to
There is no shortcut. The pattern across the most productive founders is unglamorous: they love what they're working on, they put in the hours, and they don't have complicated systems for extracting more output from themselves. The mind that is always looking for the shortcut is usually the mind that struggles. The mind that is just willing to put in the time is usually the one that wins.
So: stop asking how to be more productive. Ask what is the one thing. Stack rank everything else. Block your calendar by maker or manager. Say no on purpose. And then go work on the thing.
Source: The Founder's Guide to Radical Priority and Real Work — Y Combinator