Harness CEO: Forget time management—here’s how I stay productive while running 3 companies
Jyoti Bansal has plenty on his plate with Harness, Traceable, and Unusual Ventures, but he doesn’t get overwhelmed. · Fortune · courtesy of harness

Running multiple companies can definitely be challenging. I lead three businesses with thousands of employees around the world. In terms of commitments and responsibilities, on any given day I’m always oversubscribed.

But that doesn’t mean I’m overwhelmed.

So much has been written about productivity hacks, from the latest scheduling craze to the app that promises to change your life. I don’t put much stock in these things. Ultimately, there’s no substitute for hard work and no cheat code to game the system. Most entrepreneurs I know work long hours, and it’s a choice they make consciously.

All of that said, I have learned something important over the years about the power of prioritization. By being strategic about what I do—and the order I do it in—I’m able to turn what could be an impossible to-do list into something manageable. It doesn’t involve any special apps—or any biohacking.

Here are a few common-sense techniques I figured out on the fly, after some trial and error.

The 30/70 rule

For me, being productive starts with creating room to do things that matter.

It would be easy to fill up my calendar with prescheduled, recurring meetings, but I make sure not to let that happen. In any given week, they account for no more than 30% of my time.

As any leader knows, meeting creep is a real problem. Two-thirds of managers say meetings keep them from finishing their work, while roughly the same share say they’re unproductive and inefficient—and come at the cost of deep thinking.

The other 70% of my week is highly flexible, based on what’s important. Typically, I spend half of that time talking to customers and employees. The rest I use for strategy—tasks like fundraising, company messaging, or exploring a new product area.

Impact management, not time management

So many leaders are obsessed with time management—meticulously dividing their calendar into color-coded units for different activities. To me, it’s not about time. It’s about impact.

The gist: If I work on something, will it actually move the needle forward? If I don’t, will it move the needle backward? At any moment at all three companies, I focus on only seven or eight high-impact projects that truly meet this bar.

Often, those projects aren’t neatly defined by one departmental boundary. For example, building the next version of our investor story—the narrative explaining where our company has been and where it’s going—calls for finance, sales, and marketing to work together. That’s where my expertise is most useful.

Lean into your superpower

On that note, leaders who want to make an impact should lean into their superpower. Mine happens to be product, so I make sure I have time to bring that strength to the table—partly by letting the right executives and teams run with other things.