How to Schedule Deep Work Blocks That Actually Stick
Originally published on Schedule Calendar Blog
Deep work is the kind of thinking that produces your best output. The problem is that calendars fill with shallow commitments first, and deep work never gets scheduled until it's too late in the day to do it well.
Why deep work blocks disappear
Deep work blocks fail for predictable reasons. They get scheduled as the last thing, in the leftover gaps between meetings. They are marked as Free, so they accept new invites without resistance. And they carry generic names like 'Focus time' that offer no accountability when you sit down to start.
The result: by Wednesday, the deep work session you planned is gone — moved for a 'quick call', filled with email catch-up, or simply never started because the day got busy.
Choosing the right time for your deep work block
Most people have a natural cognitive peak — a 2–4 hour window when concentration is sharpest. For many, it's early morning before the day fragments. For others, it's late morning after a light startup routine.
Protect this window before anything else. Schedule your deep work block before opening your inbox, before checking Slack, and before accepting any new meeting invites. The block should claim the best hours on your calendar, not the remaining ones.
Useful constraint: schedule your deep work blocks on Sunday or Friday for the following week. The further in advance a block exists, the less likely it is to be displaced by something that feels urgent in the moment.
Making the block structurally resistant
Mark it as Busy
A block marked Busy does not accept meeting invites silently. Anyone who tries to schedule over it sees the conflict. This does not make the block permanent — you can still move it — but it adds friction to the wrong decisions.
Name it specifically
A block named 'Write API documentation section 3' is harder to skip than one named 'Deep work.' The specific name creates a commitment. When you sit down, you know what you're doing. When you're tempted to scroll instead, the name is a mild accountability signal.
Give it a minimum length
Blocks shorter than 60 minutes rarely produce deep output. The first 20 minutes often goes to orientation and context recovery. Protect a minimum of 90 minutes for work that requires sustained attention.
Key takeaways:
- Schedule deep work before meetings claim the best hours.
- Mark blocks Busy — reduce the friction of protecting them.
- Use specific names: what exactly happens in this block?
Read the full guide on the Schedule Calendar blog — including a complete FAQ section, step-by-step examples, and how Schedule Calendar helps you put these habits into practice.
Top comments (0)