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Sergey Ilin
Sergey Ilin

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Time Blocking Templates for Different Work Styles

Time Blocking Templates for Different Work Styles

Originally published on Schedule Calendar Blog


Not all work schedules look the same. A time blocking template that works for a software engineer with long focus windows does not work for a manager with five calls before noon. Here are four templates adapted to different realities.

Why templates help

Starting a time blocking system from scratch means making dozens of small decisions each week: when do I block deep work, how long should each block be, where do I put email and admin, how do I handle the days that are mostly meetings?

A template provides a starting pattern — not a fixed rule, but a default structure to adapt. Most people modify their template significantly within a month, but having one at the start is faster than building from nothing.

Template 1: The maker schedule

Morning: 2–3 hour deep work block

This template works for roles with significant output work: engineers, writers, designers, researchers. The goal is a long morning block of uninterrupted focus, with all meetings and communication batched to the afternoon.

Midday: shallow work batch

A practical version: 8:00–10:30 deep work (Busy), 10:30–11:00 email/Slack batch, 11:00–12:00 meetings, 12:00–13:00 lunch, 13:00–17:00 available for meetings, with a 30-min wrap-up buffer at 16:30.

Afternoon: meetings only

The critical rule: the morning block is non-negotiable except for genuine emergencies. Everything else fits around it.

Template 2: The manager schedule

Morning: 1-on-1s and team syncs

Managers typically have less control over when meetings happen. This template accepts that reality and protects one reliable focus window rather than trying to minimize meetings.

Midday: a single focus block

A practical version: 9:00–12:00 available for team meetings (clustered), 12:00–13:30 protected focus block (Busy), 13:30–17:00 meetings and availability for decisions. The midday block is used for thinking that requires no interruption: planning, writing, reviewing strategy.

Afternoon: strategic decisions

The key: cluster meetings into the morning to create a predictable afternoon block that does not move.

Template 3: The remote worker

Morning: async communication catch-up

Remote work often means a mix of sync and async communication across time zones. This template front-loads async catch-up to clear communication overhead before the focus block begins.

Mid-morning: deep work block

A practical version: 8:00–9:00 async catch-up (email, Slack backlog, doc comments), 9:00–11:30 deep work block (Busy, notifications off), 11:30–12:30 lunch and light admin, 13:00–16:00 meetings and collaborative work.

Afternoon: availability window

The advantage: by 9am, the communication backlog is handled and the focus block starts with a clear head.

Key takeaways:

  • Makers: protect a long morning block; cluster meetings in the afternoon.
  • Managers: accept the meeting load, protect one midday focus block.
  • Remote workers: clear async catch-up before the focus block begins.

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.

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