If you're building something while your brain jumps between three tabs, Slack, email, and that thing you forgot to tell your co-founder, you're not lazy. Your working memory isn't broken. You just need a different system than the one designed for neurotypical people.
Most productivity advice assumes you can hold a mental model of your whole day. Time blocking. Weekly reviews. Priority matrices. These work fine if your brain naturally sorts information into hierarchies. If yours doesn't, they just become another place to fail.
Here's what actually works: external structure that matches how you think.
Start with a capture system that lives where you already are. This is not a fancy app. It's a single place - Slack channel, notes app, piece of paper - where thoughts go immediately. Not later. Now. Your brain gets relief the moment you write it down. The task doesn't have to be perfect. "Call about hosting" is fine. Your system catches it.
Next, use time blocking for single days only. Not weeks. Not even three days out. Tomorrow. What are the three to five things that have to happen? Block them. Include breaks. Include lunch. If you have ADHD, blocking 8 hours straight into work tasks guarantees failure by hour three. A 15-minute walk between tasks isn't wasted time - it's the thing that lets you focus on the next block.
For meetings, use a prep sheet. Sixty seconds before the call, write down: what's the decision or output I need? What's the one question I should ask? Who do I need to follow up with? This saves you from the classic move of finishing a call and realizing you forgot to mention the thing you called about.
Build a quick reference for recurring decisions. Every Monday, what needs to happen? Same meetings, same review, same prioritization. You're not deciding what to do. You're following a track you laid down when your brain was working better.
The hardest part isn't the system. It's the belief that you need permission to work differently. You do not. Your brain works. It just works differently. Systems built for someone else's neurology will make you feel broken even though you're using them correctly.
One more thing: reduce the number of systems you maintain. If you have a task manager, a notes app, a calendar, and a project tracker, you've created six places to lose information. Pick one or two. Make them boring and reliable. The best system is the one you'll actually use.
When you're ready to stop reinventing your process every month, the ADHD Founder Toolkit has templates built for this exact problem: time-blocking sheets that account for task switching, meeting prep templates, and decision lists that eliminate the overhead of deciding what matters today. It's two dollars and saves you the time you'd spend rebuilding what works. That's it.
Your productivity doesn't need to look like someone else's. It just needs to work. Start with capture today. Add time blocking tomorrow. Build from there.
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