We tend to approach productivity systems for leaders as a refinement problem. We look at our workflows and ask how to make them better. Faster. More efficient.
But what if that’s the wrong starting point?
That’s the thread that stayed with me most from my conversation with Rich Czyz—not the tactics, but the posture. Before we optimize, before we organize, before we build anything new… we remove.
Because much of what fills our days isn’t chosen. It’s inherited.
Old practices. Lingering expectations. Processes that once made sense but no longer serve the present moment. They persist not because they’re valuable—but because they’ve never been questioned.
And so we layer systems on top of them.
Most productivity systems for leaders are built on top of existing work. They assume the work itself is valid—that it deserves to be organized, optimized, and sustained. But that assumption is rarely questioned.
And when raising any sort of questions, there’s a key one that must be asked: Why is this here at all?
It’s not about doing less for the sake of ease. It’s about clearing space so that intention can take root again.
This is where productiveness begins—not in the act of producing, but in the decision of what deserves to be produced at all.
It’s a quieter move. Less visible. But far more foundational.
Because once something is removed, you don’t need to manage it. You don’t need to optimize it. You don’t need a system for it.
It’s simply… gone.
And in that absence, something else becomes possible. Not more work. Better work.
