There’s something quietly radical about choosing the less common word.
Most people talk about productivity. I’ve been talking about productiveness.
That alone feels unconventional—not because it’s new, but because it runs against the grain. Productivity is familiar. Accepted. Optimized. Productiveness, by contrast, sounds almost awkward when you first say it out loud. It asks you to pause. To consider being over doing.
And that pause matters.
Productivity is about output. Productiveness is about orientation. One measures results; the other reflects a relationship—especially your relationship with time, energy, and attention. The former fits neatly into systems and dashboards. The latter asks whether those systems actually serve the life you’re trying to live.
Choosing productiveness over productivity isn’t a rejection of work. It’s a refusal to let work define worth.
That choice, it turns out, is deeply unconventional.
Unconventional doesn’t have to mean nonconformist in the loud, contrarian sense. It doesn’t require swimming upstream just to prove you can. Sometimes it simply means not accepting the default. Not assuming that faster is better. Not believing that more visible effort equals more meaningful progress.
I’ve been operating this way publicly for years now—and privately for even longer. It wasn’t always labeled. It wasn’t always articulated but it was always there: an instinct that the conventional productivity conversation was missing something essential.
That instinct led me away from rigid systems and toward practices that adapt. Away from chasing efficiency and toward cultivating clarity. Away from managing time like a resource and toward relating to it as something alive—something you move with, not against.
That path hasn’t always been the easiest one to explain. It certainly hasn’t been the most marketable but it has been sustainable. And, paradoxically, more effective.
Why Conventional Productivity Breaks Down
Here’s the thing most productivity conversations get wrong: conformity scales output, but individuality sustains effort.
When you follow someone else’s “perfect” system, you may get short-term gains. But when that system ignores your rhythms—your energy patterns, your constraints, your values—it eventually collapses under its own weight. What looks efficient on paper becomes exhausting in practice.
Unconventional approaches tend to work not because they’re clever, but because they’re personal. They bend toward the human instead of asking the human to bend toward them.
That’s where productiveness quietly outperforms productivity.
Eight years ago, I shared a video that captured this idea in motion. I didn’t frame it as a manifesto or declare a movement. I simply articulated a way of working—and living—that didn’t fit the dominant narrative.
Watching it now, what strikes me isn’t how different it feels. It’s how consistent it is.
Unconventional Ages Better Than Trends
The language may have evolved. The frameworks have matured. But the core conviction remains unchanged: the most effective way to do meaningful work is often the least conventional one.
Conventional productivity promises control. Productiveness offers coherence.
One asks, “How much can I get done?” The other asks, “What kind of person am I becoming through how I work?”
That question doesn’t lend itself to hacks or shortcuts. It resists optimization. And that’s precisely why it matters.
Being unconventional isn’t about standing apart for the sake of it. It’s about standing with yourself. Choosing approaches that honor your limits instead of pretending they don’t exist. Designing days that reflect your values instead of reacting to everyone else’s urgency.
In a world obsessed with doing more, choosing to work differently is a competitive advantage—not because it makes you faster, but because it makes you durable.
And durability, over time, wins.
