
In a world where 80% of us feel time-poor, Harvard professor Ashley Whillans reveals the science of reclaiming your hours and happiness. What if outsourcing house cleaning could boost your joy as much as a significant salary increase? Time Smart delivers the ultimate wealth - more meaningful moments.
Ashley Whillans, author of Time Smart: How to Reclaim Your Time and Live a Happier Life, is an award-winning behavioral scientist and Harvard Business School professor renowned for her research on time poverty, happiness, and decision-making.
With a PhD in Social Psychology from the University of British Columbia, Whillans bridges academic rigor and practical insights, drawing from studies conducted with organizations ranging from Fortune 500 companies to the U.S. military and underserved communities in Kenya. Her TED Talk and media features in outlets like Scientific Reports and Behavioral Science & Policy amplify her evidence-based strategies for achieving “time affluence.”
A 2022 SAGE Emerging Career Trajectory Award recipient, Whillans’ work emphasizes trading monetary gains for time savings to boost well-being. Time Smart distills her decade of research into actionable tools, including assessments and mindset shifts, making it a staple in productivity and self-help genres. The book’s frameworks are widely adopted by executives, educators, and policymakers seeking to address modern time-management challenges.
Time Smart by Ashley Whillans is a research-backed guide to overcoming "time poverty," the feeling of having too much to do and too little time. It offers actionable strategies to reclaim time through mindset shifts, outsourcing tasks, and prioritizing meaningful activities. The book includes assessments, checklists, and real-world examples to help readers achieve "time affluence" and improve overall happiness.
This book is ideal for busy professionals, overwhelmed parents, or anyone struggling with work-life balance. It’s particularly valuable for those prioritizing productivity but neglecting personal joy, as well as leaders aiming to foster time-smart habits in teams. Ashley Whillans’ insights appeal to readers seeking data-driven solutions to reduce stress and increase fulfillment.
Yes—Time Smart combines academic rigor with practical tools, making it a standout in time-management literature. Whillans’ strategies, tested with diverse groups like the U.S. military and Kenyan entrepreneurs, provide a fresh perspective on valuing time over money. The inclusion of exercises and relatable anecdotes ensures immediate applicability for most readers.
Key ideas include:
Whillans recommends:
Unlike generic productivity guides, Time Smart focuses on emotional outcomes—happiness and fulfillment—rather than mere efficiency. Whillans’ Harvard-led research and case studies (e.g., military families, corporate workers) provide a unique blend of academic depth and real-world relevance.
The book argues that sacrificing time for money often reduces happiness, even with higher incomes. Whillans provides frameworks to calculate the "happiness ROI" of time-saving purchases (e.g., hiring help) and advocates for spending on experiences that create lasting memories.
Some readers might find the emphasis on outsourcing tasks impractical for those with limited budgets. Additionally, recovering workaholics may struggle to adopt leisure-scheduling habits initially. However, the book offers scalable solutions for varying lifestyles.
The book’s strategies combat burnout by encouraging boundaries (e.g., "tech-free zones") and redefining productivity. For remote workers, Whillans’ tips on avoiding hyperconnectivity and prioritizing restorative breaks align with modern challenges of blurred work-life lines.
Notable insights include:
Whillans advises retirees to view time as a portfolio to invest in relationships, hobbies, and growth. The book warns against filling retirement with “obligation creep” and instead advocates for intentional scheduling to sustain post-career fulfillment.
Absolutely. With rising AI automation and workplace burnout, Whillans’ emphasis on guarding attention and valuing experiential wealth remains critical. The book’s principles adapt to trends like four-day workweeks and digital detoxes, making it a timely resource for modern time challenges.
Siente el libro a través de la voz del autor
Convierte el conocimiento en ideas atractivas y llenas de ejemplos
Captura ideas clave en un instante para un aprendizaje rápido
Disfruta el libro de una manera divertida y atractiva
Time-not money-is our most precious resource.
We wear busyness like a badge of honor.
Workism has emerged as a modern religion.
Active leisure promotes happiness far more than passive leisure.
Volunteering makes us feel less time poor despite taking time.
Desglosa las ideas clave de Time Smart en puntos fáciles de entender para comprender cómo los equipos innovadores crean, colaboran y crecen.
Destila Time Smart en pistas de memoria rápidas que resaltan los principios clave de franqueza, trabajo en equipo y resiliencia creativa.

Experimenta Time Smart a través de narraciones vívidas que convierten las lecciones de innovación en momentos que recordarás y aplicarás.
Pregunta lo que quieras, elige la voz y co-crea ideas que realmente resuenen contigo.

Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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"It is great for me to learn something from the book without reading it."
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"Makes me feel smarter every time before going to work"
Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

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What if everything you've been taught about success is making you miserable? We chase promotions, bigger homes, and fuller bank accounts, believing that "someday" we'll finally have time to enjoy life. Yet despite earning more than previous generations and having technology that promised to liberate us, over 80% of working Americans report never having enough time. Here's the twist: we're not actually working more hours than we did in 1950. The average workweek has dropped from 37.8 to 34.2 hours, and we've gained 4-9 hours of weekly leisure time. So why does it feel like we're drowning? Picture your last "relaxing" evening at home. You settled onto the couch, ready to unwind, when your phone buzzed. A work email. Then a text. A news alert. A social media notification. Before you knew it, your peaceful hour had shattered into what researchers call "time confetti"-tiny fragments of 5-6 minutes, each interrupted by reminders of what you should be doing elsewhere. A single hour of leisure now faces an average of 21 interruptions. These aren't just annoying-they fundamentally transform how we experience time itself. This fragmentation creates a cruel paradox: we have more leisure time than ever, yet feel more time-starved. Technology hasn't freed us; it's made us feel perpetually behind. Even when physically present with family or friends, our minds remain tethered to work, to obligations, to that mounting list of tasks. We've traded deep, restorative leisure for shallow, anxiety-tinged downtime. The result? Time poverty has become an epidemic with real consequences: less exercise, worse nutrition, higher cardiovascular disease rates, and profound unhappiness that persists regardless of income level. The answer lies not in how much time we have, but in how we think about it-and that flawed thinking is costing us our health, happiness, and $640 billion annually in healthcare and lost productivity.