
At Your Best
How to Get Time, Energy, and Priorities Working in Your Favor
Visão geral de At Your Best
Burned out? Carey Nieuwhof's "At Your Best" reveals why vacations won't save you. Endorsed by Adam Grant and Seth Godin, this game-changing guide shows how top performers align priorities with peak energy - not just manage time. Reclaim your calendar, reclaim your life.
Temas principais em At Your Best
- energy management
- burnout prevention
- peak performance windows
- boundary setting
- time auditing
Citações de At Your Best
Not all hours in your day are created equal.
Passion makes you feel you can't imagine not doing something.
People caught in this pattern tackle important tasks randomly.
Technology only compounds these problems, as our phones ensure work follows us everywhere.
Personagens de At Your Best
- Carey NieuwhofAuthor and leader who overcame burnout
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Perguntas Frequentes Sobre Este Livro
At Your Best provides a framework to optimize time, energy, and priorities to avoid burnout and achieve sustainable productivity. Nieuwhof combines personal anecdotes with strategies like energy zones, the Thrive Cycle, and the Priority Matrix to help readers reclaim 1,000+ hours annually. Focused on aligning tasks with peak energy periods, it emphasizes saying "no" strategically to protect what matters most.
This book targets professionals, leaders, and anyone feeling overwhelmed by constant demands. It’s ideal for those seeking work-life balance, improved productivity, or burnout recovery strategies. Nieuwhof’s approach benefits entrepreneurs, parents, and individuals struggling to prioritize effectively in high-pressure environments.
Yes, for its actionable systems like energy-based task management and the Thrive Cycle. Readers praise its relatable storytelling and tools to regain control of schedules. Critics note it avoids systemic causes of burnout, but its focus on personal agency makes it valuable for practical self-improvement.
Nieuwhof categorizes daily energy into:
- Green Zone: 3–5 peak hours for high-impact tasks.
- Yellow Zone: Moderate energy for routine work.
- Red Zone: Low energy for trivial tasks.
Aligning priorities with these zones boosts productivity while reducing exhaustion.
The Thrive Cycle links three elements:
- Focused Time: Blocking peak hours for top priorities.
- Leveraged Energy: Matching tasks to energy levels.
- Realized Priorities: Aligning work with core passions.
This creates a self-reinforcing system to sustain performance without burnout.
Nieuwhof’s Priority Matrix sorts tasks into four categories:
- High-impact and urgent.
- High-impact but not urgent.
- Low-impact and urgent.
- Low-impact and not urgent.
He advises prioritizing Quadrant 2 tasks to achieve long-term goals without reactive busyness.
Key strategies include:
- Protecting Green Zone time for critical work.
- Practicing "organized neglect" of low-priority tasks.
- Setting boundaries to decline non-essential commitments.
- Regular self-assessment to adjust energy allocation.
Nieuwhof argues time is fixed, but energy and priorities aren’t. His "Thrive Calendar" method pre-schedules high-priority tasks in Green Zones, while minimizing distractions like notifications. He advises admitting "I didn’t make time" instead of claiming "I don’t have time".
While both focus on incremental change, At Your Best prioritizes energy management over habit stacking. Nieuwhof’s system targets time optimization for overwhelmed professionals, whereas Clear’s approach builds long-term routines. Readers call it "Atomic Habits meets deep productivity".
Some reviewers argue it overlooks systemic workplace issues causing burnout. Others find its prescriptive systems challenging for erratic schedules. However, most praise its practicality, with 79% of Goodreads reviewers rating it 4–5 stars.
- "Your best hours are a non-renewable resource."
- "Burnout isn’t having too much to do; it’s doing too much that doesn’t matter."
- "Say ‘no’ to the unimportant to say ‘yes’ to the extraordinary."
Nieuwhof shifts focus from output volume to strategic energy investment. By prioritizing tasks that align with gifting, passion, and impact, readers achieve more meaningful results in fewer hours. This counters "hustle culture" by valuing sustainability over relentless effort.

















