Module 2 – Smart Schedule Creation

Module 2: Smart Schedule Creation – Text Companion

Welcome to Strategic Weekly Planning

This module moves you beyond reactive daily planning to strategic weekly planning that transforms how you handle competing priorities and work with your natural energy patterns.

Why Weekly Planning Matters

Daily planning is reactive – you’re just responding to what’s immediately in front of you. Weekly planning is strategic because it allows you to:

  • See the bigger picture and identify potential conflicts early
  • Balance urgent tasks with important long-term goals
  • Allocate proper time blocks for deep, focused work
  • Work with your natural energy rhythms rather than against them

The Weekly Brain Dump Process

Every Sunday evening (or your chosen planning day), complete this comprehensive capture:

Tasks and Commitments to Include:

  • Everything due this specific week
  • Recurring commitments (meetings, appointments, deadlines)
  • Ongoing projects that need progress this week
  • Personal priorities and goals that matter to you
  • Any preparation needed for the following week

Information to Gather:

  • Your weekly schedule with fixed commitments
  • Any deadlines or time-sensitive deliverables
  • Your typical energy patterns throughout the week
  • Any known disruptions or unusual events

Your Core Weekly Planning Prompt

“Here are my tasks for this week [list or upload photo]. My recurring commitments are [meetings, deadlines, regular obligations]. My energy is highest on [specific days/times]. Please suggest which days to tackle each task and explain your reasoning.”

Advanced Prompting Techniques

Handling Competing Priorities

When everything feels urgent, use this prompt:

“I have these competing priorities this week [list all tasks]. Help me categorise them using: Must do this week, Should do this week, Could do this week. Then suggest which to tackle first and why.”

AI-Enhanced Eisenhower Matrix

Let AI sort your tasks by importance and urgency:

“Please categorise these tasks using the Eisenhower Matrix: [list your tasks]. Then tell me which quadrant to focus on first and explain the reasoning.”

Energy-Based Strategic Scheduling

Match tasks to your natural rhythms:

“I’m most creative in the morning, have steady energy in the afternoon, and low energy after 4pm. Given these tasks [list], when should I schedule each one for maximum effectiveness?”

Real Example: Complex Work Week

Input to AI: “Report due Friday, 3 client meetings, team presentation to prepare, monthly budget review, catch up on industry reading, plan next quarter strategy.”

AI’s Strategic Response:

  • Monday: Budget review (analytical work when mind is fresh)
  • Tuesday: Client meetings (high energy for relationship focus)
  • Wednesday: Report writing (deep work, mid-week concentration)
  • Thursday: Presentation prep (building on completed report)
  • Friday: Presentation delivery, industry reading (lighter tasks)

Notice how AI considers cognitive load, energy requirements, and logical task sequencing.

Planning for Disruptions

Use this prompt to build flexibility into your weekly plan:

“This is my ideal week [paste your AI-suggested schedule]. If urgent tasks come up, which items could be moved to next week with minimal impact? What’s my contingency plan?”

Your Weekly Planning Ritual

Step 1: Sunday Evening Preparation (10 minutes)

  • Complete your weekly brain dump
  • Review your calendar for the upcoming week
  • Note your energy patterns and any unusual commitments

Step 2: AI Strategic Planning (5 minutes)

  • Input all information using your chosen weekly planning prompt
  • Include energy preferences and any constraints

Step 3: Review and Adjust (5 minutes)

  • Review AI suggestions critically
  • Make adjustments based on your specific context
  • Ensure the plan feels realistic and achievable

Step 4: Calendar Blocking (5 minutes)

  • Block time in your actual calendar for important tasks
  • Build in 20% buffer time for unexpected interruptions

Step 5: Prepare Contingencies (2 minutes)

  • Identify which tasks could move if emergencies arise
  • Have backup plans for your most important deliverables

Practice Exercise

Try this comprehensive prompt for your next week:

“Here’s what I need to accomplish next week [your actual task list]. I work best [describe your energy patterns]. I have [number] hours available for focused work. Please create a strategic weekly plan that maximises my effectiveness while ensuring important deadlines are met.”

Quick Wins You’ll Experience

  • Strategic Thinking: Move from reactive firefighting to proactive planning
  • Energy Optimisation: Work with your natural rhythms for better results
  • Conflict Prevention: Spot potential scheduling issues before they become problems
  • Balanced Priorities: Ensure both urgent and important work gets proper attention
  • Reduced Stress: Clear weekly direction eliminates daily decision fatigue
  • Better Outcomes: Strategic task sequencing improves quality and efficiency

Common Weekly Planning Mistakes to Avoid

  • Overestimating Available Time: Remember to account for meetings, breaks, and interruptions
  • Ignoring Energy Patterns: Don’t schedule creative work during your low-energy periods
  • Underestimating Task Complexity: Allow more time for unfamiliar or complex work
  • Forgetting Buffer Time: Always build in flexibility for unexpected urgent tasks
  • Skipping the Review: Always critically evaluate AI suggestions before implementing

Adapting Throughout the Week

Your weekly plan is a guide, not a rigid schedule. When disruptions occur:

  1. Refer to your contingency planning from Sunday
  2. Use AI to quickly reorganise remaining tasks
  3. Focus on maintaining progress on truly important items
  4. Learn from changes to improve next week’s planning

Coming Up Next

In Module 3: Email & Communication Strategy, you’ll learn:

  • AI-powered inbox prioritisation using photos of your email
  • Spotting automation opportunities from email patterns
  • Summarising complex email threads instantly
  • Drafting professional responses to challenging situations

Action Step

This Sunday, complete your first strategic weekly planning session using the prompts from this module. Notice how different this feels compared to just planning day-by-day. Pay attention to which suggestions work well for your specific situation and energy patterns.

Remember: Weekly planning is about working strategically, not just efficiently. You’re not just managing time – you’re optimising for your best work and most important outcomes.