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To work smarter instead of harder, efficiency is key. One method for achieving efficiency in your day-to-day functions, business, or other endeavors, is to apply the 80/20 rule.

What is the 80/20 rule?

The 80/20 rule, sometimes called the Pareto Principle, is a concept used in business and productivity conversations to suggest that roughly 80% of your output results from 20% of your input. That means 20% of the work that is done achieves most of the result.

This principle is named after Italian economist, Vilfredo Pareto, who observed how 80% of Italy’s land was owned by 20% of the population (another conversation). The principle has been applied to many fields, including business, economics, productivity, and personal development.

How to Use the 80/20 Rule

To use the 80/20 rule effectively, consider these steps:

1. Identify Your 20%

Determining your 20% might seem confusing, but the answers tend to reveal themselves once you start looking for them.

Analyze your tasks and activities to pinpoint which ones yield the most results.

Take a look at your client or customer list to see which ones offer the biggest payout.

Use data and metrics! Vibes can get you far, but they also bring in subjective bias. Support your claims with numbers.

2. Prioritize 

Once we have our 20%, we can allocate more of our time and resources to those higher-impact tasks. Knowing our points of focus provides the opportunity to develop strategies to enhance those strengths even more. What can you do to grow those pivotal areas?

3. Eliminate and Delegate

Unfortunately for the other 80%, it just didn’t make the 20. :/ RIP. It’s time to get a little mercenary about the way we conduct things.

Following the 80/20 principle, the next step is to reduce the time you spend on those low-impact activities. Some tasks are necessary to keep things running, to operate ethically, and to prioritize your key values. But the rest of it? Chop chop.

When it comes to your personal productivity, you could consider delegating or outsourcing tasks that aren’t contributing to your own goals.

4. Review and Edit

This isn’t a one-and-done solution. You might make some bad calls, but you’ll learn more and have additional data to operate with once you’ve begun the process of applying the 80/20 method.

This means it’s necessary to continually assess your processes and results to ensure you have accurately identified those key areas of productivity. Try to be flexible and ready to adjust focus as needed based on new information.

Examples of the 80/20 Rule

Here are a few illustrations to deepen your understanding of how this principle might apply to real life.

Office efficiency

In a workplace, a manager might find that 20% of her employees are actually doing 80% of the work. She might choose to focus on supporting those key employees to enhance overall performance.

Marketing firm

Say a marketing firm takes a closer look at where their leads are generated. If 20% of their marketing avenues produce 80% of the sales, it might make sense to allocate more of the budget toward that 20% to enhance effectiveness.

Personal productivity

If you boil down your daily schedule and see that you achieve 80% of your goals with 20% of your effort, you could sit down and prioritize your goals, cut out activities that no longer serve you, and either increase productivity or keep the same level of productivity with a lot more intentional rest time.

Weaknesses of the 80/20 Principle

But like anything, the 80/20 principle has its weaknesses and can be prone to misapplication if handled unthoughtfully. Here are a few things to look out for.

1. Oversimplification

The 80/20 ratio is an approximation and can vary quite significantly in real-world scenarios. It might be 70/30, 90/10, or 50/50 if you’re God’s perfect little angel.

2. Misapplication

This principle can be misapplied when people focus too narrowly on the “vital few” and neglect other important aspects. Overemphasizing on the top 20% can lead to ignoring potential improvements in the other 80%, overlooking key functions that don’t bring in profit but do help things run smoothly, and skipping tasks that contribute to the overall success of the venture.

In the office manager example above, if her strategy isn’t carefully planned, we could easily see her broadening the gap between her productive and less productive employees. She might neglect training the less productive ones, making them even less valuable workers. The productive employees may feel additionally burdened with expectations of out-performing their peers, which can lead to disenchantment and burnout.

3. Misidentification

Determining your 20% can be difficult! It requires accurate data and analysis, which are easy to mess up. This can lead to poor decisions and ineffective allocation. Keep careful tabs on all of the changes you implement to spot mistakes quickly.

4. Weak ethics

In some applications, this focus on min-maxing a space can lead to certain ethical concerns. For example, providing your employees with healthcare might not directly tie into improving your bottom line. That doesn’t make it unimportant or negligible. Further, the 80/20 principle (like many productivity strategies) bears the risk of exacerbating social inequalities when applied in ways that might disproportionately benefit already advantaged groups.

The 80/20 principle should be viewed as a heuristic tool to identify key areas of focus, keeping in mind the importance of using caution and common sense to ensure a balanced, comprehensive approach that doesn’t sweep the legs from under your operations.

Key Takeaways of the 80/20 Rule

Find imbalances of inputs and outputs. Not all efforts are equally productive or effective. Often, a small proportion of effort and resources leads to the majority of the result.

Prioritize tasks that fall into your crucial 20% to maximize effectiveness, but keep an eye out for that 80%: Are you neglecting important functional tasks, ignoring ethical concerns, or missing opportunities for improvement?

Cut tasks that serve little purpose proportional to the investment (save those ethical and functional operations).

Gemini

Self-managed business owner, self-taught smartass. 14 years of entrepreneurialism, still can't spell it.