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energy-management

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Energy Management

Scope

Covers

  • Managing energy (cognitive/emotional/attention), not just time
  • Identifying energy drivers and energy drains and redesigning your week accordingly
  • Expanding “zone of genius” time via delegation, elimination, automation, and clearer boundaries
  • Creating micro-recovery routines (buffers, transitions, meeting hygiene) and a low-energy-day protocol
  • Running a 2-week pilot to validate changes and iterate

When to use

  • “I’m exhausted / close to burnout. Help me redesign my week for energy.”
  • “Audit my calendar and help me spend more time in my zone of genius.”
  • “I want a system to track what gives me energy vs drains me after each interaction.”
  • “Create meeting norms and boundaries so I stop hemorrhaging energy.”

When NOT to use

  • You are in an acute physical/mental health crisis or need medical advice. Seek professional help and follow your company policy.
  • You need HR/legal guidance (harassment, discrimination, retaliation, threats, investigations).
  • Your environment is unsafe or coercive; prioritize safety and support systems first. This skill can help document constraints and draft a negotiation plan, but it won’t “optimize” an unsafe situation.

Inputs

Minimum required

  • Your role + core responsibilities (and whether you manage people)
  • The time horizon: a 2-week pilot + what “better” means in 4–8 weeks
  • Current pain (2–5 concrete examples of what’s draining you) + desired outcome
  • A representative week (calendar text dump, recurring meetings list, or narrative)
  • Constraints/non-negotiables (time zones, caregiving, deadlines, on-call, travel, “can’t move” meetings)

Missing-info strategy

  • Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md (3–5 at a time).
  • If calendar detail is unavailable, proceed with a 7-day energy log first and provide a conservative default-week plan with explicit assumptions.
  • Do not request secrets, credentials, or sensitive personal health details.

Outputs (deliverables)

Produce an Energy Management Operating System Pack (Markdown in-chat; or as files if requested) in this order:

  1. Context snapshot (goal, constraints, assumptions, success definition)
  2. Energy Drivers & Drains Map (top drivers/drains + levers)
  3. Calendar Energy Audit (time buckets + “zone of genius” estimate)
  4. Zone of Genius Expansion Plan (stop/delegate/automate/defer list)
  5. Energy-Aligned Default Week (time blocks + meeting rules)
  6. Recovery + Transition Plan (buffers, micro-breaks, low-energy-day protocol)
  7. 2-Week Pilot + Experiment Tracker (what changes, how we measure)
  8. Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)

Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
Expanded guidance: references/WORKFLOW.md

Workflow (8 steps)

1) Intake + objective + safety boundaries

  • Inputs: user context; references/INTAKE.md.
  • Actions: Clarify the goal in 4–8 weeks (e.g., “end week with energy”, “reduce decision fatigue”, “make space for deep work”). Confirm boundaries (not medical/HR/legal). Choose scope: full OS pack vs subset.
  • Outputs: Context snapshot (draft) + assumptions/unknowns.
  • Checks: Success is measurable enough to evaluate after 4 weeks (even with qualitative measures).

2) Capture baseline energy signals (7-day log + quick retro)

  • Inputs: last 1–2 weeks memory; calendar if available.
  • Actions: Create a lightweight energy log structure. If you have calendar data, do a quick retro: list the top 10 activities/interactions and mark “energized” vs “sapped” after each.
  • Outputs: Energy Log (starter) + initial “suspected drivers/drains” list.
  • Checks: At least 5 concrete drivers/drains are identified (not vague labels like “people”).

3) Build the Energy Drivers & Drains Map (with levers)

  • Inputs: Energy Log + retro list.
  • Actions: Consolidate into a map: drivers, drains, triggers, and controllable levers (eliminate, delegate, redesign, time-shift, batch, buffer, prepare, recover).
  • Outputs: Drivers & Drains Map + “top 3 change levers” to try first.
  • Checks: Each top drain has at least one specific lever and a next action.

4) Audit the calendar for “zone of genius” vs “energy tax”

  • Inputs: representative week calendar (or estimate).
  • Actions: Bucket time into: (A) Zone of genius / high leverage, (B) Necessary but neutral, (C) Energy drains, (D) Recovery/admin. Identify the bottom bucket(s) to reduce.
  • Outputs: Calendar Energy Audit + zone-of-genius estimate and biggest offenders (meetings, context switching, decision load).
  • Checks: The audit produces 3–5 candidate deletions/redesigns with owners and dates.

5) Expand zone of genius via stop/delegate/automate/defer

  • Inputs: audit offenders; constraints; stakeholders.
  • Actions: Turn drains into an offload plan: what to stop, what to delegate, what to automate, what to defer. For delegation, specify decision rights and guardrails (don’t just “hand it off”).
  • Outputs: Zone of Genius Expansion Plan + 2–3 delegation briefs (as needed).
  • Checks: At least 2 concrete “energy taxes” are removed or redesigned in the next 2 weeks.

6) Design an energy-aligned default week + meeting hygiene

  • Inputs: your energy curve (high/medium/low), constraints, offload plan.
  • Actions: Create a default week with time blocks aligned to energy (deep work in high-energy windows; admin in low-energy windows). Add meeting hygiene: buffers, batching, agendas/decisions, shorter defaults (25/50), async-first updates.
  • Outputs: Energy-Aligned Default Week + Meeting Rules.
  • Checks: The plan reduces fragmentation (fewer context switches) and includes buffers between high-load blocks.

7) Add recovery + transitions (and a low-energy-day protocol)

  • Inputs: work patterns; remote/hybrid context.
  • Actions: Define micro-recovery routines (between-meeting buffer, decompression, movement, sensory breaks) and “low-energy day” rules (minimum viable day, what to postpone, how to communicate). Include optional “neurological load” aids for remote work (e.g., standing, doodling/fidgeting, walking calls) without making medical claims.
  • Outputs: Recovery + Transition Plan + Low-Energy-Day Protocol.
  • Checks: Recovery actions are scheduled (not aspirational) and do not rely on willpower alone.

8) Run a 2-week pilot + measure + iterate

  • Inputs: full draft pack.
  • Actions: Define 2–4 experiments (time-shift, reduce meetings, add buffers, delegate, change meeting format). Decide what you’ll measure (daily energy rating, end-of-week energy, number of deep-work blocks, “drain count”). Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Add Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
  • Outputs: Final Energy Management Operating System Pack + 2-week tracking sheet.
  • Checks: Experiments have clear decision rules: keep / modify / stop after 2 weeks.

Quality gate (required)

Examples

Example 1 (meeting overload): “I’m a product leader in back-to-back meetings and I’m exhausted. Audit my week and give me a default schedule + meeting rules + delegation plan.”
Expected: drivers/drains map, calendar audit, offload plan, default week, meeting hygiene rules, 2-week pilot.

Example 2 (role fit signals): “After certain calls I feel energized, after others I feel drained. Help me build a tracking system and use it to redesign my scope.”
Expected: energy log + drivers/drains map, patterns, specific levers (time-shift/batch/delegate), and a 2-week experiment tracker.

Boundary example (medical crisis): “I’m having panic attacks and can’t sleep; fix my energy.”
Response: do not provide medical advice; encourage professional help. Offer a minimal work-boundary plan (reduce commitments, document constraints, notify stakeholders) and a tracking template only if appropriate.

Source

git clone https://github.com/liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus/blob/main/skills/energy-management/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Build an Energy Management Operating System Pack that includes an energy drivers/drains map, calendar energy audit, zone-of-genius expansion plan, energy-aligned weekly schedule, recovery routines, and a 2-week experiments framework. It enables sustainable leadership performance and burnout prevention by aligning work with energy signals rather than just time.

How This Skill Works

Collect energy signals (cognitive, emotional, attention) to map drivers and drains, then redesign your week around your zone of genius through delegation, automation, and clearer boundaries. Create micro-recovery routines, establish a low-energy-day protocol, and run a 2-week pilot to validate changes, using a calendar energy audit to inform an energy-aligned default week.

When to Use It

  • I’m exhausted / close to burnout. Help me redesign my week for energy.
  • Audit my calendar and help me spend more time in my zone of genius.
  • I want a system to track what gives me energy vs drains me after each interaction.
  • Create meeting norms and boundaries so I stop hemorrhaging energy.
  • I want a 2-week pilot to test energy-management changes and iterate.

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Gather inputs (your role, core responsibilities, 2-week horizon, current pain points, representative week, constraints).
  2. Step 2: Set objective and safety boundaries (4–8 weeks, scope, and non-medical limitations).
  3. Step 3: Launch a baseline energy log and draft the initial Energy Drivers/Drains map; prepare a Context snapshot and plan the 2-week pilot.

Best Practices

  • Start with a baseline energy log (7-day if calendar detail is unavailable) to surface patterns.
  • Define your zone of genius and specify what to delegate, automate, or defer.
  • Build the energy drivers/drains map before redesigning your calendar or meetings.
  • Include buffers and meeting hygiene to protect energy between tasks and meetings.
  • Run a structured 2-week pilot and track energy outcomes to iterate.

Example Use Cases

  • A leader uses the energy drivers/drains map to reallocate tasks to their zone of genius, reducing fatigue and increasing deep-work time.
  • An executive conducts a calendar energy audit and eliminates back-to-back meetings, freeing energy for strategic work.
  • After implementing an energy-tracking system, a manager identifies frequent energy dips after certain types of meetings and adjusts cadence accordingly.
  • A team adopts meeting norms and boundary rules, dramatically lowering energy drain during collaboration.
  • A 2-week pilot tests reduced non-essential tasks and introduced automated workflows, with measurable gains in energy at day end.

Frequently Asked Questions

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