How to Stop Managing Everything and Start Leading What Matters (with Rich Czyz)
MAR 18
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There’s a quiet trap many of us fall into when the pace picks up: we start reacting instead of leading. The inbox fills, the interruptions stack, and before long, the day is no longer ours—it’s everyone else’s.


In this conversation, I sit down with Rich Czyz, author of Autopilot: Practical Productivity for School Leaders, to explore how systems—not willpower—can help us reclaim that sense of direction. While his work is rooted in education, what we discuss applies far beyond school walls. This is about shifting from firefighting to forward thinking.


Six Discussion Points

  • Productivity isn’t about doing more—it’s about reclaiming space for what actually matters
  • The inbox is often just a collection of other people’s priorities unless you set boundaries around it
  • Systems work best when they are simple enough to start immediately and flexible enough to evolve
  • Batching and theming aren’t constraints—they’re ways to restore focus in fragmented environments
  • Delegation requires letting go of control, not just tasks
  • Elimination—not optimization—is often the most powerful first move toward meaningful work

Three Connection Points

If there’s a throughline in this conversation, it’s this: the goal isn’t to perfect your system—it’s to make space for what matters most. Whether you’re leading a school, a team, or simply your own day, the question is the same: what can you remove so that what remains has room to matter?

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