When I picked up The 4-Hour Workweek, I was worried it was some sort of “get rich quick” book. The first few pages didn’t do much to change my mind.
The author, Timothy Ferriss, makes a lot of bold claims, such as: “How do you create a hands-off business that generates $80,000 per month with no management? It’s all here.”
But something happened during the first few chapters. When I read a book, I use small sticky notes to mark interesting passages. After the first 100 pages of The 4-Hour Workweek, the book was thick with stickies. By the time I was finished, I had used an entire pad!
Ferriss does make a lot of bold promises, and some of the details along the way do read like the confessions of a get-rich-quick scammer. But I believe that an intelligent reader can easily extract a wealth of useful ideas from the book. For me, it’s a keeper. I’ve read it three times already, and will probably read it again before the end of the year.
Let’s Make a Deal
After college, Ferriss took a soul-sucking sales job at a tech firm. He left to start a soul-sucking business of his own. He went from working 40 hours a week for somebody else to working 80 hours a week for himself. He hated it. The pay was good, but the business left him drained.
After learning about the Pareto Principle (more commonly known as the 80-20 Principle), Ferriss had a revelation: he streamlined his business, eliminating distractions and automating systems until it was not only more profitable, but also took less of his time. Much less. He took a “mini-retirement”, and then decided to write a book about “lifestyle design”, about creating a life that balances work and play, maximizing the positives of both.
The 4-Hour Workweek is divided into four sections, each of which explores one of the components to lifestyle design:
- Define your objectives. Decide what’s important. Set goals. Ask yourself, “What do I really want?”
- Eliminate distractions to free up time. Learn to be effective, not efficient. Focus on the 20% of stuff that’s important and ignore the 80% that isn’t. Put yourself on a low-information diet. Learn to shunt aside interruptions, and learn to say “no”.
- Automate your cash flow to increase income. Outsource your life — hire a virtual assistant to handle menial tasks. Develop a business that can run on auto-pilot. (This is the weakest section of the book.)
- Liberate yourself from traditional expectations. Design your job to increase mobility. This could mean working from home, or it could mean using geographic arbitrage to take mini-retirements in countries with favorable exchange rates.
The 4-Hour Workweek describes the specific actions Ferriss took to implement these steps. Sometimes these specifics aren’t particularly useful. However, I think it’s a mistake to let the details get in the way of his broader message. If you’re able to look past the details, to look at their meaning, you may discover principles that can change your life. For example, I don’t like much of what Ferriss has to say about automation. I question the virtue of virtual assistants, and I think that his business model works for his business but probably isn’t applicable to most others.
However, it was while re-reading this section the other night that I began to think about automating my personal finances, about making them paperless. By absorbing Ferriss’ ideas and not his specific details, I was able to apply this to my life.
A Kick in the Head
Most of the time, The 4-Hour Workweek is like a kick in the head. The flow of ideas is relentless. Here’s one of my favorites:
Emphasize strengths, don’t fix weaknesses. Most people are good at a handful of things and utterly miserable at most. [...] It is far more lucrative and fun to leverage your strengths instead of attempting to fix all the chinks in your armor. The choice is between multiplication of results using strengths or incremental improvement fixing weaknesses that will, at best, become mediocre. Focus on better use of your best weapons instead of constant repair.
Maybe this is obvious to most of you, but it’s a revelation to me. I spend a lot of time worrying about my weaknesses. Yet when I look at my life, it’s clear that everything rewarding and profitable comes from enhancing my strengths. Here’s another example:
Relative income is more important than absolute income. Absolute income is measured using one holy and inalterable variable: the raw and almighty dollar. Jane Doe makes $100,000 per year and is thus twice as rich as John Doe, who makes $50,000 per year.
Relative income uses two variables: the dollar and time, usually hours. The whole “per year” concept is arbitrary and makes it easy to trick yourself. Let’s look at the real trade. Jane Doe makes $100,000 per year, $2,000 for each of 50 weeks per year, and works 80 hours per week. Jane Doe thus makes $25 per hour. John Doe makes $50,000 per year, $1,000 for each of 50 weeks per year, but works 10 hours per week and hence makes $100 per hour. In relative income, John is four times richer.
Of course, relative income has to add up to the minimum amount necessary to actualize your goals…
I want to believe that if I had to choose between $70,000 per year earned with 70 hard hours per week, or $42,000 per year earned with 37 easy hours per week, I’d choose the latter. I’m not there yet.
A Garden of Tips
I don’t buy into everything that Ferriss writes, but I love how he shatters conventional wisdom. I love that he makes me think. Even if you reject his central thesis, there are dozens of tips and tricks here that can be extracted and used to optimize your life. Here are a few:
- Ask yourself, “If this is the only thing I accomplish today, will I be satisfied with my day?”
- How to double your reading speed in ten minutes.
- Why it’s more productive to carry around a written to-do list than to keep one on your computer.
- Learn the art of non-finishing. This is all about the sunk cost fallacy: just because you paid $10 to see Pirates of the Caribbean 3 doesn’t mean it’s a good idea to watch the entire thing.
- How to be more efficient with e-mail.
- How to reduce clutter from your life.
- If you can’t define it or act upon it, forget it.
- Life exists to be enjoyed — the most important thing is to feel good about yourself.
- Why geographic arbitrage is a great way to enhance your relative income.
- The value of a virtual assistant.
My Recommendation
Despite its flaws, The 4-Hour Workweek is a great book. I think that most people can draw something useful from it. Borrow it from your public library. If you like it and think you’ll re-read it, then wait for it to come out in paperback. I’ve already read my copy three times, but that’s because it’s perfect for when I am in life; I’m not convinced that others will extract the same value.
To learn more about The 4-Hour Workweek:
- AskMetafilter: Is the four-hour workweek feasible?
- I Will Teach You to Be Rich: The book that changed my life in two hours
- The Simple Dollar: Review: The 4-Hour Workweek
- Author Timothy Ferriss has an interesting blog full of tips like how to tie the perfect tie, how to check e-mail twice a day, and how to travel the world with ten pounds or less.
A final note: perhaps best of all, this book has a ten-page index. Why don’t more books do this?
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I’ve read the book and enjoyed it. The time management and ‘life is much more than corporate work’ sections were alone worth the cost of the book.
However, what I didn’t like was the business plan based around selling a product online. This turned my muse right off. In fact, it made my muse want to run.
So I was wondering if anyone’s tried to apply Ferriss’s business model to a service or a skill rather than manufacturing pills or a DVD. For example, has anyone tried out this business model with something like marketing skills, a massage business or even book and article editing.
Suggestions, anyone?
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Agreed, the online sales model isn’t for everyone. I also got a lot out of the book, but am not rushing to set up my very own Yahoo! store.
I think the main message of the the book is that your life doesn’t have to be spent sitting in a cubicle, working for someone else — and it sounds like you got that message loud and clear.
The steps that Ferriss lists — defining what you want, eliminating that which doesn’t get you there, automating the rest, liberating yourself from traditional expectations — ought to be helpful in any of the businesses you mentioned.
Certainly I don’t see why you couldn’t provide marketing services remotely via the Internet/phone/fax/FedEx, if you wanted. As for editing, a few minutes with Google will find you numerous web-based businesses which match up publishers with freelance editors and proofreaders (though I hear it pays to check what others say about them; some are a bit dodgy). Massage might be more difficult…
The main problem I see with the latter two is that they don’t scale. You can only edit one book or article at a time; and massage is obviously a one-on-one, by-the-hour sort of service — unless you’re planning to start a chain of studios, which doesn’t sound like a four-hour work week to me. Also, building up a regular clientele would be difficult if your goal is to travel Ferriss-style.
Still, even if the details don’t appeal to you, I think you’re on the right track in trying to adapt the high-level ideas to what it is you love to do. I’ve used his book as one of my inspirations in making the switch from cubicle dweller to independent option trader. Still early days, but so far, so good! Best of luck, Amanda…
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Hi Martin,
Thanks for your reply. In all seriousness, I listed the first random things, like massage and editing (anything service-based), that popped into my head. So they were just examples.
Actually, I’ve been working up an idea for seminars aimed at government departments and NGOs to learn Aboriginal communication styles and turn these into Aboriginal-centric ‘products’ that effectively communicate the NGO’s or g’ment dept’s service or function to remore communities (might be healthy food or anti-smoking messages, for example). (You might note than I’m an anthropologist who lives and works in outback Central Australia).
Sounds like you’re on your way to breaking out of the cubicle, Martin. That’s awesome. If you have any inspiring thoughts about service-based adaptations of Ferriss’s ideas, let me know.
Best wishes for Christmas & the New Year
I’m not really interested in either.
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I work more than 4 hours a week, but I have to say it’s definitely possible to work 50% of the time for 90% of the income. When I started working from home, I could accomplish tasks in 1 hour that used to take 2 in the office. All those meetings, interruptions… they take so much time! I try to remember that when I’m billing, by the way, and it justifies my fees. One other thing I do that perhaps this book doesn’t mention, is that I keep my fees the same for a piece of work even as I get faster. I do website programming and speed definitely increases with experience. However, if it took me 5 hours initially to do it, and now it takes me 1 hour, I still charge for 3. It increases my income and still protects me from newbie competition, who’d have to charge 5… I pay my own learning costs, now, and this helps ensure I don’t eat those hours without pay.
The biggest problem is myself. Distractions, like, hey, why am I writing comments on this website… are a hazard of being online all day. I remind myself that I don’t get paid for goofing off anymore and try to keep myself on the straight and narrow. My current goal is to set a daily goal and if I can make my day’s target billings by lunchtime, then I’ll stop. I have to admit that it’s hard to really use my time in the way I’d like, though, since people seem to feel EVERYONE should work a 40 hour week. No one cares if you earn 75% of what you used to, it’s somehow not socially acceptable to work a 20 hour week. I’d take more vacation chunks if I thought my clients would accept it, but I notice they really like that I have the same ‘hours’ as everyone else. So the downside is that much of my free time is unpredictable and short. This is important if you’re setting up your work to support another activity like kids, writing a novel or drinking lattes versus international travel or something. The kind of work day you end up my be as important to you as the number of work days in total.
I’m currently trying to think of ways to allow more vacation chunks and concentrated workdays so I get long weekends every weekend. I think an assistant, as the book mentions, might be part of that solution, but maybe not. Anyone who replaced you 2 days a week can always aim for 5!
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It’s a great book! I loved it… a lot of great advice and practical application! It really does allow you to get rich quicker than the “normal way” Why get rich slow when you can get rich quick right?
Thanks for the post!
David
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Nice review. I definitely got a few good things out of it but felt like there were better things that could have been mentioned (like how to create more business plans or other tips on going digital).
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The book does come out of the gate stinking to high-heaven of the swagger of a get rich quick scheme, but it does settle down into a more reasonable attitude. Many of the resources the book talks about are out of date now, and I think most readers would be better served with a fresher book.
I feel like The 4-Hour Workweek is simply inappropriate for most readers.
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