Business SOT: The Hidden Productivity of Journaling
Business SOT: The Hidden Productivity of Journaling
What if your most transformational work doesn’t look like “work” at all?
We tend to measure productivity by what we can see: finished reports, signed deals, emails answered. But there’s another kind of work that often gets overlooked — journaling. It doesn’t always look “busy,” but it can be one of the most productive practices you ever adopt.
Why Journaling Looks “Light” — but Isn’t
I used to dismiss journaling as light work. It didn’t feel as demanding as preparing a case or drafting a business plan. Sitting quietly with a pen and notebook didn’t seem like productivity.
But I’ve come to see that journaling is actually heavy work — not because it’s physically strenuous, but because it requires focus, time, honesty, and spiritual depth.
When you’re journaling, you’re not just scribbling thoughts. You’re confronting ideas, clarifying priorities, and sometimes wrestling with God. That’s not light. That’s deep work.
Tangible and Intangible Results
The productivity of journaling shows up in two ways:
In fact, some of my best business strategies and revelations have come from journaling sessions — not from sitting at my desk trying to force ideas.
A Personal Testimony
I spend hours journaling — it’s how I talk to God. For me, it is deep spiritual work, and it’s also how I’ve birthed some of my most powerful manifestations.
After journaling for hours, I realized something: I felt like I had worked. And that’s because I was in deep concentration. I wasn’t just writing random thoughts; I was journaling to learn, to grow, and to receive direction.
It’s also the first thing I do when I wake up. That meant starting legal writing immediately afterward wasn’t always easy. I struggled with guilt because journaling didn’t “look” like work.
But then I gave my journaling the weight it deserved. I recognized it as intense, heavy work in its own right. Now, I count journaling as one of my heavies. I usually plan for two heavies in a day, and journaling always takes one of those slots. Because I start very early, I aim to finish by noon — though I don’t always hit that goal. So if I’ve journaled for three hours, I count that as part of my productive work. I still do journaling and legal writing, but I stopped pretending journaling “didn’t count” and only counting the legal writing toward my day. That shift brought me freedom and peace.
Why This Matters for Business
In business, we’re trained to value output: emails sent, projects completed, meetings held. But if you’re only measuring visible output, you’re missing half the story.
Now, I count journaling as one of my high-intensity tasks. I give every task a weight. I only schedule two “heavies” in a day — like journaling and writing — and then fill the rest of my day with lighter, supportive work. By doing this, my days have actually become more productive, not less.
This approach helps me focus on quality outcomes instead of trying to cram endless tasks into a day.
Business Strategist’s Note
I used to discount journaling because it didn’t “look” productive. Now I see it as one of my most powerful tools. Journaling is where my faith and business meet — it’s where the strategies God gives me get written down, clarified, and turned into action.
By giving journaling the weight it deserves, I’ve learned to respect the intensity of my work and plan my days with balance. Two heavy tasks per day is enough. When I approach my schedule this way, I don’t just stay busy — I move forward.
Quick Win Prompt
This week, block out 20 minutes a day to journal. Don’t worry about structure. Just write down what’s on your mind — your ideas, your prayers, your reflections. At the end of the week, look back. You may find the seed of your next strategy waswaiting for you on the page.
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