On April 6, 2007, after working 18-hour days building the The Huffington Post, founder Arianna Huffington woke up in her home office in a pool of blood. She had collapsed while working, hitting her face on the desk and breaking her cheekbone. After that incident, she went from doctor to doctor, undergoing multiple tests to find out what was wrong.
It wasnโt a disease or other underlying health problem that caused Huffingtonโs collapse, but rather something you and many other busy founders experience every day: She was exhausted.
โThere is that level of tiredness where you donโt actually even notice youโre tired because you no longer remember how not being tired feels,โ Huffington writes in her healthy sleep habits book The Sleep Revolution. โI was sleepwalking through my life.โ
Those chilling words are relatable for any founder who is trying to build and scale a business. When your inbox is overflowing and your schedule is packed, what is the first thing to go?
Sleep.
Why You Need Healthy Sleep Habits, Especially as a Founder
But cutting out sleep under the false notion that youโll be more productive is a bad idea. Maybe youโll finish that proposal by staying up till 2 a.m. and still get up for that 8 a.m. client call. Six hours of sleep should be fine, right?
But according to sleep expertsโitโs not. The National Sleep Foundation recommends adults get at least 7 hours of sleep each night.
The benefits of a good nightโs sleep are numerous. Why do you think itโs something all people share, across ages, countries, cultures, and socioeconomic statuses? We all need it to thrive.
Studies show sleep is crucial to maintaining a healthy immune system, metabolism, and memory. It helps your brain learn and helps your body restore itself and repair tissue.
Perhaps the best way to underscore the importance of good sleep is to demonstrate what happens when you donโt sleep. The most famous example of this is when 16-year-old Randy Gardner broke a world record in 1965 by staying awake for 11 consecutive days. On top of having trouble focusing, struggling to form short-term memories, and feeling irritable, Gardner started to hallucinate. The effects were so dangerous that the Guinness Book of Records has stopped listing this record so as not to encourage others to try to break it.
So, you get a little less sleep than optimal tonight. All thatโll happen is you might be a little sluggish the next day, right? Wrong.
According to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, going too long with too little sleep makes you more likely to suffer from heart disease, kidney disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, and stroke.
A study published this year found that just two nights in a row of less than six hours of sleep decreases your performance for the next six days.
As an entrepreneur, you canโt afford to have suboptimal performance for an entire week. Your business depends on you to lead it. Itโs tempting to cut sleep because you might have fooled yourself into thinking you can function just fine on fewer hours. But thatโs not what science shows.
Need to get more done during the day so you can sleep more at night? Here is how Tim Ferriss does it.
If you still think a lack of sleep doesnโt really affect decision-making or performance, consider the 1979 nuclear accident at Three Mile Island or the 1986 nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl; in both cases, investigators concluded that sleep deprivation played a significant role.
While most errors will not be nearly as tragic, itโs hard to ignore the fact that people do not function at their best when theyโre not sleeping enough. As business owners, we owe it to ourselves, our staff, and our customers to operate responsibly, and that includes getting enough sleep to make those critical decisions.
How can we increase the hours and improve the quality of our sleep, so weโre fully recharged and able to be more productive in our business?
5 Healthy Sleep Habits to Recharge Your Body and Supercharge Your Business
As an entrepreneur and poor sleeper, the topic of healthy sleep habits interests me deeply. In 2016, for about 40 days, I made it a point to start winding down around 9 p.m., be in bed by 11 p.m., and keep my smartphone outside of the bedroom while I slept (instead of right within reach, as usual).
The results were astounding. While I didnโt set up a scientific study or keep a journal, I did notice that I fell asleep much faster (I have always had a hard time falling asleep), and I awoke feeling more refreshed. Sadly, I have since fallen back into bad habits.
But letโs take a deeper look at some healthy sleep habits that helped me improve my sleep quality, plus some other tips Iโd like to implement.
1. Make Your Bedroom a โNo-Phone Zoneโ
How many nights do you stay up in bed, your smartphone glowing in the darkness, while you check a few emails before going to sleep? How many mornings do you hit your inbox just as quickly as you hit the alarm?
I admit, I am guilty of this. And according to data from the National Sleep Foundation, I am not alone. Ninety-five percent of people surveyed said they use electronic devices right before bed, with the biggest offenders being those under the age of 30.
The problem with this ubiquitous habit is that research suggests having a smartphone with you while you sleep can decrease your sleep quality and cause you to take a longer time to fall asleep.
The solution? Keep the phone (and for that matter, the laptop!) outside of your bedroom. The idea is to create physical spaces dedicated to certain tasks. The kitchen is for eating, the living room is for watching TV, the office desk is for working, and the bed is for sleeping. This makes it easier for us to make that mental switch into โwork modeโ and โsleep mode,โ and it prevents our work from bleeding too much into our personal life.
2. Communicate Your Work Unavailability at Night
Now that weโve talked about physical boundaries, letโs talk about setting boundaries with people too. Let clients, customers, and employees know what your available hours are and that you do not respond to emails or phone calls at night. Protect your sleeptime, and others will respect your sleeptime.
By far, one of the biggest hurdles Iโve faced as a digital entrepreneur is the immediacy of the apps I use in my workflow. Slack, Google Hangouts, and even Skypeโs chat feature lend a certain sense of urgency to every message received. I find that the best way to handle this is to be clear upfront with every person I work with, be it a client or a colleague, that I donโt respond to messages past a certain time of day. Iโm even considering working it into my contracts.
Further, if you use Slack, itโs important to set your status to Do Not Disturb mode so people donโt expect an immediate response.
Hereโs how to set your Slack Do Not Disturb schedule, so you donโt get notifications during your downtime.
First, log in to Slack and look for the notifications icon on the upper left.
Next, click โDo Not Disturb schedule.โ
Finally, on the next page, scroll down to โDo not disturb,โ and set the time period during which you donโt want to receive push notifications from Slack. Make sure your timezone is correct too.
Itโs important to note that even while youโre in Do Not Disturb mode in Slack, your teammates have the option of pushing through a notification to you if itโs an emergency.
Need to get more done during the day so you can sleep more at night? Here is how Tim Ferriss does it.
3. Have an Evening โWind Downโ Routine
Many entrepreneurship articles revolve around the perfect morning routine that can jumpstart your productivity at work, but letโs not forget we need an evening routine that helps us wind down for sleep! Few of us can transition from a hectic day of working with customers to a restful good nightโs sleep.
Try shutting down your work at least one hour before bedtime to allow your brain to release melatonin and prepare to go to sleep. This includes avoiding looking at any light-emitting screens before bedtime, such as your cell phone, laptop, or TV.
Why? Studies show that blue light emission (the type that comes from our laptops, smartphones, and certain e-readers) is harmful to our sleep; it suppresses melatonin, delays our circadian clock, and reduces our alertness the next morning, among other things.
If you canโt put the screen away before bedtime, there are a couple of options that can reduce the amount of blue light your eyes are exposed to.
- Flux app – This free app changes your computer screenโs color temperature depending on the time of day, your location, and your sleep schedule. During the day, it keeps the computer screen the typical blue tone, which mimics sunlight. But at night, Flux changes your computer screen to a warm, orangey tone so your brain doesnโt get mixed signals.
- Blue-light-blocking computer glasses – Based on the same principle above, Felix Gray glasses filter blue light, with the added bonus of reducing glare too.
For me, my winding down would begin at 9 p.m. Iโd tidy up the kitchen and wash the dishes. Then Iโd brew a hot cup of herbal tea, read, pray, reflect on the day, place my cell phone outside the bedroom, and head to bed. At first, it was really difficult not to do my usual scrolling through social media on my phone while lying in bed, but eventually, I found my mind was racing less and less, and I was able to fall asleep faster without my smartphone to distract me.
4. Outsource Your Nighttime Tasks
You donโt have to do everything yourself. One of the huge benefits to outsourcing work is that you can designate tasks to your employees or contractors while you sleep. This works especially well if you choose to hire a virtual assistant who is in a different timezone. For example, if you live in Australia, having a U.S.-based VA means they can check your inbox during their waking hours while you sleep.
And for founders who feel they have to personally handle every customer support email that hits their inbox: outsource it! Have a customer service rep work the night shift while you catch some Zs.
One of the things that plagues my bedtime hours is waking up with a start when I realize I forgot to reply to a work email. (Sad, I know.)
To prevent this, I recently hired a virtual assistant to manage my inbox. She responds to the emails she can handle, and if thereโs something that requires my response, she reminds me.
The idea is to get to the point where you donโt get frantic because you worry an emergency might pop up when you should be dozing off. Very rarely does a business emergency happen while you sleep, but if youโre worried about it, have a system in place where others in your company can handle any situations that may arise at anytime.
Where to find a virtual assistant
- Reach out to your network. I found my virtual assistant by posting an announcement on my businessโs social media. I was able to find a trustworthy VA who had been following my business for years.
- Zirtual matches you with college-educated, U.S.-based VAs, though theyโre only available 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., so this wouldnโt be a good fit for overnight work.
- Fancy Hands provides U.S.-based assistants who can answer a certain number of requests per month.
5. Track Your Sleep
Youโve probably heard the old marketing adage, โYou canโt improve what you donโt track.โ As business owners, we track our revenue, expenses, profit margins, user growth, and more. Iโd like to apply the same principle to our sleep. While you donโt have to get too mechanical about it, itโs helpful to keep a sleep journal or use an app to be able to see patterns as you work to improve your sleep.
If you donโt want to think too much about it, Apple Watches and Fitbits track your sleep for you. You can also use free apps, such as Sleep Cycle, to track your sleep patterns.
The cool thing about Sleep Cycle is once itโs installed, you can place your smartphone on the nightstand, and it analyzes your movement while you sleep.
This helps it calculate the best time to wake you up, which is the moment youโre sleeping the lightest. The idea is that if your deep sleep is interrupted, youโll wake up feeling way worse than if you were awakened at a more optimal time.
So with Sleep Cycle, you can set your wakeup time, and then the app will wake you up within 30 minutes of the time you set, choosing the best moment to wake you up based on your sleep patterns. This might help you wake up feeling more refreshed.
Now, I know what youโre thinking: What happened to your earlier suggestion of making your bedroom a โno phone zoneโ? For the sake of benefiting from Sleep Cycleโs sleep pattern analysis, Iโd still recommend using the app for a short time. The app has charts showing how long you were in bed and how long you were in deep sleep, plus it rates your sleep qualityโall useful data if you want to track your progress.
So maybe you could use Sleep Cycle for one week before you begin implementing new sleep habits to get a baseline. Then, after you implement your new healthy sleep habits, use the app again for one week to see if thereโs any improvement. The bottom line is, itโs a useful tool, as long as it doesnโt tempt you to use your phone when you should be snoozing.
Need to get more done during the day so you can sleep more at night? Here is how Tim Ferriss does it.
Do You Have Healthy Sleep Habits?
As entrepreneurs, we need to reject the notion that losing sleep is a worthy sacrifice. As you saw in Arianna Huffingtonโs case, giving up sleep to work more on your business can lead to dangerous effects on your health, and in turn, your businessโs health. And thatโs just not a price we should be willing to pay.
By implementing these healthy sleep habits, youโll be able to get better quality sleep that allows you to recharge your mind and body and work on your business at your full potential:
- Get rid of electronics in your bedroom
- Have an evening routine to help you wind down
- Let people know youโre unavailable for work at night
- Outsource nighttime tasks for your business
- Track your sleep progress
Out of the loads of advice out there in the entrepreneurial world, this might be the most radical bit youโve seen yet: Thatโs enough work for today; go get some good sleep.
Is sleep deprivation affecting how you run your business? Comment below with some changes youโre making to have healthy sleep habits, and in turn, more productivity!