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Maker's Schedule vs Manager's Schedule
Paul Graham's distinction between two fundamentally different ways of organising a working day. Makers need long, uninterrupted blocks to produce creative work. Managers slice the day into hourly intervals for meetings. Conflict arises when managers schedule meetings that fragment a maker's day.
Key Differences
| Dimension | Maker's Schedule | Manager's Schedule |
|---|---|---|
| Unit of time | Half-days or full days — minimum effective block is ~4 hours | Hours — the day is divided into one-hour intervals |
| Meetings | Devastating — a single meeting can destroy an entire afternoon | Normal — the default mode of work |
| Cost of interruption | Very high — context-switching kills deep work | Low — switching between topics is the job |
| Typical roles | Engineers, designers, writers, founders building the product | Executives, sales, HR, project managers |
| Ideal structure | Batch meetings into one day; protect the rest | Distribute meetings throughout the week |
When to use Maker's Schedule
- When you or your team need to produce complex creative or technical work
- When protecting focus time for engineers, designers, or writers
- When you notice productivity dropping despite everyone being 'busy'
When to use Manager's Schedule
- When coordination, alignment, and communication are the primary value drivers
- When leading a large team that requires frequent check-ins
- When the role is fundamentally about decision-making and delegation
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the maker vs manager schedule?
Paul Graham's concept describes two fundamentally different ways of organising time. Makers (engineers, writers, designers) need long uninterrupted blocks — a single meeting can ruin a whole afternoon. Managers operate in hourly intervals where meetings are the natural unit of work. Problems arise when managers impose their schedule on makers.
How do you protect maker time?
Batch all meetings into designated days or time blocks, leaving full days or half-days meeting-free. Many companies implement 'No Meeting Wednesdays' or 'Maker Mornings' to protect focus time. The key is making uninterrupted blocks the default, not the exception.