The 40+Hour Allocation Problem and the 20% shift
You’re competent.
You’re good at your job.
Your colleagues trust you and the pay is solid.
From the outside, everything looks as it should.
Nothing is obviously wrong with your career and that’s what makes the unease so hard to justify.
The difficulty is that competence has its own momentum.
Once you become good at something, the system naturally pulls you further into it. Responsibility and expectations grow and your identity adapts to the role you perform well.
This is why when something inside you begins to question the direction it feels disorienting. In many ways you are succeeding and the unease appears precisely because the structure is working.
When I was managing teams in luxury retail, performance reviews revealed something uncomfortable.
Every year there were a few employees who were clearly stuck.
They were competent, experienced and well paid, but the energy had shifted. Leaving felt financially risky, while staying felt increasingly misaligned. They were still doing the job properly, but internally something had already thinned.
Those conversations forced me to confront a deeper pattern, which was that their entire professional life had become concentrated in one place.
Income, identity and forward momentum all depended on the same organisation. If that structure changed, everything in their lives would have to be renegotiated at once.
The more I reflected on it, the more I realised I was living inside the same structure myself.
This is what I now think of as the 40+hour allocation problem.
Most professionals spend forty or fifty hours each week solving problems, generating ideas and improving systems.
But almost all of that intellectual effort compounds somewhere else. Come Monday you realise that none of the effort you produced last week has accumulated into something that belongs to you.
The problem is not that you are employed, it’s that all of your strategic energy is employed.
So what if even a small fraction of those forty hours were directed toward something you own?
What might exist three or four years from now that does not exist today?
The Psychology of risk aversion
The human animal is deeply risk-averse. Behavioural economists have shown repeatedly that people fear losses far more intensely than they value equivalent gains.
This is why leaving a stable career feels terrifying even when the long-term alternative might be more fulfilling.
The mind interprets the loss of stability as danger. It narrows your thinking toward short-term survival and under those conditions most people abandon exploration entirely.
But the solution is easier than you think. It does not have to involve some sort of radical action. There is no need for resignation letters, abrupt pivots or crazy reinventions.
All it takes is 2Hours of focused intention and that is what we are going to talk about here.
The 20% Shift and structural optionality
The paradox of building something meaningful is that almost nothing about it feels dramatic at the beginning.
Modern cultural narratives celebrate extreme reinventions, but most durable structures are assembled very slowly. It will seem like nothing is happening at first. You write a paragraph here, you explore a question there and it may, at times feel pointless.
But if you stick with it long enough these fragments accumulate into something substantial.
The research on what economists call hybrid entrepreneurship is clear. People who begin building while still employed are significantly more likely to succeed than those who quit first and attempt to build under full financial pressure.
To me this seems obvious - when your income floor is secure, you are free to learn, experiment and iterate before your ideas are forced to support you financially.
The goal of the 20% shift is to recreate that dynamic deliberately. In practice it unfolds through a few simple adjustments.
1. Create a Protected Block of Time
The first move is structural.
Most people treat their working week as fully spoken for. This is how institutions absorb human ambition, by occupying all available time.
Forty hours go to the job, and whatever remains dissolves into recovery or distraction. Week after week the pattern repeats, until it becomes difficult to imagine your effort settling anywhere else.
The 20% shift begins the moment you interrupt that pattern.
You decide that a small portion of your forward-looking thinking will no longer be absorbed automatically.
In practical terms this is a minor adjustment. In psychological terms it is much larger, because you are beginning to reclaim authorship over where your effort compounds.
When starting any new habit or skill we have to begin small and build gradually. That is part of the reason this newsletter is called the 2Hour Creator. Because 2Hours is all you need to make that first shift.
The important thing is to lock the habit in. Do not try to overextend or commit time that you do not realistically have. Start with two hours at the weekend and allow the rhythm to stabilise before expanding it.
What matters is that this time exists every week and that it belongs to something you are building.
Open your calendar and block two recurring sessions this week. Treat them the same way you would treat a meeting with a client.
They are not optional. They are where your long-term thinking happens.
2. Identify the Problems You Already Understand
The second step is choosing where your effort should go.
Most people make this harder than it needs to be. They begin searching for business ideas or trying to invent something entirely new.
A better starting point is much closer to home.
Psychologists call it the curse of knowledge — once you become familiar with something, it stops feeling like knowledge at all. It simply becomes the way the world works. You forget that what feels obvious to you may be completely invisible to someone outside your field.
Years of experience produce what is known as “tacit knowledge”. The unwritten understanding of how things actually function beneath official explanations. The incentives that shape behaviour. The workarounds people rely on. The strange patterns that only appear once you have been inside the system long enough.
Your industry is full of these invisible structures. They might be inefficient processes, misaligned incentives or decisions that make sense internally but appear irrational from the outside.
Once you start paying attention to these tensions, you realise something important.
The most valuable ideas rarely come from inventing something new but from articulating something others have not yet learned to see.
Next step:
Take ten minutes and write down five frustrations you see repeatedly in your field or surroundings. These are not abstract industry trends, they are real situations you encounter during the week. Something that makes you pause and think:
Why does this keep happening?
Those observations form the beginnings of your perspective.
3. Turn Observations Into Ideas
Learn how to think with these observations.
Once you begin collecting these fragments, a pattern slowly starts to appear. But this only happens if you push the thinking one step further.
Insight begins when you interrogate the structure beneath the surface. In psychology and organisational theory this process is sometimes called sense-making. The mind tries to understand not just what is happening, but why the system produces that outcome in the first place.
This is where a few simple questions become powerful tools.
Why does this happen?
Who benefits from this structure?
What incentives are shaping behaviour here?
What would need to change for the outcome to be different?
These questions move you from experience to analysis. Instead of reacting to events, you begin examining the underlying logic that produces them.
Over time this is how perspective forms. Fragments turn into patterns, patterns turn into explanations, and explanations eventually become insight that other people recognise and want to learn from.
Next step
Take one of the frustrations you wrote down earlier and expand it into a short paragraph.
Describe the problem clearly.
Then ask yourself three things:
What is actually happening here?
Why does the system produce this outcome?
What do most people misunderstand about it?
You do not need a perfect answer. The goal is simply to begin practising a different mode of thinking, because the moment you start analysing the structures around you, your daily experience stops being routine work.
This will become material for your intellectual assets.
4. Allow Your Thinking to Exist Outside Your Job
This is the step where thinking begins to turn into an asset.
Most professional insight disappears because it never leaves the room where it was discussed. A useful idea surfaces during a meeting, someone articulates it briefly, and then the conversation moves on. The moment passes and the insight dissolves.
This is how most knowledge inside organisations behaves. It exists temporarily, performs its function, and then vanishes.
But something different happens when thinking is externalised.
This is the idea of extended cognition. The mind becomes more powerful when its thinking is expressed outside the brain in language, diagrams, or writing.
The act of articulating an idea stabilises it. What was previously a passing thought becomes something that can be examined, refined and built upon.
Allowing some of your thinking to exist outside your job changes the equation in a subtle but important way.
Instead of disappearing into the institution that employs you, your insights begin to accumulate under your own name.
This is the secret power of writing that the world seems to have forgotten. Writing is thinking and when done in structured manner in the form of a newsletter you are slowly assembling a body of thinking that belongs to you.
Over time this changes how your work compounds. The same experiences that once disappeared at the end of the day now become part of a growing archive of perspective.
Next step
Take the paragraph you wrote earlier and expand it into a 300–500 word reflection.
Explain the situation clearly enough that someone outside your industry could understand the problem and why it exists.
You do not need to publish it yet. Writing it down is enough.
What matters is that the idea now exists outside your head.
You have just created the first piece of intellectual property attached to your name.
5. Let Time Do Its Work
This is where most people sabotage themselves.
They expect something dramatic to happen quickly. A surge of attention, a sudden opportunity and clear path forward that confirms they are on the right track.
When that moment does not arrive, they assume they’ve failed.
But the parallel path operates on a very different logic.
Human beings are naturally impatient. Behavioural economists have shown that we heavily discount future rewards in favour of immediate ones. We want visible progress now. We want reassurance that our effort is working.
Compounding doesn’t behave that way.
At the beginning nothing happens. Progress is so slow it feels invisible, but continuity has a strange property.
Fragments accumulate, ideas connect, and a body of thinking slowly forms. The internal shift is as important as any visible external result because once that exists, your professional life is no longer concentrated in a single place.
Some of your effort is now compounding in a place you own.
Next step
Commit to producing one piece of thinking every two weeks for the next three months.
Twelve weeks. Six pieces.
Do not worry about scale or visibility. The goal of this period is simply continuity.
Six pieces is enough for patterns to begin appearing in your thinking and for the parallel path to start feeling real. Once effort starts accumulating in more than one place, the architecture of your professional life begins to change.
The deeper purpose of the 20% shift is not escape.
It is the creation if structural optionality and the gradual distribution of effort.
You remain fully engaged in your primary role. You continue to earn and to contribute but a portion of your thinking is now compounding somewhere else.
In the next piece I want to go deeper into what qualifies as an asset in the first place. Not every side project compounds. Some disappear as quickly as they begin. Others grow into intellectual assets that open opportunities you could not have predicted when you started.
Understanding that difference is where the parallel path becomes strategic.
Take care,
I will see you next week.
Ben


This is very thought provoking! I can see how this would work and I really want to go over this again and learn the steps. Looking forward to the next instalment!
Hi! I just found you on Substack and feel inspired. just wanted to thank you for that. I’m on my way.