Day in the Life of a Remote Worker - Fadeke Adegbuyi
This spotlight illustrates how each remote worker finds freedom and productivity in their everyday life, in their unique way. Get inspired and see how you can improve your workspace, workflow, and work/life balance.
Name: Fadeke Adegbuyi 👩🏾💻
Current Job: Marketing at Doist ✏️
Current Job: Marketing at Doist ✏️
Current Location: Edmonton, AB Canada 🇨🇦
Current Computer: iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2019)
🖥 // Macbook Pro (Retina, Mid-2015) 💻
Current mobile devices: iPhone X 📱
What does your typical workday look like?
I’ve been working remotely for over 2.5 years at Doist, the creators of
Todoist and Twist! I’ve experimented with a few small tweaks to my routine
over time, but I’ve generally always kept “normal hours.” Our company has
no designated time zones or work hours, so team members have the
flexibility to create their own schedules –– we have a handful of early
birds and night owls!
Though I start my workday a bit early, I take an extended break in the
morning and end the day at a normal time. While I’ve tried coworking and
occasionally work from coffee shops, working from home is my default and
where I’m most productive.
6:00 AM
My alarm is set for 6 am, but I wake-up before my alarm nearly every day.
Setting it is mostly a fail-safe habit. I grab my phone immediately and
scan through everything for a few minutes: texts, emails, Twist, Todoist,
and Twitter.
It’s not a particularly calming way to start each day, but I generally
don’t respond to anything at this point. I simply get an overview of my
day or take a mental note of anything that’s come up overnight. Since I
work with team members all over the world, many have been working for
hours by the time I’m up! 🌏
Before I start working for the day, I usually read for 30 minutes. Right
now I’m reading Uncanny Valley by Anna Wiener and have a novel, Chronic
City by Jonathan Lethem, up next!
Afterwards, I get ready and head to my home office. The physical separation is great and I treat it like a real commute even though it’s just a few steps away – I grab everything I need for the day including my water bottle, phone, and sometimes a change of clothes, hairbrush, and make-up for some video calls so I’m not going back and forth.
7:00 AM
I start working at 7 am and begin the workday by responding to messages
from my team in Twist and any Todoist comments that need my attention.
In the morning, I try to balance collaborative shallow work with
individual deep work. I never want to block a team member, so I aim to
provide prompt responses to questions or requests for feedback,
particularly if I’m leading a project. One of the challenges of remote
work is effectively navigating time zones. If I only focus on
deep work in the morning and leave responses until the afternoon, my
teammates may be offline in Europe or Asia and can’t move things forward
until the next day. This is one of the trade-offs that arise with
distributed work!
After that, it’s time to start planned and focused work. On my best days, I’ve already prepped a to-list the night before. If not, I set aside some time in the morning to make a chronological list of things to do in Todoist before I start working.
I practice time blocking and organize my to-do list accordingly. I’ve used this method for years, but remain comically bad (or, more charitably, too optimistic) at estimating how long things take. I often shift my to-do list multiple times per day, as frequently as every hour. I don’t recommend this! 😅
I tend to prioritize writing and editing tasks in the morning when I have
a set of fresh eyes. That could be writing a blog post on topics like
mastery or how to organize your life on our blog, Ambition & Balance, or
editing the work of one of my talented colleagues.
9:00 AM
I aim to go to the gym every day during the week and usually land
somewhere below that on average. I head out the door at 9 am and am there
by 9:10 am. I stay for an hour doing a mix of cardio and weight training
or a Body Pump class.
Once I leave the gym, I often grab a coffee on my way home and may pop
into the grocery store or run an errand nearby.
Ideally, I wouldn’t split up my day and stop working just as I’m getting
into flow, but I usually go to the gym with a friend. The timing
inconvenience is outweighed by having an accountability buddy!
On days I don’t go to the gym, I simply continue working.
🙇🏾♀️
11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
By 11 am I’m back home and at my desk. Even though I consider myself a
morning person, afternoons are my most productive time of the day!
I take a small break around 12 pm for my first meal of the day, a sad desk lunch. Otherwise, it’s focus mode again until around 5:00 pm (with a few sessions of Twitter browsing sprinkled in).
This stretch of time involves going through all my core work including:
- Leading marketing projects like our Twist Remote Work Guides or Year in Review
- Writing, editing, and coordinating articles for Ambition & Balance or our Twist Remote Work Guides
- Planning and posting content for all our social media channels for Doist, Todoist, and Twist
- Recruiting activity for open marketing roles including screening applicants and marking test projects
- Providing feedback or helping out on ongoing marketing projects
- Coordinating joint marketing initiatives with other companies
- Responding to users who reach out to us on social media and collecting feedback
My priorities and to-dos shift month to month and week to week! Since what
I’m working on can vary, I try to be mindful of too much context switching
and ensure I’m not multitasking. I generally only ever have a few
applications open on my dock and under five tabs in my browser.
Doist largely communicates asynchronously through text. I generally only
have 1-2 meetings per week with colleagues over video chat.
In the summer, I’ll occasionally leave my place around 2 pm and spend the
rest of the afternoon working from a coffee shop or a public library!
Throughout the winter, I mostly stay home for the remainder of the
workday. ❄️
My mini end of the workday routine involves spending time responding to
our users on social media, answering any Twist messages I missed, tidying
my desk a bit, and heading out of my home office. I generally come back
later in the day to work on personal projects, but almost always take a
break in between!
While this is a typical day, specifics can vary! If I’m working on a
bigger cross-functional project with hard deadlines, I start earlier to
have greater overlap with my colleagues in Europe and Asia. I also have
the flexibility to work later into the evening if I need to pop out for a
mid-day appointment.
Describe your workspace setup:
I only started working from a home office a few months ago – it’s a work
in progress, and the white walls are begging for some artwork!
I have a 3 drawer L-shaped desk from Wayfair that serves as my control centre – it’s where I have my iMac, all my other gadgets, and any workbooks I reference.
My office also has a corner with a great couch and side table. The original vision was to sit on the couch and ottoman with my laptop and write, but I’ve honestly only ever done this a handful of times. When you get used to a large monitor, it’s hard to go back to working on a small screen!
I have a bookshelf that’s strategically placed behind for aesthetics on video calls.
One interesting addition to my office is a ring light. I was familiar with them because they’re used by some of my favorite YouTubers for filming. It wasn't until I spotted one in the setup a fellow remote worker that I knew I needed one too. Dark skin is extremely hard to light, even in the world of television and movies – on previous video calls, I often had windows open, lights on and a lamp nearby and still barely showed up on screen. With the combination of the ring light and an external webcam, I’m much more visible and lit on camera.
What do you listen to while you work?
I bounce between a few different kinds of music or noise while I work,
though I often work in silence too.
Most mornings, I opt for Brain.FM on “Focus” mode. I’m not sure if they actually work or it’s the pavlovian conditioning of putting on headphones and turning them on, but they do help with concentration.
Later in the day, I might keep using Brain.FM, listen to nothing, or I’ll occasionally open Spotify and listen to one of the following:
- Classical music –– Max Richter’s Recomposed album or Fabrizio Paterlini Fragment’s Found album.
- The same song on repeat –– most recently Trampoline by SHAED and Zayn, Bedroom by Litany, or Midas by Skott. Fair warning: this will skew your Spotify Year in Review!
- Video game soundtracks: Epic Gaming playlist or The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim: Original Game Soundtrack.
With the exception of listening to the same song on repeat, I can’t really
listen to music with lyrics while I’m working and definitely don’t
understand the people who listen to podcasts.
Aside from your phone and computer, name a gadget you can’t live without in your workspace:
Sennheiser HD 4.50 BTNC Over-Ear Wireless Headphones - Black
- Great over the ear headphones that also work really well on airplanes! I often have them on while I work, even when I’m not listening to anything.
Logitech C920 Webcam HD Pro (960-000764)
- The built-in webcam on the iMac is laughably bad. Honestly, this webcam