You know what’s funny? The smartest people I know are often the ones who look the laziest.
While everyone else is grinding away at 14-hour days and wearing exhaustion like a badge of honor, these folks are casually strolling in at 10 AM, taking random Tuesday afternoons off, and somehow still crushing it in their careers. They’re the ones who make you wonder, “How the hell do they get away with that?”
Here’s the thing: they’re not actually lazy. They’ve just figured out that working smarter beats working harder every single time. They’ve discovered shortcuts that traditionalists call “cutting corners” but are really just clever ways to get the same (or better) results with a fraction of the effort.
I’ve spent years studying these people, trying their methods, and yes, getting judged for them. But you know what? The same colleagues who rolled their eyes at my “lazy” habits are now quietly asking me how I manage to get so much done while seemingly doing so little.
Today, I’m sharing eight of these controversial life hacks that smart people swear by. Fair warning: your hardworking friends might judge you for these. But deep down? They’ll wish they’d thought of them first.
1. They automate literally everything possible
Remember that coworker who spent three hours color-coding their calendar? Meanwhile, smart “lazy” people are setting up systems that handle repetitive tasks automatically.
I’m talking about auto-paying bills, using templates for common emails, setting up IFTTT recipes for social media, and letting apps handle everything from grocery shopping to investment rebalancing. One friend of mine even automated his dating app swipes based on specific criteria (yes, really).
The hardworkers call this “impersonal” or “cutting corners.” But while they’re manually doing the same tasks every week, the smart lazy folks are using that time to think, create, or just chill.
I once spent an entire weekend setting up automation for my business processes. My team thought I was wasting time. Six months later? Those automations saved us about 15 hours per week. That’s almost two full workdays we got back, every single week.
2. They say no to almost everything
“Can you hop on a quick call?”“Want to grab coffee and pick my brain?”“Could you just review this real quick?”
The answer from smart lazy people? Usually no.
This drives the people-pleasers absolutely crazy. How dare someone not immediately respond to every request? But here’s what I learned after years of saying yes to everything: most requests are other people trying to outsource their problems to you.
Warren Buffett supposedly said, “The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything.” And he’s right.
When I started defaulting to no instead of yes, something magical happened. I suddenly had time for the projects that actually mattered. My stress levels plummeted. And surprisingly? People started respecting my time more.
3. They batch everything into specific time blocks
You know those people who check email every five minutes? They’re not the smart lazy ones.
Instead of constantly context-switching throughout the day, smart people batch similar tasks together. All emails get answered in one 30-minute block. All meetings happen on specific days. All creative work gets protected time slots.
I learned this the hard way. When I was building my first company, I prided myself on instant email responses. Then I realized I was spending my entire day in reactive mode, never doing any deep work. Now? I check messages twice a day, period.
The traditional workers think this is irresponsible. “What if something urgent comes up?” they ask. But here’s the secret: almost nothing is actually urgent. And the few things that are? People will find a way to reach you.
4. They copy shamelessly instead of reinventing the wheel
Why would you start from scratch when someone’s already done the hard work?
Smart lazy people are master copycats. They find what works and adapt it. Need a business plan? Download a template. Writing a proposal? Use the structure from a successful one. Building a website? Clone a design that converts.
The grinders see this as cheating or lacking originality. But while they’re spending weeks creating something “unique,” the smart lazy folks have already launched, tested, and iterated three times.
There’s this myth that everything needs to be original. But even Picasso said, “Good artists copy, great artists steal.” The key is knowing what to copy and how to make it your own.
5. They outsource the stuff they hate (or suck at)
This one really gets under traditional workers’ skin.
“Must be nice to have someone else do your work,” they’ll say, while spending four hours trying to figure out Excel formulas or design a basic logo.
Smart lazy people know their hourly value. If you make $50 an hour at your job, why would you spend three hours cleaning your house when you could pay someone $60 to do it? That’s basic math, but somehow it offends people who think suffering equals virtue.
I outsource everything from meal prep to basic research tasks. The time I save goes toward things that actually move the needle in my life and career. Call it lazy if you want, but I call it smart resource allocation.
6. They use the “good enough” principle
Perfectionists hate this one with a passion.
Smart lazy people know that 80% done and shipped beats 100% perfect but never finished. They launch messy, iterate quickly, and improve as they go. Meanwhile, the perfectionist is still tweaking fonts on slide 47 of a presentation nobody will remember next week.
This doesn’t mean doing sloppy work. It means recognizing the point of diminishing returns and having the courage to ship when something is good enough to serve its purpose.
I’ve watched too many talented people kill their own projects by endlessly polishing instead of launching. The smart lazy approach? Get it out there, get feedback, make it better. Repeat.
7. They work in bursts, not marathons
“I worked 12 hours straight yesterday!”
Cool story, but how much of that was actually productive?
Smart lazy people work in intense, focused bursts followed by complete disconnection. They might work four hours of deep, undistracted work and accomplish more than the person who’s “busy” for 12 hours but checking Instagram every 10 minutes.
The Pomodoro Technique, time-boxing, and similar methods aren’t about being lazy. They’re about recognizing that our brains aren’t designed for endless grinding. When you see someone leaving the office at 3 PM, they might have already done more meaningful work than the person staying until 9 PM.
8. They skip most meetings and social obligations
Finally, here’s the hack that makes traditional workers absolutely lose their minds: smart lazy people skip most meetings.
“This could have been an email” isn’t just a meme for them. It’s a life philosophy. They decline meetings without clear agendas, skip networking events that don’t align with their goals, and aren’t afraid to leave a party early (or not show up at all).
The social butterflies and meeting warriors see this as antisocial or career-limiting. But while they’re sitting through their fourth “sync-up” of the day, smart lazy people are actually getting work done.
I’ve mentioned this before, but most productivity content misses the point entirely. Being busy isn’t the same as doing meaningful work. And nowhere is this more obvious than in our obsession with meetings and forced social interactions.
The bottom line
Look, I get it. These hacks go against everything we’ve been taught about success requiring hard work, long hours, and constant hustle.
But maybe that’s exactly why they work.
The smartest people I know have figured out that the goal isn’t to work harder than everyone else. It’s to get better results with less effort, so you have more time and energy for the things that actually matter in life.
Will people judge you for adopting these “lazy” tactics? Absolutely. Will those same people secretly wish they had the courage to do the same? Without a doubt.
The real question is: do you want to look busy, or do you want to be effective?
Choose wisely.
















