A Productive Conversation

Mike Vardy

Hosted by productivity strategist Mike Vardy, A Productive Conversation offers insightful discussions on how to craft a life that aligns with your intentions. Each episode dives into the art of time devotion, productiveness, and refining your approach to daily living. Mike invites guests who are thinkers, doers, and creators to share their strategies for working smarter and living more intentionally. From practical tips to deep dives on mindset shifts, this podcast will help you reframe your relationship with time and find balance in a busy world. Subscribe and join the conversation—because a productive life is more than just getting things done.

  1. How to Finally Organize Your Digital Life Without Overcomplicating It (with Johnny Decimal)

    HACE 3 DÍAS

    How to Finally Organize Your Digital Life Without Overcomplicating It (with Johnny Decimal)

    We live in a world where everything is digital — yet almost none of us were ever taught how to manage digital information well. Files, notes, emails, documents, IDs, receipts… they pile up. And unlike physical filing cabinets, our computers let us create anything anywhere — which sounds like freedom but often leads to chaos. In this episode, I sit down with Johnny Decimal, creator of the Johnny Decimal system, to explore a structured, deceptively simple way to bring order to your digital life. What began as a practical solution for a shared Dropbox folder has grown into a framework that helps people organize their records with clarity and confidence — without turning their lives into an overengineered productivity lab. Six Discussion Points The real digital problem isn’t volume — it’s the absence of structure.Fewer decisions create more clarity: limiting your top-level “areas” reduces cognitive friction.Numbers provide stability where words create ambiguity.A shallow hierarchy (three levels only) prevents organizational sprawl.Personal records management is different from personal knowledge management — and that distinction matters.“Comfortable awareness” beats perfection in both information and task management.Three Connection Points Johnny Decimal's websiteSign up for Johnny Decimal's email listHow to Build an Achievement Structure: Getting the Front End Work DoneWhat struck me most about this conversation is how grounding structure can be. Not rigid. Not restrictive. Just grounding. When you know where something lives — and you trust that it will be there — your attention is freed for better work and better living. If you’ve ever felt buried under digital clutter, this episode offers a thoughtful starting point.

    49 min
  2. How to Flourish in a World Obsessed with Performance (with Daniel Coyle)

    25 FEB

    How to Flourish in a World Obsessed with Performance (with Daniel Coyle)

    In a culture that prizes metrics, optimization, and constant output, what does it mean to truly flourish? In this episode of A Productive Conversation, I sit down with New York Times bestselling author Daniel Coyle to explore a deeper question beneath performance: how do we build meaning, joy, and fulfillment in systems that reward speed over substance? If you’ve ever felt successful on paper but unsettled underneath, this conversation is for you. Daniel—author of The Culture Code and The Talent Code—has spent years studying high-performing organizations, from the Navy SEALs to professional sports teams. But in his latest book, he turns toward something more foundational: flourishing as joyful, meaningful growth. We talk about why life isn’t a game to win but a garden to tend, why pauses matter more than productivity hacks, and why the best leaders ask better questions instead of delivering faster answers. Six Discussion Points Flourishing vs. Performance – Why happiness and success aren’t enough—and why flourishing goes deeper.Life as Garden, Not Machine – The shift from optimizing systems to cultivating living ones.Awakening Cues – The power of intentional pauses that reconnect us to what truly matters.Relational Attention – How asking better questions builds meaning and connection.Community Over Individualism – Why flourishing doesn’t happen alone—even in high-performance environments.Writing and Evolution – How Daniel’s work evolved from individual talent to group culture to a more philosophical exploration of meaning.Three Connection Points Flourish: The Art of Building Meaning, Joy and FulfillmentDaniel's websiteOur previous conversation (Episode 420 of APC)In a world obsessed with output, this conversation is a reminder that flourishing isn’t something you chase—it’s something you cultivate. And cultivation takes intention.

    38 min
  3. Joel Zuckerman Talks About Expressive Gratitude, Impactful Letters, and Lasting Connection

    18 FEB

    Joel Zuckerman Talks About Expressive Gratitude, Impactful Letters, and Lasting Connection

    Gratitude shows up in a lot of productivity conversations—but rarely as a practice that changes how we relate to others. In this episode of A Productive Conversation, I sit down with Joel Zuckerman, author of Gratitude Tiger, to explore gratitude as something we actively express, not just quietly feel. Joel has written more than 300 Letters of Gratitude over the past twelve years, and what began as a simple exercise has evolved into a life-shaping practice. We dig into why handwritten letters matter, how gratitude can move from introspection to expression, and why this practice benefits the writer just as much as the recipient. Six Discussion Points Why “Gratitude Tiger” is more than a catchy title—and what TIGER actually stands forThe difference between a thank-you note and a true Letter of GratitudeWhy writing letters of gratitude is a creative process, not an obligationThe seven pillars of expressive gratitude—and where most people get stuckDopamine, reflection, and why gratitude creates lasting satisfactionLegacy, ripple effects, and why you should never wait to write the letterThree Connection Points Gratitude Tiger: Creating Joy Through the Art of Impactful LettersJoel's WebsiteThe Productivity Diet Gratitude doesn’t need to be complicated to be powerful. This conversation reminded me that one letter—written with intention—can deepen relationships, shift perspective, and leave a legacy that outlasts the moment. If you’ve ever thought about reaching out to someone who mattered in your life, this episode might be the nudge you need.

    34 min
  4. PM Talks S3E2: Poise Under Pressure in a Fractured Moment

    11 FEB

    PM Talks S3E2: Poise Under Pressure in a Fractured Moment

    This episode is the latest in our monthly PM Talks series, where Patrick Rhone and I step back from tactics and tools to explore the deeper questions that shape how we live, work, and show up. What we planned to discuss was poise—but what we actually talked about was something more urgent. Recorded in real time as events were unfolding in Minneapolis and St. Paul, this conversation became about moral clarity, civic responsibility, and what it means to stay aligned when neutrality no longer feels like an option. This isn’t a polished debate or a tidy argument. It’s a candid conversation about right versus wrong—and why that distinction matters now. Six Discussion Points Why this conversation couldn’t follow the plan—and why that matteredThe difference between poise as composure and poise as alignmentWhy this moment isn’t about left versus right, but right versus wrongThe danger of performative belief and the erosion of truthHow lived experience carries weight even when it isn’t “linkable”What it means to keep living your life responsibly in a fractured momentThree Connection Points Requiem for the American Dream (documentary)Willhoit’s Law (on power and the application of law)PM Talks series archiveI’m grateful Patrick was willing to have this conversation when he did, and I’m grateful to you for listening. This episode isn’t meant to inflame or persuade—it’s meant to bear witness. Sometimes that’s the most productive thing we can do.

    52 min
  5. Thom Gibson Talks About Work-From-Home Fatherhood, Six-Hour Workdays, and Sustainable Family Rhythms

    4 FEB

    Thom Gibson Talks About Work-From-Home Fatherhood, Six-Hour Workdays, and Sustainable Family Rhythms

    Working from home sounds simple—until kids, calendars, meals, meetings, and relationships all collide. In this episode, I sit down with Thom Gibson, a work-from-home dad and social media strategist, to talk honestly about what it really takes to make remote work and family life coexist. Thom is the founder of WFH Dads, and his perspective is grounded not in theory, but in lived experience—raising two young kids, navigating shared schedules with his wife, and building a workday that leaves room for presence, not just productivity. Six Discussion Points How Thom transitioned into working from home during the pandemic—and why he stayedWhy default schedules matter more than perfect plansThe overlooked power of clear boundaries between “work time” and “family time”How simplifying meals reduces daily decision fatigueWhy Thom changed his journaling practice after 15 yearsThe thinking behind the Six-Hour Workday Playbook for dadsThree Connection Points WFH DadsGet The Six-Hour Workday PlaybookHow to Build a Powerful Journal in 3 Steps (Starting Today)This conversation reinforced something I’ve believed for a long time: structure isn’t the enemy of freedom—it’s what makes freedom possible. Thom’s approach to work-from-home life is thoughtful, practical, and refreshingly human, and I think a lot of parents—especially dads—will see themselves reflected in this episode.

    41 min
  6. Brad Stulberg Talks About Sustainable Excellence, Mastery, and Doing What Truly Matters

    28 ENE

    Brad Stulberg Talks About Sustainable Excellence, Mastery, and Doing What Truly Matters

    This week on A Productive Conversation, I sit down with Brad Stulberg, author of The Way of Excellence, to explore what excellence really means in a world obsessed with efficiency, optimization, and performative productivity. Brad has spent years studying sustainable excellence across sport, leadership, creativity, and life—and this conversation digs into why excellence is neither perfection nor hustle, but something far more human. Brad and I unpack the difference between true excellence and what he calls “pseudo-excellence,” why metrics often outlive their usefulness, and how habits like routine, curiosity, and gumption play a central role in meaningful progress. Along the way, we explore why satisfaction outlasts happiness, why flow isn’t always the goal, and how focusing on the task at hand—not the time on hand—changes everything. Six Discussion Points Why excellence must be reclaimed from hustle culture, optimization, and perfectionismThe difference between efficiency and excellence—and why short-term efficiency often undermines long-term growthMetrics, mastery, and knowing when measures help—or get in the wayFlow versus values-driven excellence (and why not all flow is good)Gumption, routines, and building momentum without becoming roboticWhy satisfaction comes from effort on worthwhile work, not outcomes aloneThree Connection Points The Way of Excellence by Brad StulbergThe Growth Equation (Blog Posts)Listen to Brad's previous appearance on APCThis conversation is a reminder that excellence isn’t about doing more—it’s about doing what matters with care, patience, and intention. Brad’s work offers a compelling counterpoint to the constant pressure to optimize everything, and instead invites us to pursue a more grounded, values-aligned version of success—one that shapes us as much as the work itself.

    40 min
  7. Brad Farris Talks About Leadership, Presence, and Scaling Beyond the $1M Agency Plateau

    21 ENE

    Brad Farris Talks About Leadership, Presence, and Scaling Beyond the $1M Agency Plateau

    There are moments when a conversation slows you down in the best possible way. My discussion with Brad Farris was one of those moments—a reminder that growth isn’t just about doing more, faster, or harder, but about becoming the kind of leader who can sustain momentum without burning everything down in the process. Brad has spent decades working alongside agency and expert-firm owners, helping them move past the $1M–$2M ceiling and into healthier, more durable growth. What stood out to me wasn’t just his experience—it was his insistence that the real work happens internally. The biggest constraint to progress, he argues, isn’t strategy or systems. It’s what’s happening between your ears. Six Discussion Points Why agency growth stalls at the $1M–$2M mark—and why effort alone won’t fix itThe hidden cost of hurry, speed, and “getting through the list”Why leadership is about choosing, not clearingHow inbox habits reveal whether you’re managing or leadingThe role of presence, energy, and reflection in better decision-makingWhy leading yourself is the first step to leading othersThree Connection Points Anchor Advisors – Brad’s home base and advisory workBrad Farris on LinkedInHow To Transform A Single Daily Theme Into An Everyday FocusBrad’s perspective reinforces something I’ve seen repeatedly: sustainable growth isn’t about squeezing more output from yourself or your team. It’s about creating the conditions where clarity, rest, and intention can do their work. This conversation is an invitation to slow down just enough to lead better.

    38 min

Acerca de

Hosted by productivity strategist Mike Vardy, A Productive Conversation offers insightful discussions on how to craft a life that aligns with your intentions. Each episode dives into the art of time devotion, productiveness, and refining your approach to daily living. Mike invites guests who are thinkers, doers, and creators to share their strategies for working smarter and living more intentionally. From practical tips to deep dives on mindset shifts, this podcast will help you reframe your relationship with time and find balance in a busy world. Subscribe and join the conversation—because a productive life is more than just getting things done.

También te podría interesar