Less Busy Lab

Aye Moah & Alex Moore

Less Busy Lab is the productivity podcast for people who want to get the right things done and still feel calm when the laptop closes. Moah & Alex met at MIT and later went on to build Boomerang, the multi-million-dollar productivity suite used by millions while amassing more than a dozen patents on productivity technology. After fifteen years of leading an efficient team that consistently out-performs its size without burning out, they’ve learned that real productivity isn’t a single system or a 4am morning routine. Alongside parenting two energetic kids together, they continue to hack on their own productivity and enjoy reading research papers with a glass of wine after the kids go to bed. In each episode, they unpack the research behind focus, overwhelm, habit change, task management, and procrastination while sharing honest stories of the methods they’ve tried—what stuck, what flopped, and why. You’ll leave with practical, actionable tips to discover your own “productivity persona,” lift team performance, and feel less busy while getting more done. If you’re looking for thoughtful guidance on getting the right things done faster while feeling less busy, you’ll feel at home here.

  1. The Procrastination Doom Loop: How to Break Free (Science-Backed Strategies)

    FEB 24

    The Procrastination Doom Loop: How to Break Free (Science-Backed Strategies)

    You know you should start that project. You know the deadline is looming. So why are you watching TikTok instead? It's actually not a willpower problem, and it’s not poor time management. In this episode, Alex and Moah dig into the surprising science of procrastination. It turns out that the conventional wisdom about why some of us put things off, wait until the last minute, and even miss deadlines entirely is inaccurate. Instead of doubling down on unhelpful advice, they reveal the tactics that can actually help you get work done on time. Along the way, you’ll learn about a nude French novelist (one of history’s most famous procrastinators), the three types of procrastination (and why only one is harmful), and three evidence-based strategies you can use to break bad habits. If you've struggled with procrastination your whole life, there's hope. And it doesn't need to involve nudity ;) Links from the show! Seminal paper on procrastination https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17201571/ Procrastinators’ brain https://neurosciencenews.com/doer-procrastinator-brains-9724/ Temptation bundling for exercise https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S074959782030385X Meta analysis of intervention strategies for Procrastination https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1747938X18300472 Party tricks and Naked Writing https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2018/dec/30/party-tricks-and-naked-writing-the-eccentric-life-of-victor-hugo Got to-dos? Get GQueues! gqueues.com Boomerang for Gmail boomeranggmail.com Boomerang for Outlook boomerangoutlook.com

    36 min
  2. Quitters Friday and How to Conquer the “What the Hell Effect”

    JAN 9

    Quitters Friday and How to Conquer the “What the Hell Effect”

    Today isn’t just any Friday, it’s Quitter’s Friday, the day when more people abandon their New Year's resolutions than any other day of the year. Only 18% of people report success with their resolutions by year-end, but what separates the successful few from everyone else isn't simply willpower. This episode explores the psychology behind why resolutions fail so frequently and which research-backed methods actually work for building habits. You'll discover the "What the Hell Effect" and learn the pitfalls of all-or-nothing streak-style goals, where most reminder apps fall short, and the surprising role sleep plays in building lasting habits. Whether you've already fallen off the wagon or you’ve maintained your resolution (for now), this episode arms you with tools to plot your own Quitter’s Comeback. Because day 9 of 365 is too soon to give up for good. Links from the show! Quitter's Day research data from Strava https://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/a-study-of-800-million-activities-predicts-most-new-years-resolutions-will-be-abandoned-on-january-19-how-you-cancreate-new-habits-that-actually-stick.html Herman & Mack’s milkshake study (What the Hell Effect) https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-6494.1975.tb00727.x How sleep affects habit formation https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10374463/ Reminders should help you remember your trigger, not act as the trigger itself https://pure-oai.bham.ac.uk/ws/files/71165330/Investigating_the_Impact_IWC_2019_Final.pdf Schedule text messages from your Gmail (it seems some carriers have shut these down, your results may vary!) https://blog.boomerangapp.com/2011/06/schedule-text-messages-from-your-gmail/ Got to-dos? Get GQueues! gqueues.com Boomerang for Gmail boomeranggmail.com Boomerang for Outlook boomerangoutlook.com

    26 min
  3. The Perfectionist’s Trap: 3 Deadly Enemies of Getting Things Done

    11/19/2025

    The Perfectionist’s Trap: 3 Deadly Enemies of Getting Things Done

    Which world famous masterpiece took its creator 16 years and still wasn’t finished? Yet it’s the one painting everyone has heard of. What’s worse, the painter died before the public ever saw his most famous piece. He was a perfectionist, and in this episode, Alex and Moah will explore the challenge so many face, from artists to authors to even themselves: completing a project you’ve started. You’ll discover the three major barriers to calling a project “done,” why perfectionism is so hard to beat, how to harness the power of deadlines and accountability, and clever strategies to make the tedious “last 10%” manageable (and maybe even fun). Alex and Moah also attack the all-too-common problem of scope creep with practical tips you can implement with your team or on your own. Tune in to transform your unfinished projects into completed victories, and finally experience the sweet satisfaction of “done.” Tune in to pick up powerful tools, principles rooted in psychology, and that final push you’ve been looking for. Links from the show! Small area hypothesis https://ideas.repec.org/a/oup/jconrs/doi10.1086-663827.html https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/relationships/how-to-turn-the-bureaucratic-grind-of-life-into-a-party-7205f690 Study of how NASA scientists stay motivated when mission times are forever https://news.virginia.edu/content/research-reveals-keys-sustaining-long-term-motivation How to run a forcing party, from Tyler Alterman https://x.com/TylerAlterman/status/1947291319774159251 Admin Night - Wall Street Journal https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/relationships/how-to-turn-the-bureaucratic-grind-of-life-into-a-party-7205f690 Boomerang for Gmail boomeranggmail.com Boomerang for Outlook boomerangoutlook.com Got to-dos? Get GQueues gqueues.com

    36 min
  4. Lessons from 26 Team Offsites; What Worked & What Didn’t

    10/29/2025

    Lessons from 26 Team Offsites; What Worked & What Didn’t

    What makes a company offsite productive and not just another expensive mini-vacation with name tags? In this episode of Less Busy Lab, Moah and Alex pull back the curtain on more than a decade of running offsites and hackathons for their now remote team. From a castle in Mill Valley with more Greco-Roman statues than employees to a bioluminescent kayaking adventure, they share real stories of what went right, what went wrong, and the research-backed reasons offsites make teams more creative, connected, and collaborative. You’ll hear why brainstorming after lunch is scientifically smarter, how silly icebreakers (like “Your plane crash-landed on a desert island. What would you pack?”) build psychological safety, and how offsites can increase collaboration by over 20%. Plus, learn their practical hacks for planning a great retreat, like why natural light matters and how to verify Airbnb Wi-Fi before you arrive. Whether you’re organizing your first team retreat or wondering if you should attend an optional off-site, this episode will leave you with fresh ideas, science-based takeaways, and at least make it something you don’t dread. Links from the show! Babson/Dartmouth study: attendees received ~23.5% more new incoming collaboration ties after an offsite than non‑attendees https://faculty.tuck.dartmouth.edu/images/uploads/faculty/adam-kleinbaum/RewiringTheOrgNetwork.pdf Microsoft’s 61,000‑employee study on collaboration time https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/the-effects-of-remote-work-on-collaboration-among-information-workers/ Organizations now average 2.6 offsite events annually: Emburse https://www.emburse.com/resources/the-state-of-corporate-offsites-2025 Boomerang for Gmail boomeranggmail.com Boomerang for Outlook boomerangoutlook.com Got to-dos? Get GQueues gqueues.com

    40 min
  5. Rethinking Email: How Remote Work Changed Everything

    09/24/2025

    Rethinking Email: How Remote Work Changed Everything

    What does email apnea, Slack culture, and flow state protection have in common? They’re all part of how our digital communication habits have shifted since the pandemic—and how those shifts are reshaping productivity. In this episode, Moah and Alex unpack what’s changed about email, chat, and meetings in the past five years. From the days of “batching email twice a day” to today’s blurred boundaries of hybrid work, they dig into surprising research on responsiveness, burnout, and the hidden costs of interruptions. You’ll hear stories from their own remote team and insights from studies out of Microsoft and the University of Mannheim. Along the way, they explore how to balance synchronicity with deep work, why self-interruptions might be less harmful than external ones, and practical ways to protect your off-hours while staying connected to your team. Tune in for practical tips, surprising science, and the kind of candid conversation that will help you get more done while feeling less busy. Links from the show! Media Synchronicity Theory — Multilingual Virtual Teams https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331209896_Language_Proficiency_and_Media_Synchronicity_Theory_The_Impact_of_Media_Capabilities_on_Satisfaction_and_Inclusion_in_Multilingual_Virtual_Teams Email apnea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_apnea Positive feelings when we're more responsive https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/job.2239 Email patterns and self-interruption https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2858036.2858262 Microsoft research on interruptions at work https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Modeling-Opportune-Moments-for-Transitions-and-Breaks-at-Work.pdf

    33 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

Less Busy Lab is the productivity podcast for people who want to get the right things done and still feel calm when the laptop closes. Moah & Alex met at MIT and later went on to build Boomerang, the multi-million-dollar productivity suite used by millions while amassing more than a dozen patents on productivity technology. After fifteen years of leading an efficient team that consistently out-performs its size without burning out, they’ve learned that real productivity isn’t a single system or a 4am morning routine. Alongside parenting two energetic kids together, they continue to hack on their own productivity and enjoy reading research papers with a glass of wine after the kids go to bed. In each episode, they unpack the research behind focus, overwhelm, habit change, task management, and procrastination while sharing honest stories of the methods they’ve tried—what stuck, what flopped, and why. You’ll leave with practical, actionable tips to discover your own “productivity persona,” lift team performance, and feel less busy while getting more done. If you’re looking for thoughtful guidance on getting the right things done faster while feeling less busy, you’ll feel at home here.