The Journey That Changed Everything
From Burnout to Breakthrough
David’s story didn’t start in a consulting firm. It started in Central at midnight, staring at a calendar that looked like a crime scene. Meetings back-to-back. No deep work. No time to think. He was pulling 60-hour weeks but felt like he wasn’t actually accomplishing anything that mattered. Sound familiar?
The Big Four Years
That’s when David made a choice. Instead of accepting calendar overload as “just how it is,” he became obsessed with understanding why Hong Kong’s corporate culture makes time management so brutally hard. He wasn’t content with generic productivity tips. He needed frameworks that actually work in a city that never sleeps, where saying no isn’t cultural and every meeting feels non-negotiable.
Education and Real-World Application
David completed his MBA at the University of Hong Kong and later pursued specialized certifications in organizational psychology through HKU’s Executive Education program. But here’s the thing — he didn’t just study theory. He tested everything on himself first. He applied the Eisenhower matrix to his own calendar. He implemented time-blocking with brutal honesty about what actually deserves his attention. He set boundaries that terrified him at first. And it worked.
The Turning Point
When David started coaching others, something unexpected happened. His clients weren’t just getting more productive — they were getting their lives back. Investment bankers actually saw their families. Tech founders stopped feeling guilty about taking weekends. Corporate executives discovered that protecting deep focus hours made them better leaders, not worse. That’s when David realized his real work wasn’t about squeezing more tasks into fewer hours. It was about fundamentally rethinking how Hong Kong professionals approach time.
Focus Hour Limited
Today, David leads productivity strategy at Focus Hour Limited, where he’s developed frameworks specifically tailored to Asian business contexts. He’s worked with over 300 executives across banking, technology, and professional services. His clients have reclaimed an average of 8-10 hours weekly. But more importantly, they’ve stopped feeling guilty about their boundaries. They’ve learned that saying no to the urgent makes room for the important. And they’ve discovered that weekly accomplishment reviews aren’t about tracking busyness — they’re about staying motivated when the city demands everything.