Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
Famous model in psychology and helps us understand what motivates people.
8+8+8 Rule
Make a good balance sheet of your life.
Fogg Behavior Model
Identifies 3 elements for behavior change: Motivation, Ability, and Prompt.
Mental Flow
A state of complete immersion and focused enjoyment in an activity.
Peak-End Rule
Explains how we remember experiences.
SOAR Self-Leadership Model
Built on four essential components that guide personal and professional development.
4-7-8 Breathing Technique
Simple approach to clam the nervous system.
4A Model
A valuable model to manage stress effectively.
5 Second Rule
A Simple Trick to overcome procrastination and anxiety.
Goleman Emotional Intelligence Model
Foundation for personal success and leadership.
VITALS Method
Just take one small, meaningful step instead of a giant leap.
CBT Framework
It’s not the situation that causes your emotions — it’s how you think about it.
ABC Model
A simple and practical way to break free from negative emotions.
Peak–Trough–Recovery Model
Knowing where you are helps you choose what to do next with intention instead of habit.
Peak–Trough–Recovery Model: Mastering Your Energy, Not Just Your Time
Knowing where you are helps you choose what to do next with intention instead of habit.
Peak–Trough–Recovery Model
Introduction
Most professionals manage their schedules by the clock. They fill every hour with tasks and push through fatigue to stay productive. Yet what truly limits performance is not time, but energy.
Throughout the day, your energy naturally rises and falls. Some hours you feel sharp and creative, while others feel slow and draining.
Don't take this on yourself; it is more than the rhythm of a human being.
Ignoring this rhythm leads to wasted effort and lower focus.
The Peak Trough Recovery Model helps you understand and manage these natural energy cycles.
Developed from behavioral science research by Dan Pink, it shows how mental energy follows a daily pattern of highs, lows, and rebounds.
By aligning your most demanding work with your peak periods and saving lighter tasks for your lower-energy hours, you can work smarter, stay focused, and recover more effectively.
In this model, Dan Pink divided a day into 3 stages, and each day follows a predictable emotional and cognitive curve:

The model reveals that productivity is not a straight line.
Peak
Usually, you reach the peak of the day in the morning. This is your high-performance window. Focus, alertness, and analytical thinking are strongest.
It is ideal for deep work, problem-solving, and decision-making. For most people, this occurs in the morning hours after waking and stabilizing.
Trough
When it moves to the second stage, energy dips and attention declines. Mistakes are more likely, and motivation drops.
The trough is not the time for complex work but for routine tasks, checklists, or short breaks that help you reset.
Recovery
Later in the day, mood improves and creativity rebounds. Logic weakens slightly, but flexible thinking returns.
This phase suits brainstorming, collaboration, or planning sessions that need open-mindedness rather than precision.