Guest Post: How I Outsource My Life to Over 13 People (by Gopi Kallayil)

Note from Jenny: When my friend and fellow Googler Gopi Kallayil first told me he outsources his life to over a dozen people, my jaw dropped in awe. I’m having a hard time figuring out how to outsource to one! (An unpaid intern if anyone is looking for a cool gig. And by cool, I mean I need your help to even figure out how to help).

So I asked Gopi how he does it, and he replied with an email summary of his outsourcing tactics. I was absolutely blown away! Talk about priorities – Gopi has figured out how to employ dozens of people to make his life easier – and let me tell you – it works. Gopi is one of the kindest, happiest, most generous, and energetic people I know! His enthusiasm for life is contagious, which you can see for yourself in his award-winning Toastmasters speech, My Cup Runneth Over.

Even if we are all at varying places in our lives to afford this kind of outsourcing (though some would argue we can’t afford NOT to), I hope you’ll get a kick out of seeing how Gopi manages his life.

How I Outsourced My Life Away (by Gopi Kallayil)

There are some things that are perfectly egalitarian on this planet. Birth and death for one. And the fact that in between we all have 24 hours each day of our life. President Obama gets 24 and I get 24. But as our lives get busier and there are more choices for us it becomes difficult to do everything we want to in 24 hours. So we lead frenzied, busy lives, lurching from one commitment to another under the tyranny of schedules.

That is when I stumbled upon a concept that shifted my paradigm. You can BUY time in a free market capitalist economy and as a result have 28 or 32 or 36 hours in a day. I first read about it when A.J. Jacobs tried personal outsourcing and wrote an article in Esquire titled “My Outsourced life” which has done its rounds around the Internet. His point was that corporations were outsourcing so individuals could do likewise. Rock stars and Hollywood celebrities have assistants. So can regular folk like me.

My inspiration came from Timothy Ferriss, author of the best seller “The 4-Hour Work week“  when he spoke at Google (video). His compelling logic is as follows: Take your annual salary and divide it by 2,000 hours which is the number of hours people in America work on average. The resulting number is the economic value of an hour of your time based on your current compensation. Let us say that number is $40 for example. If there is something you need to get done but it is not your passion and someone else can do it for you for less than your hourly cost ($40 in this example) then you should give it to them and use that hour to focus on your passion and joy.

Simple! So I read his book, followed through and did much of the outsourcing he does, plus some more I have invented. It is likely, you may assume, that this is the lifestyle of the rich and the famous. I am discovering it is not and that you could get help as little as $4 an hour or even $0.

Here is what I have done to outsource my life:

  • Personal Assistant — I have a personal assistant in India through Getfriday. Her name is Nancy. Nancy sits in Bangalore but can handle anything that can be done on the phone or web. For example, if I am going on vacation she will stop my mail and all my subscriptions. Once my car got broken into and my navigator was stolen and she arranged for a repair shop to come in to my office in the San Francisco bay area and replace the glass before ordering a new navigator on the web. She saved me so much money by calling around and finding the best provider that with one transaction she paid for her fees for the next two months. In addition it may have taken 45 minutes of my time which would be difficult to find on a work day. So the problem would not have been resolved for several weeks.
  • Personal Organizer — There is stuff that accumulates around my house – books, mail, photos, CDs, bills, etc. Stuff that keeps piling up on my desk and kitchen counter and dining table. Erinne is my personal organizer and she comes in for a few hours on some weekends. We work together around my home office and in two hours my study is clutter-free and all my to-do items are in two small folders labeled “Urgent” and “Medium Priority.” The psychic energy of having a clutter-free office is tremendous.We execute as a team for a few hours and I am done with home office work for another two weeks till things pile up again. But thanks to this system I can find find things when I need them such as a favorite CD, book, that picture from my reunion or the receipt for the music system I bought two years ago and need for warranty repairs.
  • Webmaster — I have my own website where I am interested in writing content but not in dealing with the technicalities. So I found Viggie in Madurai, India to maintain my personal website.
  • Housekeeper — Alma my housekeeper comes in a couple of times a month to tidy up, She is fantastic and does a terrific job. Thanks to her expertise and my own effort to keep it so in between her visits my house feels like a home. It is a haven for me.
  • Personal Chefs — I like entertaining but lack extensive gourmet culinary skills. Through Craig’s List I found a few excellent personal chefs. When I host a dinner party we do menu planning together; one of us does the shopping, and we cook and get the place ready as a team. In this case I am not technically outsourcing to a caterer; however, since entertaining is something I enjoy (but don’t have all the expertise) I am using an expert to complement my meager skills in this area.
  • Interior Decorator — As I mentioned before my home is my haven and sanctuary. I want it to look and feel that way. Kulvi my designer and I work closely together on the aesthetics. It is primarily my self-expression but Kulvi layers on her ideas. Other advantages including getting furniture from some show rooms that are open only during business hours (so hard for me to go) and open only to designers. And special prices only available to designers.
  • Editor — I love writing but need a skilled editor to polish my articles. My friend Nicky in the UK does a fantastic job like she did here.
  • Speech Coaching — I am a competitive public speaker and very active with Toastmasters. There are experienced toastmasters like my coach Henry who take me under their wing and provide the coaching when I am in competitions.
  • Graphics Artist — When I need very sophisticated graphics for my presentations I reach out to my long time graphics artist Kathy who I know from my McKinsey days. She takes my rudimentary designs and magically transforms them.
  • Bike, Run, Swim Coaching — I am a member of the Silicon Valley Triathlon Club which costs me around $5 a month. For that nominal fee I get free biking, running, and swimming coaching by some extraordinary athletes.
  • Handyman — Scott the handyman takes care of all the stuff around the house that need fixing and does a much more professional job than I could if were installing garden lights on my own.
  • Gardener — I have only indoor plants as the property association takes care of the ones outside, but historically there has been cultural herbicide at my place. Plants readily shrivel and die under my care. So Louis helps me pick the right plants from nurseries and keep them alive despite my efforts. I have him come over about once every three months.
  • Wardrobe consultant — Now you are all laughing real hard. So I will stop here. But I do I get some help from a friend and from a professional; both of them have a good taste in styles and labels, which saves me the trouble of dealing with the bewildering experience that clothes shopping is for me. Jenny doubts if it has made a difference. (Note from Jenny: Not true – Gopi always looks amazing!)

But don’t you need a fortune to live this way?

Now I am sure you must be wondering how one affords all this if you are not a rock star or the Sultan of Brunei, which I am not. The well keep secret that I learned from Timothy Ferriss is that you can take advantage of free market capitalism, labor market arbitrage, and currency exchange rates and get all this for some relatively inexpensive rates.

For example, my website designer is $4 an hour and spends about 5 hours a month on my website, so that is a $20 bill. The triathlon club fees are about $5 a month and for that you get free coaching in three sports 2-3 times a week. Toastmasters dues are $3 a month and experienced members are always happy to be mentors. A personal assistant can be as low as $10 a month and for a 5 to 10 hours of their time you pay a nominal fee but get lots done.

More importantly, what do I do with the time that I’ve freed up? Focus quite exclusively on five things that are important to me and I want to spend most of my time on. Those five are:

  • Personal growth and spiritual practice
  • Family and friends
  • Physical, mental, emotional, financial health
  • Professional passions, which currently is my work at Google doing marketing
  • Personal passions, which includes global travel, yoga, public speaking and live music

Here is an example of the kind of trade-off I am making: I teach free yoga lessons and have done so ever since I trained to be a yoga instructor in India. This is my gift to the world. I am consciously choosing to pay someone to take care of tasks that are not my passion so that it frees up two hours a week when I can teach yoga for free.

How successful am I with this concept? Modestly successful, although this is still a work in progress.

Good luck if you choose to go down this path.

***

About Gopi: During the day, Gopi Kallayil works as a marketer at Google. He also teaches yoga, travels the world, speaks, writes, sings, lives freely and joyously. At other times he espouses radical ideas like outsourcing your life and can be a general threat to orderly, civil society. Visit his website or follow him on Twitter.

  • Rachel Vincent

    Jenny and Gopi, I loved loved this post. I had never thought about it as buying time, but this opens up an entirely new perspective. My one question is: what resources have you found that have helped you connect with all of these people? You mentioned Craig's List and getfriday, for example. Any others that you have found helpful?

  • http://www.valeriemondesir.com Valerie M

    This post reminds me of Erica's (of erica.biz) guest post on one of the personal finance sites. It got lots of people upset.

    To be honest, outsourcing intimidates me. I'm sure I don't speak for myself. I realize it's probably because I don't currently have a concrete goal or calling that takes up the majority of my energy. I'm still trying to figure out what I'm good at and what better way then to dabble in everything? However, I do agree with Timothy in 4HWW that it's probably good to get practice with delegating via outsourcing for minor tasks in your life anyway. I'll have to brush up on 4HWW again, it's been a while.

    I also like how you pointed out finding mentors and help through club memberships. I never thought of that.

  • Cat

    Great great guest post! I feel like I took so much away from it that my head is spinning … but in an inspired way! ;-) Thanks for sharing.

  • http://foodedu.blogspot.com Samantha

    Great post! I definatley could outsource some of my life such as getting a house cleaner. It's really hard for people such as myself (control freaks) to hand off responsibility, but I am beginnig to learn I can't do everything and I might be a lot happier saying no and handing undesirable jobs off to others!

  • http://www.happinessandwisdom.com HappinessandWisdom

    I was sitting on an airplane today reflecting on how I was going to accomplish all that I wanted to do, in the short time I wanted to do it. I landed on (pun intended!) outsourcing as the answer, but didn't fully know where to start. To date, I've done the obvious stuff (gardening, housework, etc), but the extreme to which it's been taken by Mr. Kallayil is inspiring! I am going to being immediately outsourcing more of my life! Thank you!

  • Emily

    Jenny,

    Again, an inspirational post that just talks to me!!! I find myself thinking ALL THE TIME (i'm sure as everyone else does) about how I need to find a free personal assistant who wants to keep track of my life…and to know you CAN do that and it is affordable? So awesome! Keep up the good work….your blogging rocks my world!

    Emily Smith

  • Nancy Paul M

    Jenny this is Nancy, I loved the post..I am assisting him virtually but I have seen when he came to India . He is person with true passion and knows what life is all about and leads in the way he wants.(To King Size)
    He is so organized and punctual that assisting him made me learn many things which I didn't even knew before I joined “Getfriday”.
    So I would love to thank him to the core from your end too and my destiny which gave this option.
    Gopi Kallayil is best.

  • Dinesh

    I met Gopi when he came down to Bangalore( Getfriday).

    He is definitely Smart, Passion about his life. One of his fav quotes truly inspires every one.
    “In the end what matters is
    Did you live well?
    Did you love well?
    Did you let go? “

  • gopi

    Google search (of course -:) ) and word of mouth.

  • http://twitter.com/stanigator Stanley Lee

    Why am I not surprised…your fellow Googler and I are in the same club in terms of outsourcing advocacy anyway…

  • http://ericaleexo.com/blog/link-lust-week-of-61-66/ Link Lust: Week of 6/1-6/6 | ericaleexo.com

    [...] ♥ Weird, but seems to work for some: How I Outsource My Life to 13 Different People [...]

  • http://www.sociallygreenguru.com/ Quisha

    Great post! I shared it with my boyfriend. He owns a small moving company and they're in serious growth mode. Where I don't have time to help him out because I'm busy myself, I referred him to Getfriday.com :) I may use it myself. Guess you don't have to be super rich in order to get help in normal everyday life things!

  • Chris Davis

    Gopi,

    Thank you once again for taking what I viewed as a mundane concept and providing me with a much richer interpretation. There are several domains that you touch on where I already outsource, and others that I can now consider.

    One quibble is with your title (which I realize you probably chose to be provocative). I am not at all interested in outsourcing my life; which I view and the challenging and engaging ways I invest time and energy. And, I am enthusiastic in outsourcing what I view as the non-engaging aspects of my life. Your post has given me new ways to think on this topic. Again, thank you,

    cd

  • http://www.websitedesigningmumbai.net website mumbai

    I have always looked forward for things that have educated masses and I am really glad to see the same thing has been attempted, thank you.

  • http://www.websitedesigningmumbai.net website mumbai

    I have always looked forward for things that have educated masses and I am really glad to see the same thing has been attempted, thank you.

  • http://www.thenextgreatgeneration.com/ Rochelle

    This is a very interesting concept. I feel like people today are so busy to the point of stressing themselves out, and many want to show that they are independent and capable of doing everything themselves. This is especially true with Generation Y. I think outsourcing your own life is a great way to free up time, and it's inspiring to know that it can be done in an affordable manner.

  • http://www.Lifestyleignition.com Mark

    I love seeing real world applications of outsourcing in life! The stereotype is that this is expensive and not possible. This proves otherwise. Never heard of GetFriday either. Im checking that out right now.

  • http://careersoutthere.com/career-shmeer-links-of-the-week-worth-your-time/ Career Shmeer: Links of the Week Worth Your Time | Careers Out There

    [...] How To Outsource Your Life – Life After College Words Of Wisdom From A Newbie Entrepreneur – Life Without Pants Employees Advise How To Be A Better Boss – Harvey Mackay The Difference Between Employees vs Independent Contractors – Ryan Stephens How To Enhance Networking Calls With Pre-Call Research – My guest post for Ryan Stephens [...]

  • Jamie

    So if you can’t afford to pay people proper wages, just exxploit them and pay them next to nothing and then brag about it, lovely!

Previous post:

Next post: