The Quiet Build · A free tool
The Honest Hours
Find the hours already hidden inside your week. Built for shift schedules, doubles, and tired evenings — not for people with quiet 9-to-5 calendars.
Three short steps. About two minutes. You do not need to give an email to see your number.
One honest thing before you start: this tool does not find you more time. It tells you the truth about the time you have — including the recovery you need after a shift, counted without guilt.
Built by Tom Pham. Twelve years of hotel shifts in Toronto.
Step 1 of 3 — The job
Include overtime. If your weeks swing, use a heavy week. We are being honest here.
Count a double as two.
Door to door, both directions added together.
Step 2 of 3 — The body
The real number, not the number you aim for. In hours.
Cooking, eating, chores, errands, family, the gym if you go. In hours.
Step 3 of 3 — The recovery
This is the question the other calculators skip.
The couch. The long shower. The scrolling. Count it without guilt — recovery is not laziness. It is the cost of the work.
Your number
honest hours a week
Your week, all 168 hours of it
The same hours, two futures
When money gets tight, most people can only think of one move: find another job. Here is the honest math on your hours before you decide.
If a second job paid you dollars an hour:
Rent your hours out
$0
a year, before tax. Real money — and also the ceiling. In year five it is the same number. And it resets to zero every Monday.
Own your hours
$0, at first
That is the honest truth about building your own thing. But what you build stays built. It does not reset on Monday. And it has no ceiling.
A second job is not wrong — some seasons need one. But it is renting out the last hours you own. Building something of your own is the other option almost nobody mentions.
Keep your number
I will email you this result as a short one-page plan, along with the five free questions I send everyone — the ones about whether this is really it. No spam. Unsubscribe any time.
Sent. Check your inbox — and the spam folder, the first time.
— Tom. I work nights in a Toronto hotel. I built this because the 5 a.m. advice never worked for me.
Finding your hours is step one. Choosing the one thing to spend them on is step two. That is what the Starter Kit is for — nine dollars, one honest evening.
Know someone who says they have no time? and send them this.