TITLE:
Impact-Based Prioritization and the 0 - 10 Rule: A Randomized Controlled Study of Productivity Gains and Burnout Reduction in Working Professionals
AUTHORS:
Michelle Rozen
KEYWORDS:
Productivity, Burnout, Decision Fatigue, Goal Achievement, Occupational Wellbeing, 0 - 10 Rule
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.14 No.6,
June
23,
2026
ABSTRACT: Modern professionals face mounting pressure from decision overload, task proliferation, and chronic time scarcity. These conditions contribute to declining productivity and rising rates of occupational burnout. The 0 - 10 Rule is a structured prioritization methodology in which every task, opportunity, or decision is assigned a numerical score from 0 to 10 based on its potential impact and alignment with the individual’s highest priorities. Tasks scoring at or near 10 receive immediate attention and resources; those scoring lower are delegated, deferred, or eliminated. Despite anecdotal support for this approach, no controlled study has evaluated its effects on measurable productivity outcomes or burnout. A 12-week randomized controlled trial was conducted with 1000 working professionals (mean age 42.9 years; range 24 - 62). Participants were randomly assigned to either an active intervention group (n = 500) who adopted the 0 - 10 Rule methodology or a passive control group (n = 500) who continued standard work practices. The primary outcomes were goal progress (operationalized as the Goal Progress Multiplier, a ratio of post-intervention to baseline weekly goal achievement rate) and burnout (measured on a validated 0 - 100 burnout inventory). Secondary outcomes included stress level, job satisfaction, and daily focused working hours. The intervention group demonstrated a mean Goal Progress Multiplier of 9.83 (SD = 0.50), representing approximately a 10-fold improvement in weekly goal achievement relative to baseline. The control group showed a multiplier of 1.04 (SD = 0.11). Burnout scores in the intervention group declined from a baseline mean of 54.62 (SD = 9.57) to a post-intervention mean of 32.55 (SD = 7.03), a reduction of 40.5% (SD = 7.34). The control group’s burnout score was unchanged (+0.9%, SD = 7.93). All secondary outcomes improved significantly in the intervention group relative to controls. The 0 - 10 Rule produced large and consistent improvements in professional productivity and burnout across a diverse sample of working adults. The methodology represents a scalable, low-cost intervention with substantial implications for organizational performance and employee wellbeing. Because the intervention incorporated multiple components including structured training, peer accountability, and weekly review procedures, observed effects should be interpreted as reflecting the combined intervention package rather than the scoring heuristic in isolation.