I like prioritization as a way to at least put the list in an order that I can work through. I don't follow it always, sometimes it more fun to build a gate than it is to troubleshoot the
tractor.
I've learned that you don't have to get all the improvements done in one summer/year/semester. Some can wait.
Working on ways to make the job go faster in the future is also often worthwhile. An hour of innovation could make that weekly task two minutes faster. In 30 weeks your time is paid off. Gotta haul
chicken food out to the coop. Can we fit two buckets in the coop so the hauling only has to be done half as often? Can we make a chicken waterer that won't freeze in the winter requiring multiple refreshings daily (Yes). Can we pick certain crops on a regular schedule so we process/store them efficiently? Can we do all our equipment maintenance on the same day? Can we put a seedling heat mat under the chicken nest box so we don't have to collect eggs 4x a day on frigid winter days?
Often, like Caleb said, there are things you think you need to do but if you skip them (or do them half as frequently) it'll be just fine. Dusting the house... Probably can be done less frequently during the busy season. Feeding the dog... Maybe not.
My superpower at my last job was procrastination. Many times there was a
project or big task that my boss wanted done. I didn't deliberately not do it, but if I waited until it got closer to the deadline, often the big wigs would change their mind and decide the job didn't need to be done after all. Hee hee.