Reut Shechetr

Reut “Turbo” Shechter turns overload into focus, clarity, and momentum.

Reut Shechetr — Reut “Turbo” Shechter turns overload into focus, clarity, and momentum.

Reut Shechetr

Biography

Reut "Turbo" Shechter earned her nickname the hard way. For over a decade she has been the right hand of founders, helping build new teams, implement systems that didn't exist yet, juggling a thousand things that demanded her attention at once, with never enough hours in the day. In that world, time isn't a luxury. It's the one resource you can never make more of. So she learned to work with it differently. Not to do more, faster, but to decide what truly deserved her time, and to let go of the rest. Through growth, pivots, and pressure that made most people freeze, she built a method for managing time and energy that kept her calm, focused, and three steps ahead. People started calling it magic. She knew it was a method. TURBO OS. After years of working by that method, and after building her own business where every hour carried real weight, she realized something simple. The skill that had carried her all the way was not a personality trait. It can be learned. That is why she created her workshop. It is a working session. Not a talk you listen to and forget, but a place where you actually do the work. The goal is simple: to move from 0 to 1, to walk out at least one percent better, and with the momentum of a healthier, saner way of operating. Because one percent, repeated every day, is what changes everything. In the workshop she takes everything she learned in the field and hands it over in a way anyone can use, whether you lead a company, a team, or you are simply overloaded and can't lift your head above the water. It is practical, honest, and a little (a lot) of fun. People leave with the same three things Reut brings to everything she touches: focus, clarity, and momentum.

Keynotes and Workshops

Back to Basics: From "I Have No Time" to "I Have Time"
In an era where every day brings another tool, another app, and another notification, most people feel their time slipping through their fingers, and sense that no new AI tool truly fixes it. As a time architect, I lead a hands-on workshop that hands the control back. Instead of more tips, participants build a personal operating system for their time in real time: they uncover the true value of their hour, cut out the "busywork," and harness AI as a tool that works for them instead of against them. It is an experiential, sharp, and genuinely funny session, after which every participant walks out with a system that works, and with the shift from "I have no time" to "I have time."