My strategy is that I pick one project that I want to move forward, and I work on that project for 45–90 minutes every day. Or if time is really tight, at least 30 minutes. But never more than 90.
I got this strategy from the strangest place: Advice for New Faculty Members by Bob Boice. Boice spent 20 years studying what makes faculty members successful, and one of the big predictors is working in brief, daily sessions. People who do this are roughly twice as productive on quantitative measures of productivity, and they report being more satisfied with their jobs. It runs counter to the established mythology of our field (many people think that to get anything done, you must have marathon coding sessions), but this technique has utterly changed my professional life.
Boice goes to great lengths on how to implement this strategy. For me the most difficult part has been to stop after a brief session—when I'm on a roll, I want to continue. But the brief daily sessions really work. You'd think the interruption and downtime would get in your way, and that the start it does, but Boice's studies show that for almost everyone, after two or three weeks of brief daily sessions your startup cost for a new session is nearly zero. My own experience confirms this (and I am lucky enough to be one of the two-week people).
I cannot recommend this method too highly.
(If you want to know what I do with the rest of my time, I meet with people, lecture, respond to email, and answer questions on SO.)