First tip for climbing.com, don't have d-bags write blurbs for your coverpage. Case and point:
"Mid-Atlantic Rock
A four crag sampler by Spenser Li - Mid-Atlantic climbing, in the Eastern US, . In general, it's short and greasy, but it does offer good variety...."
I've climbed at nearly every famous place in the country, and some of my favorite routes of all time are located in the Mid atlantic. Yeah the gunks may be a little greasy in spots, but that statement is in general a huge oversight of the great climbing in New York, the New, the Red, Seneca and so on. By this standard, my home in Yosemite is surely 'an overcrowded cesspool of big wall groupies'. Choose your words wisely Bros.

Reader Tip: Multipitch trad routes, moving efficiently - Turn a 10 pitch, 14 hour epic into a 5 hour cruiser climb.

Tip 1: Discuss with your partner how they like to rack up before you leave. Find a consensus on what will work for you both the best. Keep true to this racking style, so you know exactly where the pro you need is, when you need it.
Tip 2: Try wearing a shoulder sling. You can take off the rack at belays, hang it up, and transfer it right over to your partner without spending 10 minutes unclipping and reclipping every piece of gear on your rack to and from your belay loops.
Tip 3: Choose a back loop on your harness for your belay devices, and one on the other side for your cordalettes. I keep my Cordalettes on my back right loop, and my belay devices on my back left. I always know where they are without wasting time.
Tip 4: At a belay, see which way the next pitch goes. Clip a sling on a biner to the opposite side of the anchor. As the second climbs, coil the rope inside the sling like a saddle, beginning with your end into the sling. This way it is stacked for when you are swapping pitches. If you are leading the whole thing, when the second gets up to the belay, grab the whole rope in the sling and roll it 180 degrees so you are on top. This will clean up belays and save you a big chunk of time. Also, let the second mess with the rope if it gets knotted. It'll give them something to do when you are routefinding.
Tip 5: Make photo copies of the topo and have one for each person. Climb with it in a velcro or zipping pocket at all times for referral on lead if necessary.
Tip 6: Belays are a place to change gear, not a place to take a 30 minute bubble bath with your partner. Have the belay clean and ready when the second arrives. Swap gear and keep going.
Tip 7: If the route has bolted anchors, keep a cordalette tied, with two biners on each side and a locker on the power point. You can take a cordalette off a previous belay and clip it right into the next anchor without having to retie it. Tie yourself in using the rope on the locker on the power point (daisy chains are static and add to the clutter). I use a clove hitch so it is adjustable, but it is reccomended that you use a figure 8 on a bight to tie off.
Tip 8: Always keep moving. There is always something to do, so do it instead of standing around eating your chalky buggers.
Tip 8: Link pitches whenever possible using long runners. Get the beta before hand from a friend. Linking pitches can be a big test of endurance, but it will save you a lot of time.
Tip 9: Keep eating! Every few pitches while on belay, grab a bar out of your pants/pack and munch down. Your body doesn't work if you don't eat and drink. By eating and hydrating, you will move faster beacuse of increased strength and confidence.
Tip 10: I hardly have to say anything these days with all these techy kids climbing around, but cams can be faster than nuts. When nuts are set, they can take a nut tool to remove. This takes time.
Tip 11: This is for more experienced climbers ONLY! Only place pro when you need it. Spending 4 minutes fighting with a cam in a marginal placement on a pitch of 5.5 is hardly worth it when you can climb 10 more feet and easily place a good piece in a few seconds.

Thanks all! there are about a million other little things that I do when I'm climbing that shave seconds here and there, but these were the biggest time savers for me. Let me know if I left anything out!
Peace,
Jack