Thanks!
Most days I go through my next action lists when I’m thinking of stuff to do and review it each week to do any re org.
It's the best GTD system I've seen online, and the infinite sub-tasking/grouping, where each grouping can be set to be done either sequentially or in parallel, either surfacing the next task or all the tasks in the "Next" list automatically is amazing.
Throw in the review settings, and the big picture areas of responsibility? And end-to-end encryption?
It's amazing.
The list is only for this single day. The rest 3/4 of the two pages is for notes from meetings or ideas. If there is not enough room, I just turn over and use the next two pages completely for notes. If I don't need the second page, I don't use it or paint something nice (this is important, because I don't wanna turn pages for a single day)
If I remind a todo, that is not for today, I put it on the LAST 2 pages of the notebook. One is for SOON (last page) and the other is for ANYTIME (before SOON).
My daily routine is:
- Check yesterday, put all unfinished todos on the top of the new page
- Check my calendar and also put all important appointments on the list
- Check the notes from yesterday, if there is something important
- Check the last two pages, if there is something, I might wanna do today
- Use my smartphone to "screenshot" yesterday and mail it as backup
- Having the paper notebook ALWAYS with me
Works pretty good so far, but it requires discipline and it's a lot of management work. But it is also a good "worklog"...
I also have an accountability check-in every other week with a friend, where we set goals and talk about getting them done, etc, as a means of having some accountability to someone other than ourselves.
I use little symbols like this: [x] = done, [-] = canceled. [>] = moved. [~] = in progress. I also write notes on the items so I can recall my thought processes quickly. To me, it's important to keep a to-do list free-form and unconstrained -- a constrained to-do list is not as useful. (hence I find most dedicated to-do list apps -- while tidy -- to not be that useful in real life)
My .md file looks like this:
3/3/2022
[x] Setup meeting with director Y
4/3/2022
[-] Check ETL - bleah not needed anymore
[x] Call Person X
[ ] Debug ffff.py
* I tried x but it didn't work. Maybe try y?
* Also look at z further up the pipeline.
[~] Schedule meeting with ZZ
* remember to discuss topic YY - don't move forward without agreement. Don't get sidetracked.
Parked
[ ] Schedule visit to location BB to learn how it works
[ ] Check out new database system DD -- see if it's faster than what we have.
I scan this every day to quickly remember where I'm at. Before I did this, I found I wasted hours in the morning just trying to recall what I had to do in a day, which meant I only worked 4 hours of every 8 hour day. With this, I can squeeze in 6-8 hours of productive work.The only downside of this system is that there are no automatic reminders, but I need time-based reminders for certain things, I just add an item to my calendar app. That's what calendaring apps are for, and todo apps merely duplicate their functionality.
Context switching is expensive, and anything you can do to recover context quickly will pay dividends.
There’s no tool that can mask a lack of disciplined, conscientious work.
Personal: paper notepad. The timelines are longer and the lists are shorter, it doesn’t need anything fancy.
In both cases embrace the Bullet Journal notion of having a regular step where you decide to scratch items you’re not really going to do. Otherwise the list keeps growing no matter what system you use.
I assign due dates to most tasks (only the least important tasks don’t get a date - and I never get to those) and then I use some custom components written for xbar on Mac and Scriptable on iOS to make sure that every screen I look at shows me the items that are due today.
I can create a new task and assign a due date by talking to my phone using Siri or shortcut on Mac and iOS. I’ve also got a shortcut that clears my list for the day and pushes everything out until tomorrow, which I might use of a weekend.
I’ve been doing this for 5 months and have 175 items in Done, which is huge for me as I’m a procrastinator.
It's a note taking app but it has three very useful features
1) you can make anything into a checkbox
2) you can #tag anything
3) you can create "views" that display tagged content e.g. #admin AND #priority NOT #waiting
This combination effectively lets me evolve my own todo system and note system at the same time. So over time you build up a knowledge base of how you completed previous tasks that's relatively easy to find again.
I've never had success with the systems and apps that require maintenance, there's just too much cognitive burden in reviewing and cleaning them. It's much easier for me to just rewrite from scratch, maybe copying a few items, and then accept I can ctrl+f a previous month if necessary.
This way is good because if I don’t manage to get to do something on the list I can just move it to the next appropriate day. At a glance I can see if there was anything I missed doing the day before.
Calendars and reminders use their respective MacOS system apps (those can be used with Exchange, CalDAV and CardDAV servers which is important to me). The note-taking part of the app has a lot of niceties (task management, subfolders, tags, wiki-style-links, attachments, ...) and is split into a general-purpose "notes" folder and a "daily notes" folder. If you open a daily note, you get a combined view of a markdown note for the day in the center, your calendars and reminders on the right and all your general-purpose-notes in a sidebar to the left. I find this combination so useful that Noteplan is the only app I (very grudgingly) a) pay a subscription fee for and b) sync via a commercial cloud service - in this case Apple's CloudKit.
1 https://mejuto.co/how-i-use-todoist/ an article I wrote about my usage
Every morning I burn through my emails. then run through my calendar, then my todo lists, then make a plan for the day. You have to keep revisiting and updating.
3 main categories: Must do, should do, could do. (Plus a couple of other for recurring and seasonal).
On Sunday eve or Monday morning I go through, add new things, delete done things.
Then pick things I want to do this week and transfer it on a sheet of paper that sits on my desk.
For stuff that absolutely, positively needs to get done, I'll sometimes report to the aggressively-persistent Due³.
¹https://culturedcode.com/things/ ²https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT212758 https://www.dueapp.com/
This is the simplest and most effective so far that I have broken down to.
Obsidian is used as a personal wiki where I track consumables like movies, series, and books.
I sometimes also use ClickUp. I track the most unpleasant stuff with it.
About to-dos specifically, I use plain-text files. Only on some days. It lasts for a day.
I sometimes also use Google Sheets or Google Calendar to timeblock stuff for the next day. And then print it out.
I believe one should try different methods or combinations of them before settling with on or some.
For overflow beyond that, I have a Google Sheet that just keeps growing. I categorize activities into their basic category, and then tag them with one of the following: “urgent and important,” “urgent and not important,” “not urgent and important,” or “not urgent and not important.”
What “urgent” means is obvious, but “important” is intentionally vague. Specifically, it’s “important to me and not necessarily anyone else.” It’s a value judgement encapsulating a lot of things. Do I enjoy it? Do I care? Will it help me achieve something? Do I feel happy for having spent time on it? Etc. It’s best used as a quick gut check.
I then order from top to bottom in terms of urgency, and then importance. This way, discipline is pretty much out of the question: I simply pick the top item and get to it, as logic has already dictated that it’s the most urgent item, which by definition has to come first. Beyond abject urgency, items sort themselves by their importance to me, therefore also removing discipline (I don’t need to be disciplined in order to work on things that are important to me).
This way, it’s kind of a self solving system, as problems identify themselves quickly and naturally. If I’m always stuck in one of the “urgent” quadrants, I need to reduce my workload so that I can do more of what’s important to me. And if I’m spending a lot of my time in one of the “not important” quadrants — why? Clearly something needs to change.
The sweet spot is “not urgent and important.” That’s where I want to spend as much time as possible.
I also have fields for things like “next action,” “sub-steps,” “what’s blocking it,” etc. Plus fields for tracking progress of each sub-step (not yet started, in progress, wait, finished, etc).
I use this system for everything — basic to-do’s, app ideas, whatever. It requires a decent amount of sitting down and organizing things, but that organization process is an important time for self-reflection.
It’s low tech, but like how my best financial system is putting time aside each Sunday to manually log every cent I spent that week, it’s effective in that nothing escapes my brain and I’m consistently forced to self-reflect. No other system for me has stuck.
Every task in the board is also its own page (Notion creates a database) so I can keep track of notes and other useful content right on the task. Once it's complete I pull the task out of the board, and now it's a self documented project history.
I've tried Notion, Trello, and Keep in the past: they felt over-engineered and too reliant on having an internet connection/browser window open, so in the end I always found myself going back to basics. Haven't had a single problem with my current setup so far.
And I'm sure I'm forgetting some.
When most items are completed I create a new updated list and toss the old one into a "pile" (my favorite data structure!).
It works really well for me, as it keeps even older todos in my head every morning and also makes me aware of how much I have on my plate overall.
- I've been using it for 7 years and there's nothing better out there.
Then every week, I pull a few into my planner and try to do a couple things a day, which I micromanage with a daily bullet journal style thing.
Google Keep for checklists - Travel checklist, Address change checklist, Grocery checklist.
Rarely, when I need to note something long form, I use Google Docs.
I use Google Keep for shopping lists because of the checkbox functionality and sync to Android, but I expect to keep using Notepad until it's sunsetted.
TickTick has steadily improved/refined their offering without ever interrupting my existing workflows.
Thoughts/details about how I use it:
(1) I never try to remember to do anything. I just always add a quick reminder in TickTick and let my brain move on. I have ~300 reminders right now. This is part of the answer to how I remember to manage the list. The list has every I need to know/track in it, so the need for management shows up whenever the list becomes unwieldy. More on that below.
(2) Everything that needs to get done gets a due date. I add an arbitrary one if it doesn't have to get done by a certain date. I won't see any task with a due date again until the due date arrives. The only thing I regularly pay attention to is my "Today" view -- the list of due or overdue tasks.
(3) Actually-scheduled things go on my calendar. The to-do list is for things that don't necessarily have to get done at a fixed time. (Tick Tick is good about showing both your calendar and your tasks at the same time, so you can maintain this separation while still seeing what has to get done.)
(4) There are lots of tasks (e.g. perform annual maintenance) that I don't perform right away. Having these tasks automatically repeat 1 year from completion (vs. 1 year from the original due date) is a very helpful/useful option. (Both Todoist and TickTick support this.)
(5) I remind myself to do more things than I actually do. As tasks come up that I'm not going to perform right away, I re-schedule them (e.g. for 1 more week out). But once I've dismissed/delayed a task a few times, it's time to re-evaluate whether it's actually worth doing.
It's always interesting to notice thoughts like: "I should do this, but I'm about to skip doing so again." Sometimes this prompts working to develop new habits or other corrective action. But more often it results in me re-evaluating why I think I "should" do it and deleting the task. Until I take one of those actions, I have explicit evidence that my thoughts (what I should do) and actions (what I'm actually doing) aren't quite aligned. Seeing that gap is useful -- it provides some insights.
(6) The biggest downside of this system is that it can result in a mountain of delayed (so clearly not very important) tasks building up. But I find it better to deal with that as described in (5) than to be careful about what I add to my task list up front.