Jul 30, 2007
The Importance of a Central Project List
I can’t escape the fact that having a real centralized project list for the things I’m doing is helping. I want to believe that I have tons of excess capacity in my brain. I want to think that I remember everything I’ve got on the go. But I don’t. And maybe you don’t, either.
I’ve recently started using the Mac program iGTD as a central repository. It does a great job of sorting out contexts and projects such that I can sort things by project or context and get whatever done that I can. I’m sure you can recommend the PC or LINUX equivalent in the comments section, right? But to me, it’s not about the software. It’s about the way one uses the product to create a workflow. Here’s what I’ve been experimenting with:
30 Minutes in the Morning
I wish I could use less time to do this, but I find that if I give the first 30 minutes of my morning towards wiping out my inbox and either turning the mail into projects or acting immediately, it goes a long way on improving my day. So that’s what I do.
- Open email
- Process mail into a project –> add to iGTD or
- Act on mail immediately: respond in a way that closes the loop with the other person.
- Close email and try to forget for an hour.
- Try to nail some action on a project, hopefully in order of deadline.
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