GTD

Blogging Again and Four Ways I’m Going to Keep Going

I’m on a new upsurge of blogging right now, doing lots of posts, and more comments in other places. It’s easy to see I’ve had surges of posting in the past, but they fizzle out, so I am making a marked effort this time to keep the flow of output.

There are a few things I’ve done this time I haven’t done in the past to keep me going. Continue Reading »

GTD
Productivity
Organization
Procrastination
Articles
Goals
Time Management
Tools
Software

Permalink

Not Working On Something Important? Do Something Fun

InspireMe.org’s Two Tips To Make Your Productivity Soar deals with one critical time consumer, staring at a screen wondering what to work on next. They recommend that if you find yourself with an empty to-do list (You do use a to-do list right?) you get up right away, and go and think about what you need to do next.

I’m not sure you even need to go that far, this last week rather then poke around waiting for RSS feeds to update or a new email to drop in searching for some inspiration, when I’ve been at home I’ve stopped, and gone to read a book for a bit, and come back later. And while the actual amount of things I’ve managed to contribute to my various projects on-line has remained pretty much the same, I’ve managed to fit in finishing a book along side. Essentially, rather then worry about not doing anything, I’ve embraced the quiet moments and do something fun. In turn when I get back to working on something more “productive” I  generally feel all the better for the break, and am able to think about things more clearly.

GTD
Productivity
Organization
Procrastination
Articles
Time Management

Permalink

A look at “GTD with Vim”

I just had a quick play with “GTD with Vim” a seemingly nifty little plug-in that adds some Getting Things Done type functionality into your Vim client.

Now, it’s a neat little plug in that offers some swift keyboard short cuts (and a menu) for adding actions as a line and some syntax highlighting to make it easy to read when you tag it as a project or add a context. But it just seems a little limiting to me, mostly in the way to review the data once it’s in. My Vim-Fu is a little lacking, so maybe there are some short cuts I’m missing, and the formatting falls back neatly to been filtered though “grep” or other text processing tool, but that means leaving it to another application.

Edit: After a bit of further investigation, I discovered that it automatically reorders lines by project name, and then by context, and keeps finished items at the bottom, so no option, just magic that wasn’t immediately obvious as none of my tests cases overlapped.

Still, if you live your life in Vim clients it might be what you need to give you that little bit of an edge. It did make me take another look at the way Vim can be extend in other areas however, and so a worthwhile effort even if not for me right now.

GTD
Productivity
Tools
Software

Permalink

My Top 5 Free and Cheap Productivity Tools

Today’s “Geek To Live” over at LifeHacker.com lists 10 Top Free and Cheap Productivity Tools. It’s an interesting read, but I don’t agree 100% with the list, I do however agree with the principle - “Free and Cheap” is a good thing, in fact it sums up most of my entire “Getting Things Done” solution, here’s what’s in my top 5 tools right now.

  1. Pen and Paper
    Don’t leave home without it, in fact, don’t leave the room without it. You want to capture that flash of inspiration you had while waiting for your cup of tea to brew without having to hunt down materials to do so.
  2. D*I*Y Planner or Filofax
    In theory, I love the idea of a D*I*Y planner. In practice, I use a Filofax (A5 Logic Zip) with a few sheets from D*I*Y Planner to complement it. I did try to use non-Filofax binders, but there is such a lack of consistency in “contents”. With a Filofax I know I can pick up a new calendar refill each year, without trouble, and I can’t see myself printing, cutting and punching my own diary. The cost of paper, ink and time just makes it ineffective. But for additional sheets, D*I*Y Planner is invaluable.
  3. Pocket Diary
    Carrying an A5 binder that contains your whole life is not ideal, so I picked up a Filofax pocket diary, that doubles up as my wallet so I always have a quick reference of my diary, somewhere to collect notes. - I have mixed feelings about it currently, usually depending on my trouser pockets and how tight they are. Keeping it in sync with my main diary is sadly a memory job currently, something I need to address.
  4. Post-It Notes
    I collect most of my “Next Actions” on Post-It notes that I then stick to a pair of section dividers in my Filofax, or to my monitor edge for the one’s I’m actively working on so I always have an at a glance view of my work load.
  5. An Inbox
    I use an old sweet tin from Christmas as an inbox, it’s an odd shape and so after a while it becomes very difficult to stack extra things in, which prevents over filling and forces me to process it. I’d love to say I use this correctly, but I don’t nearly enough at present.

What I don’t have yet, and what oddly the Lifehacker list also missed, was a Whiteboard - something which is currently top of my to-buy list. (Well, a Nintendo DS lite is top… but the whiteboard is second, and practical to boot) and maybe index Cards might get a look in, but they come more under pen and paper.

GTD
Productivity
Organization
Articles
Lists

Permalink

Compound Improvement - The 2% Challenge

You’ve probably heard the quote by Albert Einstein that “The most powerful force in the universe is compound interest.” and you can’t ignore the figures over the long term when it comes to saving your money. But compound increases apply to anything. Including productivity.

I never really though about this before, but I was listening to a Brian Tracy audio book this morning, and it’s mentioned there, and when it was it stuck me as such a simple approach to improvement: If you improve your productivity by just 2% each week, in three months your total productivity will have increased by nearly 27%. And in about eight months, you will have doubled your total productivity. By year end, you’ll be operating at 280% of your current productivity. That’s with just a 2% increase per week.

Continue Reading »

GTD
Productivity
Organization
Career
PersonalDevelopment
Articles
Goals

Permalink

A Collection Of Personal Development Sites

Over on Get Rich Slowly they have posted up a collection of recommended personal development sites, several of which I haven’t come across before, which is always a good thing.

Personally,  I try to keep the number of blogs I monitor at anyone time fairly small - but keeping a bigger stock to check when I have more time then usual is handy. But my picks right now are probably not all that suprising:

  • LifeHacker

    One of the most comprehensive blogs for getting the most out of your life with a healthy variety of content to satisfy my craving for some more random entries every now and again.

  • 43Folders

    Another great blog which I constantly refer people to when they want to get a head start on their GTD systems, as the overview they have over there condenses both a good introduction and good lead points for more discovery.

And a couple that are missing that I read regularly:

  • Positive Sharing

    A blog for an in development book that focuses on the concept of seeking happiness at work, an often forgotten ideal which takes a refreshing new angle over the usual attention to simply being more productive and efficient.

  • D * I * Y Planner

    Since I favour paper based planners over digital, then the supply of various templates for printing your own stock for various purposes comes in handy, and the blog keeps up with plenty of articles on general productivity and ideas for new ways to organize your life and planner.

GTD
Productivity
Organization
PersonalDevelopment
Happiness
Articles

Permalink

Avoid Email Chasing Distraction With An Auto-Response

I’m not going to repeat the ancient incantation of “Don’t use email alerts“. Not a week goes by when someone mentions it within the blogsphere, but I’ve always found that while you can turn off email alerts, it’s more difficult to ignore the follow up phone calls just to check “Have you got my email yet?“.

One way to try and reduce this pressure is to set up your email program to automatically reply with a standard email which informs the sender that you have received the email, and will process it within an allocated period of time. It’s useful to make it clear in the message that it is an automated response, so people don’t assume that you are aware of the mail contents.

It’s not fool proof by any means, but at times where you just want to get down
to some work, but keep getting interrupted it can make it easier on people contacting you who are stuck in reactive models of working who might feel that no reply within 10 minutes is shocking.

GTD
Productivity
Email
Work

Permalink

Past Articles from David Allen

Over at http://rickyspears.com/blog/?p=134 Ricky’s gone to a lot of effort to search out the past articles of David Allen from various places on the internet and provide a handy list of them all for quick click access.

I haven’t had much chance to read them yet (There is a lot of them) but they all look to extend around his “Getting Things Done” themes, and while I haven’t seen anything that I’d count as “new” in them, it’s always good to go over old ground from new view points and that’s what this does. And I’m sure some more reading will turn up some lost gems of insight along the way.

GTD
Reading
Articles

Permalink

A second look at Brian Tracy

I felt I might have been a little harsh on Brian Tracy yesterday, so I gave some more of his material a listen, they are fairly short audio books, an hour each and so I gave his “How to become a millionaire” a listen in full, and his “21 ways to earn more and be promoted faster”.
Continue Reading »

GTD
Productivity
7Habits
PersonalDevelopment

Comments (1)

Permalink

Looking at Brian Tracy

I’ve taken a bit of a detour in my reading/listening of the “7 Habits” because my audio book is either abridged, or a different edition to my hard copy (I have the latest revision), plus there are clear cuts in sections. Which makes it near impossible to follow since I can’t tell how much I’ve missed by flicking into my book.

So, not to be put off I picked up one of the other collection of audio books I read, “21 ways to be more productive” by Brian Tracy. Wow, was this a different approach, while reading “Getting Things Done” and “Seven Habits” had given me pause for thought on my opinions of various self help styles, this guy just reconfirmed some of the worst clinches. Continue Reading »

GTD
Productivity
7Habits
Reading
PersonalDevelopment

Permalink