A
andmor
Guest
Agenda
I make a distinction between Calendar and Diary/Agenda. The GtD and Time Design format suggests that the Calendar and ToDo List are what you look at when you decide what to do. But I find that the day/week needs to have some shape, otherwise I become the biggest interrupting culprit because I have to keep going back to my lists whenever I finish something. So when, as most days, I have few meetings and lots of unscheduled time, I draw up a rough plan of my day - I write the 2/3 most important things to do plus a few other items (I try to consolidate based on my Context Lists), assign generous duration estimates and create a tentative daily plan using start/end times. I know that everything is negotiable and the plan can be changed easily. I try to avoid going back into my lists except to extract detail of the daily plan items.
I also journal when I work - see current thread on this and Scott Lewis's excellent posting. I write notes opposite the items in the notepad. I find that it helps me to focus on the task at hand and it creates some structure to my incorrigible doodling. It's much better than using scrap paper and not being disciplined about what I write because I know I will throw the scrap paper away.
I avoid updating my lists as I go along - I save my notepad notes till the end of the day (occasionally, 2x a day). In my case, this is "know thy enemy" - I am not good at tidying up; I immediately jump into the next thing - so I set aside a one-shot time to tidy up at the end of the day.
HTH
Andrew
I make a distinction between Calendar and Diary/Agenda. The GtD and Time Design format suggests that the Calendar and ToDo List are what you look at when you decide what to do. But I find that the day/week needs to have some shape, otherwise I become the biggest interrupting culprit because I have to keep going back to my lists whenever I finish something. So when, as most days, I have few meetings and lots of unscheduled time, I draw up a rough plan of my day - I write the 2/3 most important things to do plus a few other items (I try to consolidate based on my Context Lists), assign generous duration estimates and create a tentative daily plan using start/end times. I know that everything is negotiable and the plan can be changed easily. I try to avoid going back into my lists except to extract detail of the daily plan items.
I also journal when I work - see current thread on this and Scott Lewis's excellent posting. I write notes opposite the items in the notepad. I find that it helps me to focus on the task at hand and it creates some structure to my incorrigible doodling. It's much better than using scrap paper and not being disciplined about what I write because I know I will throw the scrap paper away.
I avoid updating my lists as I go along - I save my notepad notes till the end of the day (occasionally, 2x a day). In my case, this is "know thy enemy" - I am not good at tidying up; I immediately jump into the next thing - so I set aside a one-shot time to tidy up at the end of the day.
HTH
Andrew