preferrred brand /format re: Paper planners/calendars

Jamie Elis

Registered
If you love your paper planner pages and they are working for your GTD implementation, I would like to hear what you are using and how you are using it. It is getting close to ordering time for 2009 calendars!

If you have already posted on this, please give me a good clue on how to find your post. (Katherine, I know how to find yours! And, I thank you for your many articulate and logical contributions).

After the long slow death of my Palm, during which time I thought I was developing dementia, I have come to rely on my 3-ring binder 8.5" x 5.5" , but it is bulky, and when I use it I feel like I am still losing my mind because as I flip from one section to another I forget what I am going to enter or want to look up.

Here is my set up and what I do and don't like about it.

Monthly calendar is on two pages--great to see the whole month at once, not enough space in each box for more than a few appointments and deadlines; "bench mark" dates get obscured in the hand written mishmosh.

Contexts- each has a section:

@adjenda (people) and I have a page for each major place where I see or meet with people (office, church, organization, and a page for nuclear family members and a page for extended family. I keep "waiting fors" on this list with the person I am waiting for it from. In the Palm, I had them in memo and hence they were alphabetical (but not check off-able).

@c/c=at calendar(s) and at computer (most of the incoming info about dates comes via e-mail or checking a web page); many times I need to note these in my calendar and send a reply (""ll be there" or "So sorry..."). Many of these I have to write on the family calendar as well as my planner and e-mail on the other people.

@computer r/w = one page for research, one for write/edit/outline

@ Home-desk

@ Home-in the house

@ Home-outside the house

@LISTS (includes cumulating lists, reference lists (part numbers, sizes, etc), check lists, and "waiting for" list for stuff that is not from a person I usually interact with (e.g., parts I have ordered, a credit to come on an account).

@office (work place)

@OUT (errands)

@Telephone/fax/copier

Projects: list of them, brief description, one per page because I can't remember what I have done and not done and a large portion of my actions are not dependant.

SDMB: projects that are deferred, undeveloped

What I miss the most from the Palm is that I can't readily search or carry around my contacts data base.

What I hated about the Palm was not being able to see the whole month and the cumbersome of entry when I was not at the computer.
 

GTDWorks

Registered
I've used a lot of different systems in the 7 years since I've adopted GTD. I keep going back to paper. I am using the classic-sized F-C planner. I have my monthly calendar on two pages per month, use the two-page daily pages because I love the right hand page for recording notes and activities throughout the day, and I have tabbed sections for the following:

Tab #1 - Projects (just the project titles)
Tab #2 - Next Action Lists (Anywhere, Calls, Computer, Email, Errands, Home, Office, Online, Waiting for - one page for each context)
Tab #3 - Agendas (single page for each)
Tab #4 - Someday/maybe
Tab #5 - Church (I'm a pastor)
Tab #6 - Ideas
Tab #7 - Horizons of Focus/goals
Tab #8 - Extra Note Paper
Tab 9 - Receipts folder

I keep a Weekly Reoccurring Calendar WORD document that has each day of the week outlined with the things I would ideally like to do on that particular (perfect) day. It's a rough outline of the week that I use during weekly review or when my wife and I plan out the coming week(s).

I also keep a Monthly Reoccurring Events page with each month of the year on it and items that occur monthly (birthdays, anniversaries, monthly church events, etc.). I keep this in my planner so that I don't have to populate my calendar with them until its time. I check this sheet monthly so that I'm on top of upcoming events and can plan accordingly with projects and associated next actions.

Paper gives me a break from the digital world that I live in so much of the day and I enjoy the full monthly view of my calendar and the daily pages for notes, reflections, reminders, etc.
 

mhm802

Registered
I use a Filofax A5. I have separate sections for Home and Work (the only two contexts I really use), and detailed actions and projects tabs in each. As for calendars, I use two: Monthly (2-pages), and daily (page-per-day). I typically carry three months of daily pages at a time: the current month, previous and upcoming. Appointments for further out are noted on the monthly calendar, and then transferred when I make the monthly switchover. I like Filofax for many reasons, but most especially because of the clean design (white pages, high quality paper) and minimal formatting. In an ideal world, I'd most like a week-at-a-glance, but I find that I sacrifice the space to put tickler items and notes right on the date, so I've settled on daily pages, which don't require me to censor my note-and list-making. On the daily pages the left column I use for appointments, the right column for that day's tickler or items that must be done. There's room for notes at the bottom as well.
 

TesTeq

Registered
DavidCo is late.

In 2009 most of us will have to use third party paper organizers since DavidCo is late with its Mead product announcement.
 

GTDWorks

Registered
I bought a Franklin-Covey planner because GTD wouldn't be out in time for me to get set up for the new year. I look forward to seeing it, however!
 

Ed Svoboda

Registered
I use a Franklin planner that I've had for years. You can find a nice broken in one of eBay. Apparently I have one of the sought after large ring binders so I keep it maintained.

I used to use the Franklin inserts when I wasn't buying them. Now I use pages printed from diyplanner.com along with a custom meeting notes form that I created.

Very much organized like most GTD systems.
 

eLady

Registered
I've spent countless hours & dollars looking for & buying binders, covers & pages that didn't satisfy me. Being a parent & teacher, I needed 3 main things: a calendar, lots of notes pages & no bulk.
I eventually found that in my At-a-Glance Monthly Action Planner! It has a monthly calendar thats large enough to pencil in appointments, generous ToDo & notes pages that are seperated by tabs, a plastic pouch (its rather flimsey though), all in a lightweight flexible spiral notebook that feels great in my hand!
Only 2 negatives, there's no monthly/weekly combination; it comes in one or the other. Also, the pages are boring & unattractive in my opinion.
But, its has 97% of what I want, so I'm happy!
If Mr. Covey would update his Her Point of View wirebound planner to include more note pages i'd be in planner heaven! ;)
 

steve beal

Registered
Paper vs. digital (stuck!)

I've bounced between paper and windows mobile for way too long. Sometimes I switch back and forth twice within one week. This involves deleting my lists from my outlook task list and handwriting them in my Franklin Covey planner. I've been using GTD for years and I do believe it's the only way to go. Here's the basic problem; I use outlook for my calendar. When I go paper, I still use outlook for my calendar, so when I look at my two page per day planner, I don't want to write my appointments in because we all know the perils of having more than one calender. I don't want to go to the written calendar because my meetings come at me from others and they are usually sent as outlook invites.
When I go strictly digital ( I have a Motorolla Q with windows mobile) I find I am not as diligent at opening the lists, reading the tasks, listing the next actions (placemarkers) etc...when I go to my planner, I get a real jolt out of comleting a task and coloring it done. Problem is that when I make my lists, I find myself planning the day and writing a to-do list rather that a list separated by context.
Help! I really want to go paper but my contacts and appointments will be in another place.
I don't want to drift back to daily planning because the re-writing of tasks seems such a waste of time. One lastthing. I like havinga record of events page that comes with the FC planner.

Has anyone else struggled with this and is there a solution??
 

kewms

Registered
Several people use hybrid systems, with electronic contacts and calendar (usually) and paper for everything else.

That's what I did when I first transitioned away from an all-electronic system. I've since gone to a mostly paper calendar as well. I use an electronic calendar for meeting-dense events like conferences, to store conference call numbers and such, and to share with my husband, but I avoid the two calendar problem because my paper calendar is always the canonical version.

I too miss the daily log aspect of a classic planner, so for 2009 I'm merging the 2-page per week and 2-page per day DayTimer formats. This is for logging and planning only: I expect my NA lists will still reside in a softcover Moleskine. I'll try to remember to let the forum know how that works out.

Katherine
 

Day Owl

Registered
Steve:

Canonical = generally accepted standard, authoritative point of reference; often used in an ecclesiastical or literary context but appropriate elsewhere as well. Katherine has used the term quite elegantly in applying it to her paper calendar.
 

eLady

Registered
GTDWorks;61505 said:
I bought a Franklin-Covey planner because GTD wouldn't be out in time for me to get set up for the new year. I look forward to seeing it, however!

I too look forward to seeing it! Has there been any sneek peeks?
 

kewms

Registered
What Day Owl said. If I have several calendars, the canonical one is the authoritative version, the one that "wins" all conflicts among them.

I think this usage comes from computer science and the need to designate a "master" version of a file, but I'm not sure.

Katherine
 

Aspen

Registered
FCovey 2 pages per week

I use the Franklin Covey 2-pages per week with the days in vertical format. I prefer the Design Your Own pages because there are a lot of options about how exactly to set up the page. When I used 2 pages per day, I always went with the logging page on the left instead of the right because I used it less and I hate writing up against the rings of my binder.

I prefer the FC over other brands that also have vertical pages because the format is 2 pages for the week, and then two pages of notes, followed by 2-pages for the week. This past year I tried the Time Design System with 2-pages a day and it was just too much wasted paper, and I really like to see my week at a glance. I also hated the monthly pages style though it is definitely an interesting idea to track other people's schedules on the right side--I just never did it.

By June I switched over to a vertical 2-pages per week format, but I didn't want to buy FC mid year, and I basically have struggled through using this other brand without the note pages between the weeks. So far I think the note pages in between have fulfilled my need for logging pages, but I am very interested in the idea of Katherine's above.

I too miss the daily log aspect of a classic planner, so for 2009 I'm merging the 2-page per week and 2-page per day DayTimer formats.

I am very curious as to how you are going to work this merge, Katherine! Will you keep both together in one planner?
 

kewms

Registered
Aspen;61577 said:
By June I switched over to a vertical 2-pages per week format, but I didn't want to buy FC mid year, and I basically have struggled through using this other brand without the note pages between the weeks. So far I think the note pages in between have fulfilled my need for logging pages, but I am very interested in the idea of Katherine's above.

I am very curious as to how you are going to work this merge, Katherine! Will you keep both together in one planner?

That's the plan: monthly tab, weekly pages for the month, daily pages for the month. Keeping the bulk down by only putting the current month's daily pages and probably about three months of weekly pages in the binder at once. (And note that bulk isn't a huge issue, since I only use this part of the system at my desk. YMMV.) It would be more efficient to do something like this via the DIY Planner pages, since there's some duplication if you merge two planners that were intended to stand alone. If this setup works, I'll think about how to address that problem later.

Katherine
 

Mark Jantzen

Registered
Time/Design

I've used the Time/Design system for years.
www.timedesign.com

I prefer the Daily format and have found it's the fastest and most ubiquitous way for me to implement GTD. The way my office tools are structured an electronic option would mean having two segments to my GTD system. I've tried that and it's ok but for a variety of reasons Time/Design just works better for me.

I've been back and forth between paper and electronic but one of Merlin Mann's posts @ 43 Folders helped to get me unstuck (or really un-suck).

My Fiddling With Productivity Systems Sucks
http://www.43folders.com/2005/05/18...nning-shoes-is-more-fun-than-actually-running

It works for me.

- Mark
 

sparker

Registered
I just posted about this in the other forum. I just came back to GTD. I've used the Palm, I've used Franklin Covey, At A Glance, blah blah blah. I think I'm now in love with my Circa binder from Levenger. I loved the 3 ring binder, but hated that I couldn't fold the front cover back - it was too bulky. I loved my Franklin, but it was too small. The Circa is a bit of a pain because you need a special punch, but I like the ease of moving the pages around.

I had already bought an AAG month at a glance before the Circa. I can rip the pages out, punch them and insert them in my Circa. I like monthly planners. We use Lotus Notes at work, but I have very few appointments at work, so I just transfer them between the two (I know, I know, bad!) But I check them regularly.

Plus, I can always make my own pages and insert them.
 
Top