Project list? Yes, but HOW?

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I just re-read the part about creating a project list with all your projecs on it in the GTD-book.

But there are no details about how the format is, or how to structure your projects. And worst of all: How to keep to-dos of your projects in your main list of next steps...

As far as i could make sense of it, DA expects you to make a list sheet/file containing all your projects titles. Then a drawer/directory containing a dossier/directory per project (even those with just 2 tasks?).
Next every project dossier/directory contains at least a sheet/file with your plan and next steps for that project.

Now this would mean to keep you to-do-list and with that your overview up to date by going trough *all* the projects' next step lists and syncing them with the main next steps list *at least* once a week with the weekly routine.

To me this is clearly a huge and effective overkill. I tried that system already many times, and every time it failed exactly at those two points:
  1. Keeping your main next steps list up-to-date all the time took way too long (days!), because of too many separate project-next-steps-lists.
  2. It is impossible to structurize your projects hierarchically by target (aka. "why i'm doing this"), because very often you have projects or tasks that are sub-projects/tasks of several other projects, giving you a network-like structure. And that's not really supported with file systems (maybe possible with unix softlinks) or dossiers (they don't fit ;)

So what to do now?
How did you solve this?
And most important: David Allen, how did you mean this?

Thank you in advance... :)
 
I have a project list. This list describes each project in enough detail that I know what I am trying to accomplish and what the deadline is (if any). For sufficiently complex projects, I have an auxiliary page (or more) with lists of things to do, milestones, contact information, whatever else I need. For simple projects, all I need is the outcome.

I have context lists. Each of these describes the actions in sufficient detail that I can figure out why I am doing the action, and therefore can find the relevant project support materials (if any).

As I do actions, I cross them off the context lists. If I do not know what the Next Action is after that, I check the project support materials and add the appropriate new action to the appropriate list.

At the Weekly Review, I go through the project list and mentally verify that I know where I am with each project. If I don't, I check the project support materials.

My Weekly Review usually takes an hour or less. This portion of it usually takes ten minutes or less. So no, I don't think the overhead is particularly onerous.

One important point, I think, is realizing that you do not need to write down every action connected to a project. Just the next one, the one you need to do in order to move forward. It would certainly be silly to have a complete project dossier for "Buy new tires:"
* Find phone number of tire shop.
* Verify what tires are currently on car.
* Call tire shop, make appointment.
* Take car to tire shop.
And so forth. WHO CARES!

If the project is simple, it's okay for your "project support materials" to be simple or nonexistent. If the project is more complex, "Stage military takeover of Goodyear rubber plantation," then your project materials might need to be more complex. Choose the tool appropriate to the task.

Hope this helps,

Katherine
 
As usual, Katherine has a good post. To further break this out visually, here's an example GTD setup.

Imagine coming upon a freshly-polished mahogany desk. On that desk sit several pieces of paper.

The first piece of paper is labeled "PROJECTS":


PROJECTS
Complete and post hobby game to website
Finish draft 2 of novel
Go out on five dates this month
Go out to lunch with Bill

Next to it is another piece of paper, labeled "ACTIONS AT HOME":


ACTIONS AT HOME
Add test for multi-bullet ship damage to hobby game
Add short scene in which Tom walks around town to novel
Check for new matches on eHarmony

There's a third piece of paper, labeled "WAITING FOR":


WAITING FOR
Bill re lunch

Underneath the desk is a filing cabinet. In that cabinet are files labeled "Hobby Game" and "Novel". Inside the "Novel" file are several sheets of paper containing notes on things to add, remove, or rewrite in the novel. Several items are crossed off the first page; the first two non-crossed-off items are "Need scene where Tom walks around town" and "Search-and-replace Adam's eye color to be blue, not green."

The owner of the mahogany desk--a friend of yours--comes in to the room. She glances at the Actions list, and says that she's decided to write that new scene in the novel. She sits down at her desk and writes the scene.

When she's done writing the new scene, she walks over to the desk. On the "ACTIONS AT HOME" list, she crosses out "Add short scene in which Tom walks around town to novel", then thinks for a moment. She turns to you and says, "I don't remember what's next on the novel." So she yanks open her filing cabinet (it sticks a little), pulls out the file labeled "Novel", and nods. She writes down "In novel, search-and-replace Adam's eye color to be blue, not green" on the "ACTIONS AT HOME" list.

Does that make sense?
 
Project List: Yes.

I always have this discussion with other folks that use GTD and are project managers. Every project that I manage from 10 tasks to 2,000 have some support material (e.g., purpose, vision, etc.) then a list of tasks (or next tasks). Project planning is a spectrum from "what's next" to "I know everything action need to get this done". You have to pick what is the best method for the project. I'm a planner so I like to know what I'm doing 14 weeks from now.

Weekly, I review every project (in my case, 2 hours on Friday afternoon for reviewing and providing status' for active projects) and move any task for the following week or what's next tasks to my action context lists (e.g., @Phone, Agenda for, etc.) and record all completions from the context lists back on the project task list. For me, using WBS codes save my sanity and minimize confusion between tasks.

I have a single Project list (i.e., my list of lists) witch identifies every project that I work on - or I don't work on it. Even in my case, non-project tasks (e.g., call mom) get a WBS code.

So far, I have only been able to do this paper and pencil. I have tried several applications, but keep coming home to paper.
 
First, thank you all for your very interesting and insightful answers.
Now l will answer some things first, and then tell you how id did this, and how it went wrong (and maybe why, as far as i understand it).

@katherine (kewms): about your wav vs. mine

you basically do what i thought i had to do too. but to me this was way to slow and ineffective. thing of my list of next steps - containing all the next steps from all my projects too, and ordered in categories of course - as a list of at least 200 items. next think of my project folders with all their tasks folded out as a tree/mindmap higher than my room's walls... with a 10pt font size.
next i have some timing expectations on the speed. crossing off a task and adding the next one should in no case take more than 30 seconds.
 
Why do you have 200 tasks on your NA lists? Are all of them immediately actionable? Do you expect to do all of them in the next two weeks or so?

Why does your project list cover an entire wall in 10 pt. type? Do you plan to move all of those projects forward in the next two weeks or so?

My first suggestion would be to radically trim your lists. Make aggressive use of the Someday/Maybe list. Be rigorous with yourself about what it is actually possible to do, and make conscious decisions about the other stuff. Once you do that, you will find that all system maintenance becomes much easier.

now to cross of a task and add the next one, i have to do the following steps (PC):
1. find the old task
2. mark and delete the line
3. browse my projects' directory structure to the project (marked in the old task)
4. open that project's task file
5. find the old task and cross it off
6. find all the next tasks that depended on that task, mark them as active and
7. copy them over to to my main next steps file while adding the project so i can find it when i cross them off.

Why isn't the path (or even better, a hyperlink) to the project task file included in the old task? Why doesn't the file have enough identifying information for a desktop search to find it for you? If you're going to have such a massive directory structure -- which I don't recommend, see above -- automating your way around it seems like a necessity. Similarly, copying from one file to another should be a matter of a few keystrokes at most.

Since you like mindmaps, you might want to take a look at the MindManager/ResultsManager combination. Among other things, ResultsManager includes good tools for creating project views, task views, and so forth. I gave it up because it was too much overhead for me, but it would be much less overhead than what you seem to be doing now.

Hope this helps!

Katherine
 
I think you're adding extra complexity

The David says that any system should be good enough that you can use it even when you're sick. So it has to be simple, speedy, and robust.

So for starters, my system is paper. It's simple, easy, and robust, and has no learning curve at all. This is my set-up:

Each project that consists of more than one action has a sheet of A4 paper. I dump out any ideas that come to me on that sheet, and if it gets full (which is rare) I add another. I don't wrack my brain trying to plan the whole project at the start. I just write down what pops into my head so I don't lose it, and make sure I know what the first step is.

I have my context lists, containing all my NAs, as sticky labels stuck inside a folder, one for each context. Easy to manipulate, and lets me count up what I've done at the end of the day.

I have an InTray, a Waiting For tray, a Current Projects tray, a Pending tray (which I call Ignoring), and a Someday/Maybe tray (which I call Dreaming). All the usual stuff goes into the InTray and the Waiting For, and the projects go into one of the other three trays depending on whether I'm working on them now, will start them in a week or two, or may or may not ever start them.

When I complete NAs from my context lists, I unstick the sticky, and get the project sheet from the Current Projects drawer to make a note of where I'm up to, and find the next NA (if I can't work it out, which is rare). The whole thing takes a couple of seconds.

In another post, you say that you're 'proudly paper-free'. Well, a tech-based solution is not always the best: I'm an ex-software-developer, and while I love designing and building software, I also know that simplicity is the key to success with GTD, particularly for about the first six months to a year.

now to cross of a task and add the next one, i have to do the following steps (PC):
1. find the old task
2. mark and delete the line
3. browse my projects' directory structure to the project (marked in the old task)
4. open that project's task file
5. find the old task and cross it off
6. find all the next tasks that depended on that task, mark them as active and
7. copy them over to to my main next steps file while adding the project so i can find it when i cross them off.

3) You should be able to search straight to it. If you're navigating to a directory, you're taking extra time. Try something like Yojimbo, that allows you to store and retrieve based on keywords/tags etc. You should also be able to embed links for this, and for steps 5, 6 and 7 (if I'm understanding what you're doing).

6) Again, navigation is something that could be done using links.

7) I'm not clear as to why you have a 'main next steps file': could you explain, please?

And I'm with Katherine: why do you have soooo many active projects and NAs? My suggestion is to go through your projects list, and only keep as active those that you think you're likely to get something done on within the next week or so. Those that you don't think you'll work on in the next week can go in the Pending Projects, and those that you're not sure you'll ever start go in the Someday/Maybe.

This keeps the complexity to a minimum, and gives you a much more realistic view of what you'll be doing during the next week. Then, in the weekly review, you check your Active and Pending projects, and see if they remain that way. Some Active ones might go Pending for a while, and some Pendings might go Active for a while. But don't expect that you're going to get something done on every single project in your project list, every week.

That way madness lies.
 
If your PC is too slow or inefective - use paper.

If your PC is too slow or inefective - use paper. And use Someday/Maybe list(s) to stop wishful thinking.
 
GTD didn't work for me until I developed an elaborate "someday-maybe" system for all my projects and ideas, a "Pending" list for things I want to be sure to get to in the next month, and limiting my "Projects" list (and associated NA context lists) to things I wanted to move forward in the next couple of weeks.

At my weekly review, I decide whether things need to be swapped between "projects" and "pending" (or moved to "someday-maybe"). Two or three times a month I go through my "someday-maybe" file box, and decide whether to swap things in from there.

Also, I think you may be worrying too much about the book-keeping. Can you really not think of an actionable NA on a project without going through all your project materials every time? Just put something down that you know needs to be done and can be done. Don't sweat whether it's the absolutely best thing; in less than a week you'll have your next weekly review, and you can swap your spur-of-the-moment NA for a more effective one, if appropriate.

Edited to add: for context, my "projects" and "pending" lists are both limited to what I can fit on both sides of an index card (a seperate index card for each of them) but my unconventional "someday-maybe" area takes up a file box. On average, three or four projects change locations each week.
 
I agree wholeheartedly with the sentiment of others on this thread: If you have 200 active projects, unless they're all small, you're probably vastly over-committing yourself. And if you have to go through 9 or 10 steps every time you create a new Next Action, you've vastly over-complicated your system.

One of the things that David stresses is that your system's goal is to enable and support your intuition in making good decisions about what to do. So, for example, this means that you don't need project support material for simple projects. (In fact, David says someplace in Ready For Anything that some of the best work he's done have been tasks that he's tackled that never appeared on any project or Next Action list because he had enough clarity not to need the "stake in the ground" for those tasks.)

Another question that comes to mind: Why do you need to track the next actions in both the project file and your NA lists? To me, that seems like you're doubling the amount of effort it takes to get stuff done for no real gain in productivity. Remember, your system's goal is to help you do your work more efficiently, and if you're spending all your time maintaining your system rather than getting real work done, odds are you've made your system excessively complicated. Perhaps it's time to simplify.

Incidentally, I've recently simplified my own system -- from a Palm PDA to a Moleskine notebook and a weekly paper calendar -- and in the process noticed just how much time I was spending on system maintenance overhead. The time I now spend on weekly reviews and other system management tasks has now dropped by half, and I'm much more productive on a day-to-day basis.

-- Tammy
 
@Katherine:

First, thank you...
but i have a feeling like you did no read my complete post. I know i marked stuff with @Name, but in fact the parts lont much of their sense without the rest.

kewms;45855 said:
Why do you have 200 tasks on your NA lists? Are all of them immediately actionable? Do you expect to do all of them in the next two weeks or so?

Yup.
All of them can be done right now, if i'm done with the last step.
All of them are between "very good if done" and "i'll die if i don't do them".
Not a single one is a "maybe"-task. The simple reason for this is my tree/structure of purpose-nodes. The parent node of a node always is it's purpose. So there is no task without purpose. And if it has a purpose, theer is no "maybe" to it. It has to be done as a part of fulfilling the purpose.
Baceuse there is more than one task per project/purpose (but of course no "projcetless" one), and i have so many projects, i get that many tasks.

kewms;45855 said:
Why does your project list cover an entire wall in 10 pt. type? Do you plan to move all of those projects forward in the next two weeks or so?

In a way: Yes. They are mostly related to each other, ant are all part of the bir purposes/projects. I can give you an example to understand where those masses come from.
1. I have the purpose "base" (keeping the foundation of my life/existence alive/running). It contains folders/projects/purposes for my home, my health, my money and so on. Now i have some projects in health, like my sleeping problems (very very important), by plan to get into a sports club (very important for private reasons), my nutrition change (diro). Then some in "home", like a list of stuff i want to repair (because it makes me crazy to look at it and thereby distracts me), a list of stuff to buy, a project to clear some problems with my landlord (correct word?). Then of course many projects in "money". First the expenses i have to manage. Next all the "running" projects i have in my own company. (Those are many.)

They all contribute to having no problems with money, health, home, and so on, so that i have no stress and panic when i went to do *real* work or meet friends.

For the friends and me "me" project i have a similar structure.
Same for my real projects. (The reasons i live and therefore the most important, because everything else is irrelevant if i can't realize them.)

kewms;45855 said:
My first suggestion would be to radically trim your lists. Make aggressive use of the Someday/Maybe list. Be rigorous with yourself about what it is actually possible to do, and make conscious decisions about the other stuff.

I guess that's the problem. I can't see how the really important stuff could be possible without the base-important stuff. Eveything that i *could* set to someday/maybe would stay in my head and make me crazy, because i can't work when the base is instable.
On the other hand i'm pretty certain that i could do all this stuff if i hadn't those sleeping problems. But try fixing them if the problem blocks you from that too. It's like the devil's vicious circle.

kewms;45855 said:
Why isn't the path (or even better, a hyperlink) to the project task file included in the old task? Why doesn't the file have enough identifying information for a desktop search to find it for you?

The "next steps" file DOES have this information. It had this fermat when it was plain text: "Next step description < project < big purpose group" wthi one line per task and separated categories of course of course.
And in the mindmap i had tho whole thee of course.

So knowing where it is, was no the problem. What i meant wtih all the "finding" is noting more than browsing to the point it the ordered tree, or scrolling to the correct line in the ordered file.
Still it was a huge overhead in my eyes. Mad be not in yours (because - as i said - you're doing it all the time), but in mine.

kewms;45855 said:
Similarly, copying from one file to another should be a matter of a few keystrokes at most.

It is. And it was. still a few keystrokes are a few too much. Maybe with some projects and being accustomed to mouse/keyboard-switches that does look normal. But if you - like me - are a power user who mainly flies trough the system with keystrokes and macros only (using the mouse only when it's faster so switch, point, click, and reposition the hands...wich is seldom), you can't stand something like this. (beceause you *see* how it easily could be optimized if the user interface would support those tiny extensions at places where you don't have access). Ok, you could not care if you had the time to do it slowly. But in my case... well... i just *panic* ;)

kewms;45855 said:
Since you like mindmaps, you might want to take a look at the MindManager/ResultsManager combination. [...]) I gave it up because it was too much overhead for me, but it would be much less overhead than what you seem to be doing now.

There you oversaw something: I thought mindmaps would be nice, because freemind really supports flying keyboard speeds and it's simple to structurize everything on-the-fly.
But as i explained later, i found out that strict hierarchical structures, no functionality for parameters* (like a start date), and some places without even basic tab-enter keyboard control (i did not explain it fully tough) killed it for me.
Nowadays mindmaps are useless trash in my eyes. Especially their non-humanlike forced tree-structure makes it impossible to do certain tasks.
* They added parameters in the latest version. But it's a joke. Lots of clicks to tiny places, Nearly no keyboerd control. And bad visual integration. A certain no-go.

In the end, one couly say, that GTD is an optimized and effective system compared to "normal" ways. But it still has it's limits. And as it seems i'm far over them. ;)
(I also don't use paper anymore where possible, because it has no search functionality and bad design. ;)

Luckily i must say that there IS software that allows to automatize exactly the stuff i had problems with.
As you may know i played with ThinkingRock since yesterday.
An dwhile it has its flaws in the dependency, schedule and external data integration, it does the steps i explained in the last message automatically and with a nice twist. it also helps in the second most important problem: The overview. I can't sort and filter real paper or plain text files. But i can do it there :)

Now i have to see if its enough, or if i have to ask them for the source code and hack it in in a sleepless night. ;))
 
TesTeq;45861 said:
If your PC is too slow or inefective - use paper. And use Someday/Maybe list(s) to stop wishful thinking.

Compare the search/filter/sort features of your paper to those of your computer... What's the result? ;))

Now add macros... and autoformatting/prettyprinting... *fg*

My pc is neiter slow nor ineffective. The applications are most of the time. (compared to optimum, not to paper.) And my wrong way of doing things is responsible for the rest.

I chose good apps, scripting and keyboard shortcuts to overcome much of the point-and-click-on-tiny-and-idiotic-but-colorful-interfaces madness. (Luckily i'm a programmer, so that's easy.)

But in GTD, there is (were) no *real* application. And my other ways were bad. Not as bad as paper. But ike paper with search functionality, shortcuts and some scripts. No *really* dedicated purpose applications.
 
I guess that's the problem. I can't see how the really important stuff could be possible without the base-important stuff. Eveything that i *could* set to someday/maybe would stay in my head and make me crazy, because i can't work when the base is instable.

Those are questions that no one else and no software can answer for you. But the fact remains that you only have so many hours in a day. Like it or not, some things simply are not going to get done immediately. With 200 items on your list, many of them are unlikely to get done any time soon. One of the major goals of GTD as I understand it is to decide in advance which things to NOT do, so that you can give the things you *are* doing your full attention.

Katherine
 
My suggestion: Abandon hierarchies. Go for simplicity

Reading this thread reminds me why I have abandoned hierarchical listing of projects. The idea is worthy – that having a tree like structure will help one think logically and help you include everything, but one ends up with:

1) A tree diagram where it’s difficult to see the most important projects from all the structure around them.
2) A structure that takes time to maintain.
3) A system where you end up adding projects and subprojects to comply with the structure rather than in accordance with what you really need to be focussed on and get done.

If you want the benefit of thinking logically and inclusively then do mind maps, which will doubtless include hierarchical outlines, and make a list of the projects and actions generated by them - and then throw them away.

I have a simple list of projects divided into areas of your life. Okay, I still have a hierarchy of two levels but that has to be all, otherwise it gets burdensome.

With a simple list without all the structure and mess around it, it’s amazing how you can suddenly see which projects are really important to you, which are redundant and which projects can be put in someday/ maybe.

You can also of course produce a list of actions divided into contexts. You don’t need a link between these and the projects. After you work with the system for a month or so (if you actually do GTD with it rather than just maintain it!) you will be amazed how much you remember what projects and actions exist in your system and how they are related to each other. (This is by the way)

You can have a project file or digital notes on some projects where it’s really necessary. From experience you will learn that you don’t actually have to have too many project materials or notes for most of your projects. If the project outcomes are clear to you then they are usually not necessary. Just looking at the project title is usually enough to think of the next action when necessary.

Once you have done GTD for a while, you will also have less of a backlog of stuff and less projects.

More and more I am realising that this forum is so often about analysing complexity where complexity is not really needed.

You seem to you have gone for maximum complexity to start with. My advice would be to start with a simple system and then only add complexity when you have mastered how to use a simple system first.

Reading this post, I sound patronisng, don't I? But I am trying to help. I suppose I've sort of been there myself. A lot of us have. Good luck.
 
unstuffed;45857 said:
The David says that any system should be good enough that you can use it even when you're sick. So it has to be simple, speedy, and robust.

I fully agree wtih that. And that situation is what i would call the minimal acceptable optimization level. ;)

unstuffed;45857 said:
So for starters, my system is paper. It's simple, easy, and robust, and has no learning curve at all.

But it has serious performance and automation problems, like i said it the previous post. ;)
In fact i never liked it solely "easy". It bores me end has a taste of ineffectivity.
Of course you can change a part of your workflow, so it takes take less stepsand lets you do more at the same time. But that's not the kind of "easy", that paper is. ;)

unstuffed;45857 said:
This is my set-up: [...]

To convert your style to a computey way i would do it like this:
- One file per project
- one folder per: incoming, waiting, active projects, pending, maybe
- project files go into the last 3 folders
- main folder "projects" contains all those folders plus one file for next steps (containing one line per step)

Then to advance a step i open the next steps file, remove the line, go to the active projects feolder, open the right project, cross of the old step and get the new one, paste the now one to the next steps file.

Correct?
Well... this sounds exactly like i did it and like i explained it.
But with an additional flaw:. ;)
What happens when your project consists of 3 sets of sheets plus your project sheet (or some sheets)? Even on the pc: What happens when you got 3 files plus the project file?
You could create a folder and put them it it, then putting it in place of the sheet. This was what i did.

So the difference between yours an mine was maybe only that i had more projects with more files in my "active" folder.
And that i planned a bit more in advance, to overcome you potential second flaw:
When you work out the next step without using the project sheet and maybe even planning it in advance, you have a high rish of not thinking of many problems, slowdowns and unoptimal behaviour that could seriously hurt you.
Correct?

Could it be that i just plan a bit too much in advance to be more ptimized later PLUS have tons of projects PLUS having no chance to put enough of them on hold, that make the manual way of advancing to the next step of a project or keeping the projects in a non-optimal order (tree/list of sheets/files) so bad for me?

(I could no stand to look at sticky notes btw. ;)

unstuffed;45857 said:
In another post, you say that you're 'proudly paper-free'. Well, a tech-based solution is not always the best: I'm an ex-software-developer, and while I love designing and building software, I also know that simplicity is the key to success with GTD, particularly for about the first six months to a year.

But there apparently are two definitions of "simple/easy". The one you like is not the one i like. The one you can work with is not tho one i can work with.
For example:
You would possibly buy a mobile media player with the least amunt of buttons and a simpe ui that would not force you to think when using it.
I on the other hand, would buy i the one with the most buttons and functions, and load the rockbox custom firmware to in, tweaked at every setting. ;)

I like it *exactly* my way with those things, accepting complexity to get there.
You like it as easy and with the smallest learning curve as possible, accepitng that you can't have it ll then.

I respect your view. It's your optimum. Mine differs though... ;)
I can't stand to have no choice. (Guess what OS/distribution i installed lately.. ;))

unstuffed;45857 said:
3) You should be able to search straight to it. If you're navigating to a directory, you're taking extra time. Try something like Yojimbo, that allows you to store and retrieve based on keywords/tags etc. You should also be able to embed links for this, and for steps 5, 6 and 7 (if I'm understanding what you're doing).

Hey, that's something i searched for, for a long time. Unfortunatley that seems no be the only one that actually allows tagging. ;)
But yet: Does it allow relation types? Does it allow to create relations between tags? Does it have a way to grab a node, and show you the stuff "below" and "above", according to chosen relations/tags? Can you filter for tags/relations/properties? Does it even have attached properties?
Unfortunately i have no mac, so i would have a hard time testing it...

Do you now a software that can com close to it? For indows ot Linux?
I haven't found one. And i'm sproadically searching from time to time, for years ...

unstuffed;45857 said:
6) Again, navigation is something that could be done using links.

Yep. Directories are just a kind of 1:n relations missing a way to fill stuff into the 1. ;) links are something like relations without the typing (think relation types) but with a more exact anchor (allow you to mark the relevant part).

Why is there no software ike this in 2007? :(

unstuffed;45857 said:
7) I'm not clear as to why you have a 'main next steps file': could you explain, please?

It's simply what you call the NA (next actions?) sheet. I have read the german translation of the GTD-book, and there he speaks of a "next steps" ("nächste schritte") list, where all your active next actions should go.

I'm soory for not being clear on many terms. I simply don't know how they were called in the original. :(

unstuffed;45857 said:
And I'm with Katherine: why do you have soooo many active projects and NAs? My suggestion is to go through your projects list, and only keep as active those that you think you're likely to get something done on within the next week or so. Those that you don't think you'll work on in the next week can go in the Pending Projects, and those that you're not sure you'll ever start go in the Someday/Maybe.

*g* It's not that easy, i must tell you...

There's a difference between what i think i can do, and what i have to (must!) do.

I know that i have problems with doing more than one, maybe one point 2 tasks at once in a day or even week (depending on the tasks' size).
But if i'm not doing at least one step/action of at least 5-10 projects in the next week, i can go and shoot myself.

This 5-10 projects do not even include the stuff that's important to me personally. Add they contain already 25-40 tasks.

And i never have someday/maybe projects. I can decide if i want and can to realize them the moment i'm done with the brainstorming phase. Not seldom even earlier.

unstuffed;45857 said:
This keeps the complexity to a minimum, and gives you a much more realistic view of what you'll be doing during the next week.

Simple logic. I agree. :)

unstuffed;45857 said:
But don't expect that you're going to get something done on every single project in your project list, every week.

Hmm... i must do something on those 5-10 projects every week, no matter what i expect.

End result: Shit a'm damned. ;)
Or for you: Kernel buffer overflow! Core dump! PANIC! ;)
 
LJM;45877 said:
GTD didn't work for me until I developed an elaborate "someday-maybe" system for all my projects and ideas, a "Pending" list for things I want to be sure to get to in the next month, and limiting my "Projects" list (and associated NA context lists) to things I wanted to move forward in the next couple of weeks.

AAhh... so the thing is not,
to put "maybe" and "pending" stuff out of your (active) projects list,
but to put *only* some projects you want to get done soon in your "pending" list, and of that only the ones you're actively working on this week in the active list?
(Replace "list" with "drawer/folder" or whatever suites it best for you.)

That shines a new light on it. I could just call my "maybe" list "later", throw everything in it, work as described, and everything would be more focused.
[insert motivation boost image here :D]

LJM;45877 said:
Also, I think you may be worrying too much about the book-keeping.

I know. I have a problem with mess. I'm kind of an anti-messie. has complex psychological reasons that i'm working on atm. Definitely solvable.

LJM;45877 said:
Can you really not think of an actionable NA on a project without going through all your project materials every time? [...] in less than a week you'll have your next weekly review, and you can swap your spur-of-the-moment NA for a more effective one, if appropriate.

I certanly can. But i don't want to. I would make too much failures. Later i would look at the purpose and vision, and i would think "oh my god, that's so far off...".
I have a certain feeling, that most poeple, elen most of those using GTD would not think that way. They seem not to care about it and continue anyway.

I can't stand though. It depresses me, makes me want to pre-plan existing stuff and whatnot... And i know i'm not really understanding this difference in behaviour or why one of them really is the "correct" one.
 
wordsofwonder;45883 said:
One of the things that David stresses is that your system's goal is to enable and support your intuition in making good decisions about what to do. So, for example, this means that you don't need project support material for simple projects.

wordsofwonder;45883 said:
Another question that comes to mind: Why do you need to track the next actions in both the project file and your NA lists?

"S" my friend, "next actionS" of a project!
There often is more than one NA for a project. And it's wise tho have them all on you NA list in their proper category.
That way when you are now working in that caterory (eg. telephone), you can work them off without artificially creating a dependency to the other active task(s) of that project.

wordsofwonder;45883 said:
Perhaps it's time to simplify.

You're right.
But not in that way other poeple think of "simple". Rather in my way that i explained in previous posts.
In fact I don't have a problem with mig NA-lists. As long as i can sort and filter them. (eg after categories,
power, time, priority :)

wordsofwonder;45883 said:
Incidentally, I've recently simplified my own system -- from a Palm PDA to a Moleskine notebook and a weekly paper calendar -- and in the process noticed just how much time I was spending on system maintenance overhead.

Hehe... classical PIM-systems - like that of the Palm PDA (i had such a device too) - are just braindead idiotic. I'm a software developer, and i can tell you that a system with all the good stuff of a paper-based system, PLUS features that only software can give you (the aforementioned search/filter/sort capabilities, nice presentation, tagging, automation) IS definitely possible. It's just that it does not exist yet.
Some projects and companies are starting to look at mobile devices with an acceptable paper size, a usable interface and a PIM-software with a GTD-approach. But it's still a long way to go.

I personally hope for a mobile device with en extensible touch display, a full-size input system like a projected laser keyboard or something better, and really advanced software (perhaps coming from myself ;).

Or even better: Google for "augmented reality". Then think of glasses that aren't bulky but come straight from your favourite designer and can't be distinguished from normal (sun)glasses.
Then add a input device that's implanted next to your hand and measuresthe movements of the fingers (alternatively think of a wrist-strap).
Your device stays in your pocket all the time and has the power of today's desktop computers.

Possible in 5 years... (except maybe for the input system)​
 
nzamani;45893 said:
Could it be that i just plan a bit too much in advance to be more ptimized later

One question I'm asking is whether you in fact are more optimized later, or whether you just have that illusion? I can think of plenty of circumstances in my own life where I could have listed a whole bunch of NAs in advance, only to have the outcome of one intermediate step render them all obsolete/incorrect. (And, by the way, I've done software development for 10+ years in addition to my writing career, so this isn't strictly an issue of type of work.

nzamani;45893 said:
I like it *exactly* my way with those things, accepting complexity to get there.

The thing that puzzles me is it doesn't sound like, with your current system, that you have it *exactly* your way, nor have you accepted the complexity you're imposing upon yourself. Put another way: Are you really solving a legitimate problem, or are you fallng prey to creeping featurism?

-- Tammy
 
nzamani;45894 said:
AAhh... so the thing is not,
to put "maybe" and "pending" stuff out of your (active) projects list,
but to put *only* some projects you want to get done soon in your "pending" list, and of that only the ones you're actively working on this week in the active list?

For what it's worth, my "active projects" list has ONLY projects which I plan to move forward on in the next three weeks or so. Anything else gets moved to my Someday/Maybe list (or, in your example, the "pending" list, a distinction I think is a matter of terminology more than function. So, what happens when you rethink your existing workflow in light of this understanding?

-- Tammy
 
nzamani;45896 said:
"S" my friend, "next actionS" of a project!
There often is more than one NA for a project. And it's wise tho have them all on you NA list in their proper category.

As a general rule, I avoid having more than one next action per (project,context) tuple. If I have to call Bob and Steve about a project, I pick one call and put it on the list. After I talk to Bob, I can decide if I still need to talk to Steve and add another NA to my list. Remember, one of the goals of GTD is to trim to a manageable level the range of possible things you can be working on in any given context. Future actions you might want to take on a project, if you accept that brainstorming them is necessary (and, in my experience, it's usually not for me), belong in your project support materials and not on your Next Actions list.

You seem to be looking for a way to use the technology to replace all requirement for decision-making on your part. David is pretty clear, both in his books and in a personal conversation I had with him for a newspaper article I wrote, that the goal of GTD is to provide a framework to guide your intuitive decision-making processes, not to replace them. That's not to say that there might not one day be better software tools to help the process, but no software tool can (or should) replace your own decision-making.

nzamani;45896 said:
I'm a software developer, and i can tell you that a system with all the good stuff of a paper-based system, PLUS features that only software can give you (the aforementioned search/filter/sort capabilities, nice presentation, tagging, automation) IS definitely possible.

Oh, I know it is, because I've been a software developer for 10+ years myself. I just haven't found that the technological structures you mention help me enough in decision-making to justify the added overhead of maintaining them. (As the Extreme Programming crowd likes to say, I prefer to "do the simplest thing that could possibly work.")

-- Tammy
 
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