I often have topics where someone reports a technical issue. Then I make this a OmniFocus project with the reporting person in the project title:
Doe, John - Data lake update XYZ fixed
Then this goes it‘s way and I know who I am doing this for.
However, in the mean time one or two other parties report the same issue. Still, I have 1 problem to solve and to keep multiple parties in the loop.
How do you handle such situations in terms of projects, actions and maybe waiting fors?
When John Doe reported the issue, you already have a full suite of tasks on your plate to bring that ticket to closure. When only John Doe reports the issue, you know everywhere when to use John Doe as input to that next action, such as notify him of closure and where to find that information, in the project title.
When others report the same issue, you also need that information in all the same places where you need John Doe. This is clearly a case of having information (Smith, Jane has the same issue that Doe, John has) and having it available when you need it. It squarely falls in the organize phase, put it with other things that mean the same thing to you.
Project support, the ticketing system (associating tickets to each other), the project entry itself are among available options.
If I was to be in this situation, there were already a reasons that I put a project in my GTD system and there is already a reason I put the affected party in the project title. I would then either add the additional names to the body of the project entry in my list manager or put it in a project support page in Obsidian, linked to a reference entry in my list manager (Apple Reminders). I would keep the original ticket owner in the project title because they are on the primary ticket where all the information would probably be placed.
Hope this helps,
Clayton.
When we put things together that don't mean the same thing to us, we created subconscious ambiguity, that blob will repel us.