Hi everyone!
I used GTD several years ago. But couldn't keep doing it. My toolset was cumbersome. Now I want to go back but want to set up a smoother toolset. I'm not afraid to do some coding in it too. But I want to get some tips instead of experiencing everything myself.
I see a lot of threads about what works and the different softwares that are working for people in different setups. The benefits are described thoroughly. But the drawbacks of the tools that people are using are to be read in between the lines. I think it doesn't hurt for someone like me, to know what annoying things about the working setups, are there to be expected too.
I would like you to, kindly please, describe what set of tools/softwares you use for your GTD setup. What are the most annoying things in them (for me it was usually lack of integration and therefore manually carrying "things" from one tool to the other but don't mind me. Tell me what is yours...). And please tell me how do you deal with it, if at all.
Welcome back to GTD! Your question really resonates with me. I’ve gone through the same cycle: early enthusiasm, tool fatigue, eventual burnout… then a renewed attempt, but this time with clearer expectations.
Let me start with a counterintuitive thought.
Running the 5-step GTD workflow “on autopilot” is not lean.
From a Lean Six Sigma standpoint, it actually creates a lot of friction and defects.
As a human being, no matter how disciplined I try to be, I will never flawlessly execute the thought cascade:
“What is this? Is there a next action? What’s the desired outcome? Where does it go?”
The triage of 6 possible outcomes for every input just doesn’t scale well when I am tired, rushed, or sidetracked. And GTD requires consistency.
That’s why along my GTD journey, I’ve been building automations — not to replace the process, but to stay as close as possible to what GTD is meant to be.
My Current Toolstack:
- Todoist – for all actionable items
→ Why: clean syntax, recurring tasks, mobile sync
→ Labels for @Waiting For, @Agenda, and filters for Weekly Review
- Outlook (desktop + IOS Mail/calendar) – for email capture and calendar
→ All my “stuff” flows in here first
→ Add-ins like “Todoist for Outlook” used sparingly because not natively triggered on email sent
- Custom PowerShell + VBA automations
→ For: delegation tracking, automatic project labeling, email triage (built my own Outlook Todoist addon)
- OneNote – for reference material and project support private, TheBrain for pro stuff
→ Every GTD Project has a matching project support structure
- Microsoft Teams + Planner – for team-based execution
→ Shared context via Planner buckets and task comments
On Working With Others:
Over the past couple of years, I’ve noticed a clear shift: collaborative work is now the norm, even in domains that used to be very individual. No matter how perfectly tuned my solo GTD cockpit was, I had to downgrade some of my processes just to be able to operate with others.
I’m not a fan of duplication or fragmentation, but the reality is: collaboration today often means having project-related bits and pieces outside of my cockpit — in shared Teams/Slack channels, CRMs, shared documents, Planner boards, and so on.
This adds a real layer of complexity when trying to keep a full and trusted Next Actions list. I’ve had to accept a hybrid setup: centralized where possible, but linked out to distributed collaboration zones.
I used to think my GTD system was bloated because I had too many tools. But now I believe:
Bloat comes from tools doing too many roles, not from having many tools.
One place for Actions, one for Reference, one for Time. Automate the bridges between them.
A Final Friction Point: The LLM Gap
One of the most frustrating limitations today is the inability to fully leverage AI LLMs to do the heavy lifting inside the GTD system.
I’m currently prototyping the introduction of digital agents at every corner of the GTD workflow — from Inbox clarification, to action tracking, to reviewing — but it’s clear that no out-of-the-box solution exists yet. Microsoft isn’t there. Google isn’t there. Even Todoist has only taken baby steps with features like Smart Email, which can break down an email and suggest a next action… but it’s isolated. There’s no holistic, agent-powered GTD cockpit available.
So for now, it’s DIY or nothing, which is both exciting and annoying. But I believe we’ll get there — and I want to be ready when it happens.