Re: Taking And Leaving
Anonymous said:
Eclecticism per se is not a virtue. Granted it can be the mark of a sage, but it can also the mark of a dilettante.
I agree wholeheartedly. I believe there are times where a "synthesis" approach wins out--like with productivity systems. However, many people tend to believe (especially eastern philosphers/new agers) that the "both/and" logic is always superior to the "either/or" logic. Obviously, the logic of this belief is self-defeating.
Like a Hindu man once said, "When crossing the street in India, it's EITHER the bus OR me--not both."
Interesting thread! I suppose we all have different ways of looking at the same things, and I would like to throw in my 2p.
A common approach to time/task management is: Write it Down - Master List - Daily List (e.g., Stephanie Winston, Jeff Mayer, Mark McCormack, countless others). Most differentiated approaches seem to be variations on this theme. I found it hard to identify with the observation that the NA list is equivalent to the Master List. In fact, I would say that NA plus Someday/Maybe would be the equivalent, with the NA/Someday distinction being a fluid stratification by Current/Noncurrent (Contexts being optional). I agree that NA is not sufficiently defined to be actionable in "flow" - it's greatest utility is when the schedule is already busy. My preference is to fill the schedule rather than to spend too much time with the unstratified NA's. (I am not bothered by negative feelings about not getting everything on the schedule done as long as I get the hard Calendar items done.) The PDTL seems more in line with what I do.
If either/or re time management is the choice of bottom-up vs top-down, then I would say that both are necessary, with changing emphasis according to circumstances. Corporate planning, for example, usually starts with top-down objectives that establish controls over lower-level activity. Down the line, each level of management creates more discrete objectives aligned with the top-level objectives, and detailed implementation plans. The whole is rolled up for top level approval. Activity is then pre-defined, as to overall objectives/budget, and flexible, as to detailed implementation. The emphasis varies according to the amount of control that top management wishes to exercise. I see the Runway-to-50,000 feet analogy as being totally consistent with this.
Granted, the structure of the book seems to start you with crisis-management, moves on to managing reactively to all other-imposed demands, and finally integrates the top-down stuff. It may initially be a practical method of breaking out of a quagmire and it may have the virtue of encouraging action over planning as the way to break the impasse, but by the time you get to the end of the implementation and have a mature process, I'm not sure that you are operating differently from other approaches - the integration of top-down and bottom-up with relative emphasis as the situation demands.
That said, GtD offers 2 major differentiations to me: 1. A more comprehensive thinking process to the Organization stage, and 2. A healthy and intelligent discussion forum.
Andrew