Folke
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Gardener said:Do people use a top-level sort of Area of Responsibility, and do they find it useful?
I don't think the vast majority do that, but I do, and I got the impression from mcogilvie above that it is common among Omnifocus and Things users, too. (I use Doit.)
I myself use it primarily for review purposes, not so much for daily task selection. The "cost" in terms of keystrokes for new tasks is virtually nil - my projects are permanently linked upwards and most of my new tasks go into such projects (or into single action lists, as I believe this type of container can also be called in Omnifocus). The value of it to me is significant. It allows me to review my stuff in a structured order, looking at one group of AoRs at a time (such as Personal or Business or Non-Profit; ~ 30k) (or a new 30 k objective; I keep those at the same level), and then going into the individual AoRs and/or projects within that.
But I have heard many others (like yourself) say that they see no point in this. It is really an interesting question why some of us seem to like it so much, and others not at all. I think for me the value comes from the fact that I get dizzy and irritated by seeing all kinds of stuff mixed up on a single page when i want to plan ahead. In those cases I want to focus on one "thing" at a time (like an AoR or a project etc), and this refocusing takes a bit of effort.
I also find that the interpretation of AoR that I use - not as a "type of task" such as reading or traveling or bookkeeping etc, but as a defined "job role"; a "responsibility towards a well-defined category of people" - helps me "empathize" with the role and what the responsibility entails, which makes me more creative and foresightful in my reviewing.
I seldom have a problem with projects belonging to more than one AoR. It does happen, of course, but I can be resolved. It is not nearly as common as the equivalent problem with contexts - the fact that a task can require more than one tool or person or place etc, but you chuck it into the most significant one and forget the rest (or a have an unwieldy mass of combo contexts). Same with AoRs - there is usually just one "role" in the driver's seat, and the rest, if any, are "passengers". I currently have 5 contexts, and I have 10 AoRs across 3 groups of AoRs, and I have 2 goals/objectives at 30 k.