I am new to GTD and have attempted to create an electronic workflow that emulates paper lists as much as possible in order to keep things simple.
I use Remember The Milk as my main list keeper, with Evernote as my main electronic warehouse for reference material, project planning materials, and lists/checklists that are not part of the "Core GTD" system.
My problem is with managing very large projects that have a number of sub-projects. For example, I work in finance and am responsible for maintaining forecast models that predict our company's revenue and expenses.
We are planning to completely overhaul the methodology we use for some of our forecast models for 2014. The ultimate outcome is to have a 2014 budget that has been designed based on a new way of looking at our company's data, and to do this I will need to complete a variety of sub-projects, such as:
All of these sub-projects will have multiple actions and are legitimate projects in their own right. Would you list all of these sub-projects on your Projects list? Or should you only list "2014 Budget Redesign" on your Projects list and keep all of the known sub-projects on a separate list within the project support materials for the main project?
Or is "2014 Budget Redesign" large enough that it should be considered an area of focus and bumped up to a higher level list completely?
Thanks for your advice!
I use Remember The Milk as my main list keeper, with Evernote as my main electronic warehouse for reference material, project planning materials, and lists/checklists that are not part of the "Core GTD" system.
My problem is with managing very large projects that have a number of sub-projects. For example, I work in finance and am responsible for maintaining forecast models that predict our company's revenue and expenses.
We are planning to completely overhaul the methodology we use for some of our forecast models for 2014. The ultimate outcome is to have a 2014 budget that has been designed based on a new way of looking at our company's data, and to do this I will need to complete a variety of sub-projects, such as:
- Gathering data from various sources
- Analyzing the data using several statistical techniques to see which ones are most predictive
- Meeting with Senior management to get their feedback on how the models should look/feel
- Building new models based on the newly discovered statistical prediction methods
- etc....
All of these sub-projects will have multiple actions and are legitimate projects in their own right. Would you list all of these sub-projects on your Projects list? Or should you only list "2014 Budget Redesign" on your Projects list and keep all of the known sub-projects on a separate list within the project support materials for the main project?
Or is "2014 Budget Redesign" large enough that it should be considered an area of focus and bumped up to a higher level list completely?
Thanks for your advice!