jenkins said:I was under the impression that if a project has more than one next action (i.e., actions that can truly be completed independently of one another), both can go on your next actions lists.
Folke said:Definitely - but lots of people wrongly claim that there can only be one next action. David Allen however expresses it very clearly in his first book (paraphrased from memory): "you must identify every next action in every moving part of every project". There can be no question.
jenkins said:I'm not sure I'd say I make that a conscious choice -- I can't help the truth that taking my vacation can be moved forward with two independent actions. I would say that I don't make a conscious effort to unearth parallel next actions. I'm usually content to have just one (and perhaps a mind-map or outline for support material, depending on the scope of the project). And if in the middle of the night, I remember "Ah! I can't forget to find a moving company re Project #1," I might just tuck that away as project support material, rather than mining that thought for next actions. However, when I review Project #1's support material, I don't think I'd make a conscious choice to not throw "Research moving companies" onto my At Computer list.
dienkwik said:I myself am doing it the same way we are all describing it here.However, doing it this way feels like I'm choosing to advance all my projects in parallel, but slowly, i,e. I don't get to the outcome sooner.
Sometimes I feel like I should prioritize the projects and clear out several next actions of some projects in succession to get to the outcome sooner, and let other lower priority projects be delayed.
dienkwik said:With only one next action in my next action list for a project, though, once I have completed that action, I would scan my next action lists and pick another one, which is surely from a different project.
I was tempted to set my own rule of getting the next action set for a project right after I checkoff the previous one. This way, I have all projects' next action under consideration when deciding what to do next. I just never succeeded in really doing it consistently![]()
Gardener said:I also don't have sub-projects, because those are, again, an added complexity.
Folke said:it is so much simpler for me if I can just put it like that without any trouble or rather than have invent workarounds (complications) for being able to see them together in a structured way.
I think it is interesting that we humans can think so differently on what is simple and what is complex. But I am sure we would all agree that a car with just two wheels would actually be more "complicated" than a car with four wheels. Even though it is simpler in one sense to have fewer wheels, it also makes driving it and keeping it balanced a more complicated affair. And no wheels would be even more complicated - and simple - than two.
Gardener said:So it's not that I shy away from the complexity of the hierarchy because it's complex. I shy away from it because it's far less complex than the actual relationships, so its complexity is not actually depicting anything useful.
For example, when I plant sunflowers next year, my choice of sunflowers will feed into a breeding project, a dryfarming experiment, and the simpler goals of a prettier garden and having cut flowers. The project "Choose and buy sunflower seeds for 2016" could be seen as a subproject of four projects. If it's instead, "Choose and buy flower seeds for 2016", that supports even more projects. Placing it hierarchically under just one of those projects is more complicated than just leaving it at the same level as everything else.
For me most of the time when I define a project and create it I plan out and put in most of the next actions at once so it's done automatically for me in Omnifocus. Only very rarely will a given project plan actually change from when I first do it if I did the planning model correctly and properly the first time.dienkwik said:When do you put the next "action" of a project in your next action list ?
Do you do it right after you complete the previous next action ? Or do you wait until you review your projects ?
Folke said:You can do similarly in a project hierarchy. (I do). You could perhaps decide that anything that relates to purchasing or planning for the garden goes in the Garden Manager bin. No?
Gardener said:I agree that if there were value in a hierarchical structure, there are a number of ways to achieve/record/display that structure. But it has no value for me. It's work that I don't see as having any payoff.