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	<title>Kevin Molloy &#187; 42</title>
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	<description>the web-logged musings of a bearded Londoner</description>
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		<title>Getting Things Done</title>
		<link>http://kevinmolloy.co.uk/2009/09/06/gtd-5-paths-to-follow-and-then-to-leave-behind/</link>
		<comments>http://kevinmolloy.co.uk/2009/09/06/gtd-5-paths-to-follow-and-then-to-leave-behind/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Sep 2009 11:03:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kevin Molloy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[42]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Creativity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pedantry]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kevinmolloy.co.uk/?p=113</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m a big fan of G(etting) T(hings) D(one). I&#8217;ve tried most of the many methods out there. But somehow I&#8217;ve found myself in very strange place, in between four of five different methods of organising myself, and my time. I was pretty weirded out by this at first. I&#8217;m naturally the least organised person in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m a big fan of G(etting) T(hings) D(one). I&#8217;ve tried most of the many methods out there. But somehow I&#8217;ve found myself in very strange place, in between four of five different methods of organising myself, and my time.</p>
<p>I was pretty weirded out by this at first. I&#8217;m naturally the least organised person in a room&#8230; I procrastinate, prevaricate, pontificate and do various other things with letters coming between p- and -ate (prate, pollenate&#8230; ummm&#8230;). I&#8217;m doing it now look. Thinking of clever words to say instead of writing a blog post. And I&#8217;m fairly confident this blog post is a justifiable form of procrastination, away from another, more important, real-world task I have on.</p>
<p>But I eventually came to a realisation. I&#8217;ve pretty much found my own, personal, oft-touted and never-achieved nirvana state of organisation. I&#8217;m right on the balancing point between utter chaos on the one side, and mind-numbing databases and spreadsheets on the other. I&#8217;ve done it! I&#8217;m here! I&#8217;m organised and creative at the same time!</p>
<p>The other realisation was that this blissful situation (trust me when I say it won&#8217;t last long) is the result of no particular creed or strategy. In fact, this halcyon hinterland has been reached by straying from the path a number of times, each time taking just a little of the old method with me, whilst learning a new discipline. I temporarily feel like a GTD ninja.</p>
<p>So whilst I subscribe to the overall theories of none of the below, training in their ways has always left me a level up in the way of the GTD. Now I just have to concentrate not to look down, and to keep on training.</p>
<p>(1) <a href="http://mail.google.com/mail/help/tasks/">GOOGLE TASKS</a> &#8211; Google took over what I used to use RTM (<a href="http://www.rememberthemilk.com/">Remember The Milk</a>) for &#8211; namely the actual LIST of things to do. The genius thing about google tasks? You can use it straight from your gmail inbox (as you could with a RTM plugin). And even better &#8211; you can quickly and simply make a task from an email &#8211; and whenever you access that task in your todo list, you can click straight through to the relevant email you need. Google Tasks supports multiple lists, but I find I get confused doing this, so I stick to just the one list. I also don&#8217;t use it for everything. I use this task list for long-term jobs: things that need explanations, where you need to go and see what was said in an email. I still don&#8217;t feel like I&#8217;ve juiced google tasks for all it&#8217;s worth though &#8211; the fact it ties in with my google calendar is something I&#8217;m yet to make use of. Google have some great tricks up their sleeves, I&#8217;m sure.</p>
<p>(2) EMAIL POLICIES &#8211; I&#8217;ve been getting a bit better with how I act on emails. I get around 50 to 60 legitimate emails a day. Some of them take an hour to prepare for and reply to, others 2 minutes, and still others I don&#8217;t need to reply to at all. So the new policy? I archive anything I don&#8217;t need to reply to as soon as it&#8217;s been read, so it&#8217;s out of my hair. I also reply to anything that will take me less than 2 minutes straight away, no matter what I&#8217;m up to at the time. This second policy has got me into some difficult situations (10 emails at 2 minutes each is 20 minutes out of whatever I was working on, and sometimes I shouldn&#8217;t really be dropping the ball for that long). However, I find policies work best if you stick to them in all cases except where it&#8217;s obviously paramount you break them (at which emergency point no policy will be helping you anyhow). And 90% of the time, replying straight off to these emails removes 90% of the tasks on my list. A short list of 10 tasks is much easier to prioritise than the longer one of 100. Even if it took 2 hours to clear the first 90 emails, at least they&#8217;re out of your hair.</p>
<p>(3) PAPER LIST &#8211; It&#8217;s old fashioned, it&#8217;s messy, and it&#8217;s deeply, deeply un-GTD, and possibly even luddite. But I need my paper lists. These lists have EVERYTHING on them. Things like &#8216;organise a gig on an hot air balloon&#8217; and &#8216;pick up 4 AA batteries&#8217; and even &#8216;this man gave you a business card last night, find out who he is&#8217;. And the satisfaction I get from scribbling one of those entries out? It&#8217;s an indescribable amount more than ticking the checkbox by something digital. It&#8217;s the peak of GTD bliss. I can hear the sound the pencil makes as it effaces the offending and completed task. (Yes, that&#8217;s right, I use a pencil. HB.).</p>
<p>(4) ITERATION &#8211; this is possibly the most GTD thing I do (GTD as a concept being credited to <a href="http://www.davidco.com/">David Allen</a>, and this kind of constant re-evaluation being key to what he talks about). Every day, every single day, I rewrite my paper list, from start to bottom. It means that anything that&#8217;s been on their too long becomes a guilty rewrite &#8211; I either have to get it done, decide that it&#8217;s no longer worth my time, or actually DO it. It also helps me figure out what it is I&#8217;m going to do that day. It&#8217;s probably the most important thing I do every day. It is, however, utterly boring &#8211; so it&#8217;s definitely number 4 on this list.</p>
<p>(5) NOT DOING THINGS &#8211; this was the best idea I ever had. I think that all GTD is aimed, at the outset, at giving you free time to do the other things that you love. But the end result is always a draconian system from which you can never retire, and which will leave you always with a task to complete. So at any point I so desire, I completely ignore every system I&#8217;ve ever built up, and do exactly what I want to do. That&#8217;s often catching up on my google reader account (that way I feel marginally productive &#8211; it&#8217;s relevant news! &#8211; it&#8217;s culture!). Or buying a can of coke. Or spending 30 minutes getting as far as I can on <a href="http://www.handdrawngames.com/DesktopTD/Game.asp">Desktop Tower Defence</a>. My innate sense of guilt and productivity always leads me back to what I have to get done, and normally I&#8217;m a much happier, more productive person for it. Obviously sometimes I spend a day reading blogs and beating the 154th wave of oncoming enemy troops with a newly upgraded squirt cannon &#8211; but I kind of treasure those days. Like the days you watch half a season of Friends with nothing but a ting of pringles and some Ben and Jerry&#8217;s ice-cream. Those days are probably more important that all of the 50 combined &#8216;productive&#8217; days that came before.</p>
<p>Yeah, so, um &#8211; I might go do some washing up. I&#8217;ve been putting it off this whole time. Feeling guilty about that now.</p>
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