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Does this "next action" belong someplace else?
Merlin Mann | Sep 27 2004
"Next actions" are the cornerstone of Getting Things Done. In the same way that you can't have a great band with a shitty drummer, you'll never master GTD until you get yout next actions straightened out. I’ve noticed that there are often items on my “next actions” list that hang around a lot longer than they should. I scan and rescan and sort and add and delete, but there’s always a few stragglers who hang out there for a week or more. Eventually this starts to vex me, and I try to debug why things aren’t getting done. For myself, I’ve discovered that most of the items are just in the wrong place, or, if you prefer, in the wrong time or context. It can be instructive to pull each straggler out of line and try to figure out whether he really belongs someplace else. Here’s my usual suspects, ordered by how often each is the culprit behind my unintentional slack.
How do you deal with your stragglers? Who are your worst culprits? 14 Comments
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I have enjoyed a very...Submitted by Eric (not verified) on September 28, 2004 - 2:12am.
I have enjoyed a very productive personal and professional life, but the book did have some great pointers that gave me improved performance after just one day. My list of action items (which I keep on my Palm) now has the added value of listing Next Actions, and the advice of using context/location cagetories like "@computer" and "@phone" and "@ (I use the last when writing email to that person, or prior to a face-to-face) makes scanning the list much faster (one quick sort on my work congeals visually on my screen). I too end up with -- well, let's call them "Klingons" -- at the bottom of my list, which I throw back into my palm for a week. The suggestions above will help, but if something keeps coming up, almost without thinking about it, I go ahead and delete it. I find that such items, if important enough, will end up surfacing again, after it has transformed from an amorphous cloud in the sky to a falling knife (or falling gold coins) with obvious Next Actions. --Eric (Phoenix, AZ USA) » POSTED IN:
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