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What are _you_ 'waiting on?'
Merlin Mann | Oct 5 2004
A confession. I’ve been reloading this page every 3 minutes for the last week. I’m totally fixated on obtaining a copy of TextMate and have already mentally ascribed it powers that include many of the miracles described by Saints Matthew and Mark. Setting my saliva and expectations aside for just a moment, this has me thinking a bit about my “waiting on” list and just how effectively (or not) I’m using it to get things done. My “waiting on” listFirst, some quick anatomy. I suspect that I have a lot of the same sorts of things on my “waiting on” list that you have on yours. I’ve broken mine into three sections that are meaningful to me and that roughly represent ascending levels of check-in frequency:
The thread that runs through all of these is that the onus is on me to a) make sure these items represent part of a commitment I’ve made, and b) make sure they actually get done (even if it’s not my direct responsibility); otherwise, they should get moved onto my “Maybe/Later” list, right? So the questions on my mind are:
Staying on top of thingsThe simple answer for getting these items done is to convert them into next actions. If I have a “waiting on” item that says “Receive new logo from Jim” for more than a day or two, it might benefit me to generate “Call Jim to nail down delivery date and dependencies for new logo” as a next action. Now I’m in the driver’s seat, ensuring that bad communication or just old-school slack don’t prevent my client’s cool new site from launching on time. Another idea is to use a future note to yourself. Maybe I drop a message in my tickle file for a week from today reminding me to check on something. If it’s a web site I’m interested in tracking, I can get a service like Watch that page pointed at it (note that there’s a handy “Track” tab in the URLInfo bookmarklet to help you with this using a variety of services.) The bottom line is that I don’t want to allow my “waiting on” list to enable sloth or accidentally create unrealistic expectations on my part. I really don’t want it to degrade into a de facto parking lot for stuff I never intended to follow-up on in the first place. That’s when things start to crumble. Staying ready for deliveryTry this exercise. Run through all the items in your “waiting on” list and mentally generate the next action that would need to follow from immediate delivery of each item. Does it change anything about how you want to handle things now--while it's still ductile? Does it, in fact, actually generate a few new next actions? While GTD turns on not over-anticipating the next-next-action, I think it can be very valuable to turn the compost of your “waiting on” list if it starts to seem a little janky. Make sure that every item in there is truly something you can’t or shouldn’t act on right now. Could a single less-than-two-minute action do anything to move one of these items forward? You might be surprised at what you can move off your plate when you think about it. Sigh. Well, it’s been 23 minutes since I started writing this and TextMate is still not up. In that time though, I’ve made these mental notes on what I’ll do when it is:
Ah, impatience, you magnificent bastard. The best things in life truly seem to come while “killing time.” More on Getting Things Done
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I don't use WaitingFor, as...Submitted by Kyle (not verified) on October 6, 2004 - 1:27pm.
I don't use WaitingFor, as alluded to above. It's more of a mental perspective thing: I'm not waiting for someone, I have a next action, even if it's "Check with Jim about the thing". This is partly because my NA lists are index cards (one per context) I carry in my Moleskine, trying to adapt the Hipster PDA to my own needs, and partly because I feel this need to make sure that I'm not giving myself an excuse why something doesn't happen. This is particularly important when working internationally; sometimes, constant followups to my coworkers are required just to get a response at all. » POSTED IN:
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