Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
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43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
read the book etc, not sure how to start... help!
duncanshannon | Sep 13 2006
Hi- I've been thinking about GTD for about a year now (off and on) and im switching jobs again and I think it might be a good time to try GTD. I've read the GTD book, read a bunch of posts on line about people using it, studied the GTD flow chard etc... im just not sure what my first real step(s) should be. I am having stuff start to pile up at my new job already (im not 100% sure of the scope of my responsibilites is yet either) and i want to keep track of things. My boss is very driven and I want to keep up. I've been just using a notebook so far, taking lots of notes with action items on a per day basis. They use Lotus Notes (v5.0!) which im not great with yet. I think i like the idea of Gtiddlywiki (sp?) on a USB stick to be my 'system'. I can get the 43 folders setup once i actually get my desk. I have a treo 650 but am considering getting rid of it and going back to a plain ol cell phone. How do i take my first couple of steps? Do I really need to do this for work and home life at the same time? I feel like i need to determine my "@" lists to start dumping stuff in, but im not sure I know what they should be. I know the process says to collect and process. Can someone coach me a bit here and help me get my baby steps going? Thanks much in advance. Im really looking forward to some GTD nirvana. 11 Comments
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I've found it far more...Submitted by unstuffed on March 10, 2007 - 7:37pm.
QuestorTheElf;8508 wrote:
I've found it far more productive to just collect everything of interest first. Concentrate exclusively on Collecting. Then during Processing, contexts will begin to arise. Quite true, and marvellously succinct. Contexts arise as you start to define Next Actions: when you get to the stage of the very next physical thing you can do, it has a context built in. All you then have to do is make that explicit: ask yourself what tools you need in order to do the job. Like a phone for calls, an online computer for emails, and so on. When you've got a bunch of things requiring that you be in a certain place, such as a particular store or the library, there's another context list. And you're set. » POSTED IN:
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