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.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
My Entourage GTD, as it stands
tuqqer | Jan 21 2006
I'm going through a 3-week Most Excellent Productivity period, and it has to do with a couple of insights I got last month. This, after a year of trial and error and frustration. So, I'm going to finally share my Mind Like Water System, to date. After a good year of foraging out to sample quite a few PIMs, BrainDevon Tweaks and To-Do Utilities, I have returned full time to Entourage. The reason I was flirting around with other programs was because I so wanted to add a better Task/ToDo/NextAction thingie that I felt was missing in Entourage. But after playing around all these months, I simply could not get my mind around any of those pieces of software (caveat: I can't get my mind around the very popular QuickSilver either, so take all this with a grain of software salt). After reading a "How-To-Use GTD with Entourage" PDF (still in beta) that is soon to be put out by David Allen's group, I took what they were saying and gave Entourage's fairly awkward mix of Notes, Task, and (gulp) Projects another go. Entourage was alway the center of my business and organizational life. I love its inferface, its robust Rules, and the amazing amount of very useful and free scripts that are available out there, made by very smart scripters. The only missing piece for me was a better way to integrate the GTD principles?again, largely around the Task/ToDo/NextAction piece. It's only been in the last month+ that it's starting to make better sense. Part of this came from realizing that I had to stop doing the GTD book's suggestion of working with Contexts. My life just doesn't work in @Calls, @Home, and @Office contexts. Instead, I work in Projects; meaning, when I wake up in the morning, I think, "I need to work on the House Maintenance project, or I need to work on my New Product Creation Intended to Make Me Millions project. Then I view all calls, all tasks, all everything related to that Project, and do them, or assign a time to do them. Since I work from my home, it never worked for me to have a separate context for @Home or @Office, or even @Calls. No distinctions for if I'm in the car, or traveling, or at home, or at work, or by a phone. If I need to work on Project XYZ, I do it regardless of contexts. The only context I really have is @Life. This was a huge insight to me. It has given me that "water like mind" sense of well-being for the first time since starting GTD. It is also giving me a way to work with and be excited about the Weekly Review much better. How I'm organizing this with Entourage 2004 is still in flux a bit, but here's what I'm doing that is working. ?? OFFICE NOTIFICATIONS
?? TASKS (aka Actions) [INDENT]1. I clear all the columns except Status, Priority, Task, Categories, and Due Date (in that order) 2. I only view Incomplete Items, ever. No need to see what the heck I've already done! 3. I set up the following GTD Categories: 4. For both @ Categories, I list every single Action separately, so it shows up in the Task list as a separate line item. I used to try to date them, and still do occasionally, but now I mainly attach a Highest priority to it if it needs to be one my Next Actions (i.e., done in the next 24 hours). Otherwise, it floats in the list just as one of the minion Tasks. 5. For any of the ^ Categories, I only have one Task for each, because I've found it better to just list every Action for those categories in one giant to-do list. In other words, each ^ category is each under just ONE Task. I then just review this one task/list at least once a week. If there's a to-do there that absolutely needs to get done, I either do it, or I THEN put it as a separate Task, on its own line. This one was a HUGE insight to me. No more 40 separate line items for ^Household To Be Done, or ^Someday/OhSureMaybes, confusing the hell out of my brain when I'd stare at the Task list. There's only ONE. Yeaaaaaaa! 6. I have deleted all the "Task Views" that came with Entourage by default. . In their place, I currently have two customized ones: Show only @New Product Actions and Show only @Business, general Actions. I only do these two because they're the only ones that have massive to-do lists. 7. Every day, I open up Tasks, and immediately hit the Priority column. This brings up all the Actions that really need my attention. 8. I don't need a @Waiting For category, because if I've handed off a to-do to someone, or I'm waiting for a call back from someone, I put a new new event in the Calendar at about the time I need to worry about it (Example: Has John returned that DVD that I lent him Dec 12? Bob back with the answer to XYZ yet?) I don't want to see these in any list. I only want it to pop up in front of my face on the day I deem it critical. Again, if it pops up and I don't want to deal with it until this afternoon/tomorrow/next week, I snooze it until then. One side note on Categories: I have over 50 categories, but the large majority of them relate to categories for emails. 100% of every Contact in my Address book, and 95% of all my emails each get a category. That way, I can create a Custom View and see any emails associated with a Category. I can also do a search for None, Junk, and Stuff-I-can-Delete categories, so that I can permanently delete them from my Entourage database, and keep the Identity slim and wearing a 34" belt. ?? NOTES ?? PROJECT CENTER By the way, when I finally stopped trying to incorporate the Project Center, I had the first hit of "water like mind" that started this whole chain of events last month. I kept trying?since the day E'rage 2004 came out?to get my mind around PCenter. It never worked for how I work. In retrospect, it became one of those "I really shoud... things that just never left my mind, causing this underlying virus of depression that was affecting my whole being. Well, there it is. I don't think this way would work for many people. But I do hope it encourages others to find the way to make life management skills work for them, instead of trying to stuff themselves into one particular way. We think differently, and we have unique life/work/brain setups. Tweak, man, tweak! 7 Comments
POSTED IN:
Are there tricks on...Submitted by tuqqer on January 22, 2006 - 9:04am.
Rosalynnem wrote:
Are there tricks on backing up email by the bulk? Been looking for a quick save forever... Two thoughts: Identity size, and backups: As I understand it (from the holy grail[/b"> on Everything Entourage), the E2001 database (located in Documents: Microsoft User Data) had more stability problems than E2004. It also had a size limit of something like 2Gigs. Because I started on version 2001, I learned to really pare that Identity down through a few techniques I learned from Beth Rosengard (an Entourage MVP). You can keep it small and flexible, yet still keep any emails you want. Here's the article I wrote on it to all my Mac friends last year. And it helps answer "how to back up" as well ?? [INDENT]Given the price of hard drive space these days (my G5 has 600 Gigabytes of storage), there is something to the idea of "never throw anything away ever." But if you like the idea of not hanging onto junk, here is the easy 4 Step Process I use with Entourage (I do it twice a year): First, an overview: I use my Deleted Items folder as more than just a junk/toss folder (reminds me of using "Signatures" as more than just sigs). To me, it is simply the resting place for emails that I don't think I'll actually need but do want to keep. What throws people off is that it's not named "Warehouse" or something like that. To truly delete emails from this warehouse, you open up the Deleted Items folder, highlight one or a group of them, and hit delete. This then really incinerates them. Until then, they're living in your Identity folder, making it larger and larger and larger. However, to keep my Warehoused emails separate from the Real Junk (emails I want to eventually incinerate), I make sure that 98% of all email has a category. That way, I can periodically open up the Delete Folder, sort by Category, and completely delete three categories: [b] Junk, News Groups, and None. STEP ONE: assign all emails with a category. The None category takes a bit of time, since None is the default given to any email that doesn't have a category. But I find this exercise useful, since it forces me to decide if any of my incoming emails need to be given a category, so that they don't get permanently deleted. Sometimes I will leave new emails in the None category, but I have to be clear that when it comes to slimming time, these None emails will be deleted from the Deleted Items folder. STEP TWO: Delete Large Attachments. STEP THREE: Compact the Database. STEP FOUR: Duplicate and Rename the Database. It's pretty cool to have each year's identity all stacked up (2002, 2003, 2004..), knowing that you can open them at any time. It also really keeps your Identity nice and small (I run an online business and yet mine always stays below 1.2 gigs). Last note on backing up: once you can get your Identity below the size of an CD, then the easier and more orderly way to do twice monthly backups is to simply go to the identity and burn it onto a CD. The whole thing. You then label that CD "Entire Entourage, today's date." Be sure to set an Office notification that pops up to remind you every X weeks/months to do this CD burn. More than you asked for, Rosalynnem, but there you go. » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |