Thursday, January 03, 2008

Organizing Your "To Do" List

It's that time of year when folks resolve to get more organized. I'm one of them. I found a helpful post on Getting Things Done, and the excerpt is below. The post emphasizes a next action list, as opposed to a plain ol' "to do."


"There is nothing more demotivating and numbing than a large, unwieldy and obscure to-do list. It leads to more procrastination and certainly doesn’t invite you to be more effective and productive.

How to transform your deteriorated to-do list back to a lean and mean next action list? It’s time for some serious pruning!

Of course, a perfect GTD system would not allow your next action list to deteriorate into an amorphous list of undoable items. However, in my experience perfect GTD systems are few and far between!

I would therefore recommend applying the 10 tips below for pruning your next action list at least once a week, preferably as part of your weekly review. Remember, a true, lean and mean next action list is much more likely to get you to crank widgets!

1. Be specific
Does each item on your next action list represent the very next, physical and concrete step you must take to make progress on a certain project? Resist the temptation to add more than one next action for each project. Keep the other actions in your project support material.

2. Granularity
Don’t break down each and every thing in your life into tiny actions. Tying your shoe laces doesn’t have to be on your list. At the other end of the spectrum, make sure an item on your list isn’t actually a multi-step action (i.e. project).

3. Doability
Is the item on your next action list something you can and should do? Don’t add impossible items or actions somebody else should do (or could do better than you). Also make sure you really want to do the action (and the associated project).

4. 20 minute rule
In your estimation, will you be able to finish each next action in no more than 20 minutes or so? If not, that might be an indication that you should break down certain items (or perhaps they really are projects after all). Your mind will subconsciously resist complex and long actions.

5. Form
Make sure each item on your next action list actually starts with an action verb. E.g. “call Jim re: proposal project X” instead of “project X: Jim’s thoughts?”. You want each item to evoke action.
Also, limit your next action to a few words instead of complete sentences. You should be able to scan your next action list quickly. If applicable, add extra information to a notes field or even another list.

6. As soon as possible?
Does each item represent an action that needs to be done as soon as possible? Or does your list also contain items that should be done on a certain day (put these in your calendar), or items that you might do in the future (put these in your tickler or on your someday/maybe list), or even items that represent interesting information (put these in your reference system)?"

For more, go to here.