Three things go on your calendar:
Three things go on your calendar: • time-specific actions; • day-specific actions; and • day-specific information
Weekly Review is the time to
Weekly Review is the time to • Gather and process all your “stuff.” • Review your system. • Update your lists. • Get clean, clear, current, and complete.
The Four-Criteria Model for Choosing Actions in the Moment
Three different kinds of activities you can be engaged in:
• Doing predefined work • Doing work as it shows up • Defining your work
The Six-Level Model for Reviewing Your Own Work.
• 50,000+ feet: Life • 40,000 feet: Three- to five-year vision • 30,000 feet: One- to two-year goals • 20,000 feet: Areas of responsibility • 10,000 feet: Current projects • Runway: Current actions Let’s start from the bottom up:
Runway
Runway: Current Actions This is the accumulated list of all the actions you need to take— all the phone calls you have to make, the e-mails you have to respond to, the errands you’ve got to run, and the agendas you want to communicate to your boss and your spouse.
10,000 Feet: Current Projects
10,000 Feet: Current Projects Creating many of the actions that you currently have in front of you are the thirty to one hundred projects on your plate. These are the relatively short-term outcomes you want to achieve, such as setting up a home computer, organizing a sales conference, moving to a new headquarters, and getting a dentist.
20,000 Feet: Areas of Responsibility
20,000 Feet: Areas of Responsibility
You create or accept most of your projects because of your responsibilities, which for most people can be defined in ten to fifteen categories.
These are the key areas within which you want to achieve results and maintain standards. Your job may entail at least implicit commitments for things like
And your personal life has an equal number of such focus arenas:
Listing and reviewing these responsibilities gives a more comprehensive framework for evaluating your inventory of projects.
Context
Time Available
When do you have to do something else? Having a meeting in five minutes would prevent doing many actions that require more time.
Energy Available
How much energy do you have? Some actions you have to do require a reservoir of fresh, creative mental energy. Others need more physical horsepower. Some need very little of either.
Priority
Given your context, time, and energy available, what action will give you the highest payoff? You
The Core Process:
The Core Process: 1. We collect things that command our attention; 2. Process what they mean and what to do about them; and 3. Organize the results, which we 4. Review as options for what we choose to 5. Do.
The Collection System Success Factors
Collect
know what needs to be collected and how to collect it most effectively so you can process it appropriately. In order for your mind to let go of the lower-level task of trying to hang on to everything, you have to know that you have truly captured everything that might represent something you have to do, and that at some point in the near future you will process and review all of it.
Gathering 100 Percent of the “Incompletes”
In order to eliminate “holes in the bucket,” you need to collect and gather together placeholders for or representations of all the things you consider incomplete in your world—that is, anything personal or professional, big or little, of urgent or minor importance, that you think ought to be different than it currently is and that you have any level of internal commitment to changing
What Is It?
For example, many of the items that tend to leak out of our personal organizing systems are amorphous forms (Vague uncrystalized) that we receive from the government or from our company—do we actually need to do something about them?
take just a few seconds to figure out what in fact the communication or document was really about. Which is why the next decision is critical.
No Action Required If the answer is NO, there are three possibilities
Two things need to be determined about each actionable item:
What’s the Next Action?
This is the critical question for anything you’ve collected; if you answer it appropriately, you’ll have the key substantive thing to organize. The “next action” is the next physical, visible activity that needs to be engaged in, in order to move the current reality toward completion.
These are all real physical activities that need to happen. Reminders of these will become the primary grist for the mill of your personal productivity-management system.
Do It, Delegate It, or Defer It
The Next-Action Categories
That action needs to be the next physical, visible behavior, without exception, on every open loop. Any less-than-two-minute actions that you perform, and all other actions that have already been completed, do not, of course, need to be tracked; they’re done.
What does need to be tracked is;
Three things go on your calendar:
Time-Specific Actions
This is a fancy name for appointments. Often the next action to be taken on a project is attending a meeting that has been set up to discuss it. Simply tracking that on the calendar is sufficient.