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May 21 2009

Getting Things Done Primer – It's All About Doing It, not THINKING About Doing It

Category: executive learnings,lifestreaming,tech opinionjmacofearth @ 8:01 am

[So if the letters GTD don't mean anything to you this might be a good post for you. If you are a GTDer, this post might be a good reminder of the basics. If you think GTD is a cult, this post might be an outline that will help you understand the simplicity of the system. Sure the gurus of GTD have taken a few hits lately, but I cannot begin to express the amount of time I have saved by doing extensive DELETIONS. And that's a prime step in the process. So this post is about GETTING TO IT, not about THINKING ABOUT GETTING TO IT.]

New maxim: A Thought Leader without ACTION is a Thought Thinker. — jmac

Let's Go!

Two Easy Reminders

"TRAF" (Toss, Refer, Act, File) and the
"Four Ds" (Delete, Do, Delegate, Defer).


GTD – PowerPoint Version

  1. identify all the stuff in your life that isn’t in the right place (close all open loops)
  2. get rid of the stuff that isn’t yours or you don’t need right now
  3. create a right place that you trust and that supports your working style and values
  4. put your stuff in the right place, consistently
  5. do your stuff in a way that honors your time, your energy, and the context of any given moment
  6. iterate and refactor mercilessly

The Longer Outline

The System
Get everything out of your head. Make decisions about actions required on stuff when it shows up—not when it blows up. Organize reminders of your projects and the next actions on them in appropriate categories. Keep your system current, complete, and reviewed sufficiently to trust your intuitive choices about what you're doing (and not doing) at any time.

Collect
Capture everything that you need to concern yourself with in what Allen calls "buckets": a physical in-box, an email in-box, a notebook you take with you, a little tape recorder, etc. Don't try and remember everything!

When you first start: get a big in-box.

You can put the thing you need to act on itself in your in-box (a bill, an assignment) or write a note on a single sheet of paper ("change oil in the car"). When you first start, or when you feel like there are lots of things on your mind, sit down and do a "mind sweep" of everything you are concerned about.

Process
Now it's time to empty all those "buckets." Start at the top of the in-box, pick up each item and ask yourself "is there an action I need to take about this item?"

If there is no action you need to take, either throw the thing away, file it for reference, or make a note on your "Someday/Maybe" list. (critical path decision time)

If there is an action you need to take, can you do it in two minutes or less? If so, do it now! If not, decide what that next action is, and enter it on your "Next Action" list. If one action won't finish this off, enter the overall goal on your "Project" list.

Organize
Obviously, the cornerstone of this system is lists. Like with your collection buckets, you want to have enough lists to keep everything straight, but not so many that you are never sure what list to use. Here are the basics of organization:

Next Action: what is the very next thing you need to do to get your thing done? (E.g., "read chapter 4 and take notes," or "email a copy of my report to Anne for review"
Projects: chances are, many of your things will need more than one action to accomplish. Keep track of those multi-action things here. (E.g., "class presentation on Dante," or "write year-end report for boss")
Waiting: often we depend on others to help get things done. If you are waiting on something, write it down here, so you don't forget. (E.g. "get back revised version of report from Anne")
Someday/Maybe: for when you have a great idea or long-term goal that you just can't make time to work on now. You don't want to forget about it, but you don't want it to clutter up your Projects list.
Context-sensitive lists: e.g., "Phone calls," "Errands," etc.
Calendar: try and use your calendar just for appointments and other things that have to happen on a particular day/time.
Filing: keep a simple, easy to update filing system. Don't let files pile up in a slush pile. Get comfortable with putting a single piece of paper in a folder, labeling it, and filing it away.

Review
If you don't look at those lists, they won't do you much good now, will they? You'll have to review your Next Action list and your calendar every day (and probably several times a day). Set up an appointment with yourself to do a weekly review, where you process all your in-boxes down to empty, and review all lists to be sure you are on top of things.

Do!
GTD tends to leave it up to you as to how to decide what needs to be done right now–Allen seems to believe if you have everything laid out in front of you, it will be obvious what needs to be done at any given moment based on your circumstances (deadlines, how much time you have available, what tools are nearby, how much energy you have, etc.)


Lifehacker talks to Merlin Mann says, "I think people tend not to do the math on how much of themselves they’ve promised to other people, and that disconnect often leads to stress, unnecessary misunderstandings, and beads of existential flop sweat. Getting a handle on your commitments — and only accepting a reasonable and do-able amount of work at any given time — is one of the best habits you can pick up, whether you call it GTD, common sense, or what have you."


ADT- Attention Deficit Trait
It's sort of like the normal version of attention deficit disorder. But it's a condition induced by modern life, in which you've become so busy
attending to so many inputs and outputs that you become increasingly distracted, irritable, impulsive, restless and, over the long term,
underachieving.

No one really multitasks. You just spend less time on any one thing.

No one really multitasks. You just spend less time on any one thing. (read that again and again until you get it)

When it looks like you're multitasking–you're looking at one TV screen and another TV screen and you're talking on the telephone–your
attention has to shift from one to the other. You're brain literally can't multitask. You can't pay attention to two things simultaneously.
You're switching back and forth between the two. So you're paying less concerted attention to either one.

I think in general, why some people can do well at what they call multitasking is because the effort to do it is so stimulating. You get adrenaline pumping that helps focus your mind. What you're really doing is focusing better at brief spurts on each stimulus. So you don't get bored with either one.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/Quick-GTD

My favorite GTD Posts of all time:

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Apr 19 2009

INFOSTREAM STRATEGY #2: Tweetdeck – Putting a Dashboard Around Twitter

Category: about me,connections,lifestreaming,tech opinion,toolsjmacofearth @ 8:30 am

[I have several main info streams that I pay attention to these days and they are probably not what you would think. Here is part 2 of 10.]

INFOSTREAM STRATEGY #2:
Tweetdeck
– Putting a Dashboard Around Twitter

Twitter is the new email. It's not so much micro-blogging as mass Instant Messaging. The great part about an application like Tweetdeck, is you don't miss anything. I am not tied to my computer watching Tweets and Hours go by. I log into my Tweetdeck several times a day and here is how I play it.

tweetdeck twitter dashboard 4-16-09

There are other grouping and organizing tools for Twitter, Seesmic Desktop and PeopleBrowsr being two notable competitors, but for my money the simplicity of Tweetdeck, and some say the ugliness, is what makes it work for me.

So when I am looking for outside info or stimulation from the web, I go to iGoogle and Tweetdeck. Above you can see how my Tweetdeck Dashboard is laid out. My attention (deficit) flows from left-to-right, being a right-hander. Far left I have my "close" group. These are folks that I have shared some face time or extended conversations. These are my "trusted advisers." Rarely do I miss A SINGLE TWEET from my "close" group. And the reason is, Tweetdeck threads and keeps the tweets organized for me. So when I have been away all day, say Easter Sunday, I merely open Tha Deck and in the "close" column is all the tweets that have occurred while I was offline.

My next Tweetdeck columns are

2. "pro" for Social Media or Business professionals
3. "all friends." for the 2,000+ people I am "following" (you can see how this is a loose term, as I am not likely to scroll back through my "all friends" column unless I am digging deep for inspiration)
4. search "jmacofearth" this allows me to see any time my Twitter name is used, incase I don't follow someone, I will still see their message
5. "facebook status updates" this is NEW to Tweetdeck and how awesome to put FB in the same tool as Twitter
6. "direct messages" this column run off the page, but I can see when the avatar icons change and thus I need to scroll over and see what someone DM-d to me.

So with my Tweetdeck Dashboard, my attention flows from Left (full-attention) to Right in ever decreasing levels of attention for me. While Facebook updates are important, they don't move or change as quickly so I can browse them with less frequency.

I know a number of people who don't like Twitter because the information seems overwhelming. And they say the Facebook updates feel just about manageable. Well, now, it's just another stream in my Tweetdeck Dashboard. It fits into the format perfectly. And with Tweetdeck I can post to Twitter and Facebook with a single message.

RULE #2 Get a Twitter Management Strategy and a Twitter App Works for You
The information on Twitter is amazing. You can slice it, dice it, search it, track it, measure it and graph it, but if you can't control it what it will do is blow your head off. I cannot imagine a process for using Twitter via twitter.com that would allow me to make any sense of the vast amount of valuable (and value-less) data coming through Twitter. I have given an example of how my strategy has evolved using Tweetdeck. My advice is to pick something and the work it. See how it fits and how you can organize the stream-runneth-over of Twitter follows.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/infostream-2

[NEXT] INFOSTREAM STRATEGY #3: FriendFeed

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Apr 16 2009

INFOSTREAM STRATEGY #1: The iGoogle Dashboard – Getting Your RSS Under Control

Category: lifestreaming,speed the web,tech opinionjmacofearth @ 8:06 am

[I have several main info streams that I pay attention to these days and they are probably not what you would think. Here is part 1 of 10.]

INFOFEED #1:
iGoogle
Page and multi-tabbed groups of feeds

Oh how the RSS feed has changed in the last 3 years for me. It was interesting describing what RSS was to a friend who is getting up to speed on the web. My final explanation went something like this. "When I find a site I am interested in reading, I look for the RSS button and add their content to my iGoogle page."

This was informative to ME for several reasons. 1.) If the site is not about DESIGN or VISUAL MEDIA I pay very little attention to the site itself. I subscribe to the RSS feed, and then when the widget pops up on my iGoogle page I scan the latest posts for interesting topics.

Occasionally I will immediately delete the widget if the user does not have Informative Post Titles. When the feed titles are "Link Summary 4-16-09" and "Link Summary 4-15-09" etc. then I am not likely to glean much interest in the future when I visit my iGoogle SocialMedia and SEO News dashboard. If I can't scan the headline/title and understand in 1 second or less, "is this of interest to me NOW?" then I won't ever spend the time to dig into the information further. There is just too much coming at me.

RULE #1 Make the Title of your post relevant, clear and meaningful.

If you are going to be cute, make sure you get the clear message across as well. Otherwise, why bother posting it. Unless you are Guy Kawasaki or Steve Jobs, I am not likely to browse your "Link Summary" posts. EVER.

My iGoogle Dashboard - InfoFeed #1

What you can see from here are the widgets on my "WordPress" tab. Also you can see my other TABS.

  1. Home (my initial, general purpose TAB)
  2. Darn Funny (Colbert Report etc.)
  3. Dell and Competitors (cause I still care about'm)
  4. AAPL (Apple and all things iPod, iPhone and Mac related)
  5. Webmaster Tools (Google's Webmasters Tools widgets)
  6. Social Media (RSS feeds from around the SM planet)
  7. JMac data (most of my various feed varieties)
  8. SEO SEM (search and search engine marketing)

And here's an interesting kicker: I can email you any of these TABS and you can have them just as I have the ADDED to YOUR iGoogle page. I'm not promoting that here, but I have made several TABS for friends and clients and then sent them the email containing all of the data, widgets and settings that I created for them. Then, if it's not a TAB I am directly interested in, I delete it from my dashboard. But that is a pretty powerful feature when you think about it. [And if you are interested in any of my TABS let me know.]

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/infostream-1

[NEXT] INFOFEED #2 Tweetdeck

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Mar 31 2009

Getting Real with Delicious – Del.icio.us Gets Global Wings and Link Love

Delicious [used to be del.icio.us before Yahoo bought them and paid for the real domain] is a powerful social bookmarking tool that's great for organizing your bookmarks and making them available online from any computer. But its functionality goes well beyond what you would normally call bookmarking; Delicious can provide an unequaled collaborative research tool for business, and as a social networking tool, the service uses tagging to make it easy to find bookmarks that others have saved.

The following is advanced guide to getting the most out of Delicious. Please contribute to the discussion by adding your own tips to the comments.

From the Delicious home page you use the search window to find other pages that users have tagged. And the results are ranked by number of times the page has been tagged.

So on a term like "facebook virus" Delicious returns 336 results.

facebook virus on delicious

However unlike Google, these results are handpicked pages from other Delicious users. The top listing was tagged by 51 other users. And from that one result you have a lot of options beyond clicking the link. Clicking on the 51 returns a list of all of the people who tagged that page. Clicking on any of the tags in the listing repeats the search on Delicious for that tag. And there is a "save" option to add the page to your bookmarks. And finally, the user name of the first person to tag the page is also clickable to view that person's main page.

Google search on the other hand returns 10,100,000 results. While the top results might be useful, the sheer number of results and the known gaming and SEO techniques used to drive listings to the top of the search pages might not necessarily give you the most useful results. If you think of Delicious as a filtered search result, 336 actual listings were tagged by actual people with the tag "facebook virus." It's like a hand-human selected search engine. And often the information on the delicious pages are more useful.

google on "facebook virus" search

google on "facebook virus" search

Notice ReadWriteWeb is the #1 listing on Delicious. You can bet that RWW has a well-researched deep discussion of the topic as opposed to PCWorld or CNET [no offense guys] that are covering the topic as a media event not as a real-world issue requiring solutions. The Google top results are written by journalists who are hoping to attract your eyeballs and sell you some anti-virus software, as opposed to working-solutions-writers for RWW who are hoping to attract your eyeballs and sell you some anti-virus software. The difference is that on Delicious your peers thought the RWW article was worth bookmarking. On Google, some SEO folks and some media conglomerate folks decided to jockey their "Facebook Virus" story up to attract your attention.

In the simplest terms, you can use Delicious any time you would use your browser to bookmark a site. Delicious provides buttons for Firefox and Internet Explorer that allow you to access the bookmarking info page remaining on the site you are interested in. Clicking on the "tag" button pops up a window over the open page and allows you to add a Title (pre-filled with the page title information), a description and any tags that make sense to you. There is also a check box "Do Not Share" that allows you to keep any of your bookmarks private. Clicking on the TAG button brings up the following screen.

delicious bookmark popover

delicious bookmark popover

You can see there are also Recommended Tags (tags that you have used previously), Network Tags (a simple way to share the link with others in your network) and Popular Tags (tags that others on Delicious have used on this page).

So in simple terms I can bookmark a site using Delicious in the same ways I would use the browser to bookmark the page. But there are a lot of other things I can do now that I've added a piece of content to my Delicious site.

  1. Bookmark and share the link and your description and tags with others. [You can even set Delicious to post your links to Twitter or Friendfeed.
  2. Find everyone else on Delicious who has bookmarked the same page.
  3. Send your bookmark to a network of other "trusted" Delicious friends. [I can send a technical link to my dev friends and not to my entire Delicious network.]
  4. Make a tag for a specific brand or product I am interested in and see what everyone else is bookmarking with that same tag.
  5. Create an RSS feed of my links and tags to be read by others or used by me in a different program, like FriendFeed.

So having used Delicious since SXSWi 06 I have developed a large number of links. [949 953 1046 as of this article.]

my delicious page header

my delicious page header

And it is hard to even imaging what that number of links might look like if I pulled down my bookmarks menu in FireFox. I don't know but something tells me it might choke.

But with Delicious I have a bunch of ways to access, sort and retrieve my collection of links. [I sometimes refer to my Delicious site as "my brain on the internet" because if it's of major importance to me I will either blog about it or add it to my Delicious page and come back to it later.]

  1. I can view my links as various tag clouds. [Tag clouds were just gaining popularity when Delicious was launched. Here is a post I recently wrote explaining Cloud Navigation as opposed to Cloud Computing]
  2. I can "bundle" or create groups of links using their tags.

An example: I might have an educational website that I am interested in for both my kids to learn from but also from a programming or interface aspect. Using tags and bundles Delicious allows me to create a flexible and dynamic taxonomy of my links as I'm going along. So I collect "links" as I roam the web and easily add tags like "UI" and "education" and "math" to the pages so I can find them later. And then with bundles I can add the example page to both my "developer" bundle and my "kids" bundle.

tag cloud examples from delicious

A lot of the value of Delicious to me is using it as a capture and retrieval system. And I occasionally go into my account and clean up old tags, outdated pages and reorganize bundles and tags. And when I am done, I have a dynamic database of "my hand-selected information" that I can use myself or share with others.

And finally, Delicious as a whole is an amazingly powerful search engine for any topic that you are interested in. So rather than worry about "your" bookmarks, you can jump on Delicious and type in random tags like: "iPod, software, reset, troubleshooting" and Delicious will bring back results that actual humans spent time cataloging and creating. So the usefulness of the results are often much more accurate than a Google search, for example. And the search results are ranked by how many times a certain page was actually hand bookmarked by others using Delicious.

twitter vs facebook search on delicious

And that is the power of Delicious for crowd sourcing, dynamic information gathering and retrieval, and leaving a trail of bookmarks behind you as you travel the web in search of what's next. And the search engine within Delicious might have a good handle on "what's next too!

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/real-delicious

Additional Information:
Getting Real is about getting your work done, having fun and doing it with as little extraneous effort as possible. A tip of the hat to Scott Berkun, GTD, 37 signals and 43 Folders. Without your pathfinding, where would I be?

Getting Real with Twitter is the forthcoming book on Twitter Business and Twitter Etiquette and Keeping It Real on Twitter.

Getting Webwork Done is a process I am documenting about finding tools and techniques to get the internet done more efficiently. See also Speed-the-web and Twittertools tags.

Seeking the Uber App was the initial quest into efficiency and getting things done with an ultra SocialMedia-eCommerce-Browser app.

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Next Page »


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future posts

A Collaborative Space: WebEx, Go-To-Meeting, Skype, Basecamp (Teaming/Meeting Tools)
Twitter Problem: How do you find enough interesting people to follow? Then how do you keep up with them?
The Agile Mind: Construction, Evolution, Care, and Feeding Instructions for Mental Flexibility

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