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	<title>duncanriley.com &#187; gtd</title>
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		<title>Using Basic GTD To Overcome Email Bankruptcy &amp; Improve Productivity</title>
		<link>http://www.duncanriley.com/using-basic-gtd-to-overcome-email-bankruptcy-improve-productivity/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Apr 2008 02:13:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gtd]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.duncanriley.com/?p=1352</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been burdened for months by a bad case of email bankruptcy. My inbox has been constantly full of unread emails, and it keeps getting worse and worse (on a busy day I might get 400 odd emails). It had gotten to the stage that in the last 2 weeks I was forgetting to write [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been burdened for months by a bad case of email bankruptcy. My inbox has been constantly full of unread emails, and it keeps getting worse and worse (on a busy day I might get 400 odd emails). It had gotten to the stage that in the last 2 weeks I was forgetting to write up posts or follow up on leads, and I was getting emails from people asking me why I hadn&#8217;t done things. I&#8217;m far from alone in this problem, but I decided enough was enough.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve never read Getting Things Done before (and I still haven&#8217;t), but I was aware of the concepts behind the book/ system, so I did some more research and this is what I&#8217;ve changed.</p>
<p><strong>GTD Software</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.duncanriley.com/wp-content/2008/04/things.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1353" title="things" src="http://www.duncanriley.com/wp-content/2008/04/things.jpg" alt="" width="469" height="423" /></a><br />
<a href="http://www.culturedcode.com/things/">Things</a> is a brilliant package but only so far in that it&#8217;s extremely simple to use. It&#8217;s not as fully featured as some other packages I looked at, but the barrier to entry is that much simpler; the short form is I worked this one out in minutes, where other packages I wasted an hour on without any luck.</p>
<p>You use it by adding things you need to get done to it, sort of like list making/ task management. Ctrt + Alt + Space brings up a pop-up box for new entries, and you can drag and drop links to anything into this screen: in my case emails.</p>
<p>So what I did Sunday was sit down and go through my email, including my &#8220;follow up&#8221; folder which I&#8217;d started avoiding. Drag and drop the email in, add a note saying what it was and the action, tag it (TechCrunch, duncanriley.com, general&#8230;whatever), put a date due on it (you can also add someday if it&#8217;s not a priority but you want it handy) so today (monday morning) I&#8217;ve started the morning with a list of things to follow up or action.</p>
<p>The next trick was before working my way through the list, I started with email first (well after a quick glance at Techmeme and TechCrunch so I knew roughly what was happening for context on any emails), it took 15-20 minutes but I&#8217;d cleared up the entire nights email and was back to square one (well a week back, I still haven&#8217;t cleared the full backlog yet, but if you were starting from empty, you&#8217;d have an empty inbox). Emails that need to be deleted are deleted, ones that require followup are added to Things and dragged into a separate folder.</p>
<p>Now all I had left was a list of things to be done.</p>
<p><strong>Clear workflow</strong></p>
<p>The hardest habit to break is my usual read everything in Google Reader first. I decided the way I&#8217;d tackle this was to do the first two action items in Things First, then read my feeds (noting that I have Techmeme Firehouse in Twitter in case anything is breaking). So I did, one post, two posts&#8230;and it wasn&#8217;t even 10am, then I started reading feeds but only in order of importance (I allocate my reading list into A, B Web 2.0, Personal, General and other categories). 2 folders down, I switch back to the list. Another post done. Go back and spend 10 minutes with the next Google Reader folder, switch back to list etc etc&#8230;.</p>
<p>One of my other bad work habits has always been having way too many tabs open in Firefox, to the point that I often get lost in terms of which tab has which thing open etc&#8230; I decided the better way to do this was to make sure I close every tab after I write a post, and only have tabs open that are relevant to the post as I do it (aside from a core 3, Reader, Techmeme, blog entry page). What I found immediately is that I could research and reference far more easily than from half a dozen or so tabs open that a relevant and grouped.</p>
<p><strong>Will It Last?</strong></p>
<p>Monday&#8217;s are always pretty quiet as it&#8217;s Sunday in the States so perhaps this morning might not be a typical day, but it feels good to be writing this post before midday having written 4 posts with another 2 definites in the system, half a dozen space fillers if it gets real quiet, and all my other tasks I need to get done ready and waiting. I even went as far as adding in one day a week to update Facebook friends, another for LinkedIn etc&#8230;. everything spelled out.</p>
<p>It won&#8217;t work for everyone, and obviously requires some discipline, but I&#8217;m already excited by the allocate email to GTD system by itself: hopefully now I wont forget to respond to emails or write up posts and my email bankruptcy will be checked at the door.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll report back in a week with an update to see how this system works under pressure.</p>
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