43 Folders

43 Folders feed subscription icon - Shiny! New to 43 folders? Here are our All-time Most Popular Posts. Want the best stuff? Here are our Classics.

Login or register

Register for free on 43 Folders to comment on articles, post to our forum, customize your visits, and much more. Current users can login now.

Mark Taw on GTD contexts and next actions

What context do I put my Next Actions in? :: MarkTAW.com

Mark Taw consistently provides some of the most lucid and realistic productivity advice I’ve come across. Today he eloquently addresses a common question of beginning Getting Things Done nerds.

If you have 15 lists, but they’re all full of things that you can do from the same starting point, you have 14 too many lists. It doesn’t matter if it’s a phone call, email, or going to the printers to pick up your business cards, your lists should contain no more detail than that. And don’t complain to me that your list would be too long that way, breaking it up into more lists doesn’t give you any fewer Next Actions, it just lets you procrastinate some of them more by putting them on a list you’ll ignore entirely.

I agree very much with Mark on this. It’s tempting to get super-atomic about your lists or put items everywhere they could be done. That can get hectic to manage, though.

On the other hand, for very large to-do lists, or for people with limited amounts of time at any context (shared family computer that’s always busy or errands to a store that has weird hours), I do think there’s value in ganging activities wherever time or attention are precious. Finding the balance is tricky but can be worth the effort if you are going to the trouble of maintaining any but one list. Make any meta-work you do pay back as extravagantly as possible.

Nice work as always, Mark!

(Also, a related conversation over on the Google Group.)


21 Comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Christopher Brandow's picture

I think the point is...

I think the point is to make the contexts as functional as possible. While I might be somewhat likely to ignore a Next action list titled for a particular area of responsibilty, it is extremely useful to me to do all (or most) of my email next actions at a single sitting.

Merlin Mann's picture

Well put, Christopher. I think a...

Well put, Christopher.

I think a tendency I’ve had—and have tried hard to lick—is to get wrapped up in a fractal taxonomy loop. “Where does this go? Should I start a new sub-sub-list?” So your comment’s right on from where I sit.

I’ve felt for some time now that this is one piece that must vary widely from one person to another’s implementation strategy, but that the addition of extra contexts should always be in the service of more efficient action—not just to develop a more satisfying personal ontology. :-)

dominique's picture

i try to keep my...

i try to keep my list taxonomy no more than one indent deep that way if there is a location on my list i can at least keep track of the several things that i need to pick up in the same place. :)

Nik's picture

Software can really help with...

Software can really help with this. My NA list is comprised of all my contexts, but I can filter down to a specific context whenever I wish.

adam's picture

Nik, what software do you...

Nik, what software do you use?

Chris's picture

I think of Contexts as...

I think of Contexts as “views” or “selects” on the big list of Next Actions.

I’m still figuring out GTD. I’m torn between making my lists very hierarchical with dependency trees between actions or making my lists long and category/tag/context searchable.

Chris's picture

Also, Mark Taw seems to...

Also, Mark Taw seems to assume a Next Action only appears on one list. For example, his Next Action “buy oil” is on his @shopping list, but not his @car (gas station) list. Why not put it on BOTH lists? Lately, I’ve been thinking about “folksonomies” and de.licio.us-like tags for Next Actions. This is only viable with software, though. Why not let a Next Action have many tags, which can be context, location, people, and/or project names. Then your context or project lists are just subset views of your master list.

Christopher Brandow's picture

Chris, I have also...

Chris,

I have also been struggling with the heirarchical view of tasks. I have not found the ideal program. I am toying with writing my own, but lack of time/skills at this point have stunted my efforts. A number of programs are close, particularly life-balance or bonzai (windows only).

But it would seem to me that the ideal app would view projects as outlines with lots of abilities to attach relevant documents, links, etc. as Omni Outliner does, but then make any given point or particularly subpoint a task that could link immediately to whatever PIM program (entourage or palm desktop) that you use with its context (calls, email) etc intact. I have other thoughts about this, but I haven’t found anything that quite does this.

interestingly, if you make outlines in MS Word 2004 in the “notebook layout” view, then any point in an outline can be made into an entourage task. However it is not given the category info as far as I can tell.

Merlin Mann's picture

I agree that the right...

I agree that the right tool is important, but it’s critical to understand why the tool is there and to adjust expectations to accord with the stuff that a “dumb” tool does best.

It’s an artful balance, but I continually return to the side of simplicity over exhaustive “correctness.” I’d say time put into generating and maintaining multiple lists, categories, and facets can often be better spent on refactoring and simplifying the existing ones. (This definitely goes for me and my ontological library of shaded Entourage categories).

No matter how deep I get in taxonomy and “multiple locations,” I always return to the simplest single list I can handle. My secret temptation is always that some tool can do all the maintenance (read: “thinking”) for me, but ultimately, I still need to make decisions and be aware of “what’s where.” Adding a constant administrative layer and tending all those rabbits becomes its own endless project.

Anyhow. Not saying multiples, facets, or redundancy are necessarily bad—just that in my experience it can be a lot to maintain if it’s not paying consistently large rewards in enhanced action.

Christopher Brandow's picture

quite right....

quite right.

Chris's picture

I use both a wiki...

I use both a wiki and a “hipster PDA” (thanks, Merlin!). My list problem is that I can’t carry my entire list on my hipster PDA. My wiki is supposed to be my master list, but it is hard to keep up to date. And if a wiki list is too big to fit on my screen, I have difficulty managing it. I guess what I want is a Palm that can read/write my wiki lists. That way, there are no syncronization or redundancy problems.

Mekkaniak's picture

Chris, I use DokuWiki that...

Chris, I use DokuWiki that uses textfiles, and sync @list pages to my Palm with TextSync.

Mekkaniak's picture

Regarding Mark Taws article, when...

Regarding Mark Taws article, when I realized that I had too many lists I sat down and made an inventory of the common situations/places I find myself during a day (home, office, car, bus, store etc). Those were I could actually work on Next Actions became may new lists, three in total. For each situation I also made a list of the tools I usually have at hand (PDA, pen, phone, laptop etc). This was very helpful when I decided what system to use for handling my @lists. It made me ditch the Palm as my GTD central and instead use the laptop.

John's picture

Christopher you mention a program...

Christopher you mention a program called Banzai (windows only)…do you have a link to that?

Furthermore I would like to add that I, too, have tried to categorize my next actions into a multitude of lists. The problem is that it just takes so much effort to keep maintaining a gazillion next action lists based on context (be it life area specific or location/mode specific) that I have now just decided to testdrive one next actions list with indented category headers.

so for example I would just have:

@CALLS

[OC_TAXES] -call Jan for advice on company tax forms

@COMPUTER

[SCHOOLY3Q3] -make survey layout in Quark Xpress [SCHOOLY3Q3] -deliver survey layout as PDF to project team

and more ofcourse, but all in one textfile. (I actually have started using EssentialPIM [1] since a few weeks which runs nicely from my usb memorystick that I carry around from the home office to school to friends to the studio etc and I will always have all the information with me.)

I don’t know yet how this will work out for me to be honest. Its a hard one but I have to decide between this approach all in one textfile with headers or getting the info from a multitude of textfiles sorted by context.

[1] = www.essentialpim.com

donkeykong's picture

suggestion palm os app hierachical...

suggestion palm os app hierachical tree-like todo list: http://pdesk.sourceforge.net/drupal/

Jeff's picture

For me, the simplest list...

For me, the simplest list (on my computer) is to use Notational Velocity, and to create my own flickr or del.icio.us style tags. I try to create one-line to-dos, and then in the body add whatever tags seem appropriate (in the oil example above, I might add: car, gas station, shopping, errands). Having NV stretched to full height on my iBook G4 gives me about 30 lines of list and three or four of body available.

As soon as I type in, say, errands, I see a filtered list of anything that includes that word. This way I can view my list as a single list (and manage it as a single list), but have my contexts, too.

Christopher Brandow's picture

First, I agree that lists...

First, I agree that lists really need to be kept to a minimum. For me: calls, email, internet, office, home, out&about.

Second, the software is “bonsai outliner”, sorry for the horrendous spelling earlier. link: http://www.natara.com/

John's picture

Thanks Christopher!...

Thanks Christopher!

Afsheen Family's picture

Everything you've ever wanted to...

Everything you’ve ever wanted to know (and then some) about how I pretend to be organized

I’ve stopped writing store specific shopping lists, because most things can be bought almost anywhere and if I write a Trader Joe’s list then it won’t occur to me that I can also buy milk at Whole Foods. (Yes, that sounds silly, but it really happened.)

Thinkerlog's picture

GTD and BrainStorm David Allen has...

GTD and BrainStorm

David Allen has written a book called Getting Things Done. In fact, he has spun a mini-industry around it, including Outlook plug-ins, notebooks, CDs and branded baseball hats. In the blog vernacular, GTD is a meme. An idea that’s grown

ilovett.com's picture

Creativity by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Tagline: "Flow...

Creativity by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

Tagline: “Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention”
ISBN: 0060928204

On the long side, but still a worthwhile read. I had a good time reading Finding Flow back in February, so reading

 
EXPLORE 43Folders THE GOOD STUFF

An Oblique Strategy:
Only a part. Not the whole.


STAY IN THE LOOP:

Subscribe with Google Reader

Subscribe on Netvibes

Add to Technorati Favorites

Subscribe on Pageflakes

Add RSS feed

The Podcast Feed

Inbox Zero

The original 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. Don’t miss the free video of Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation.

Get Started with ‘GTD’

David Allen’s popular productivity book and the system on which it’s based help turn ‘stuff’ into actions that support valuable outcomes.