You need to understand my to-do list process before you read these steps. I strive for a daily inbox-zero task system, which means I can scrub the complete list in less than 10 minutes. The size of individual entries varies. Most can be completed in one work session, but others are project-like tasks where the to-do is the next logical step.
The never-ending question you must ask regarding whatever productivity system you’ve built is, “Does this system make you more productive?”
My first warning sign of being unproductive is when I sense I’m rescheduling more tasks than I’m completing. When I enter this state, I walk through the following list in my head for EVERY SINGLE ITEM ON MY TODAY’S LIST.
- Ask. Am I going to do this? Ask again if this is the 10th time you’ve deferred this task.
- Ask. Why is this important? Or why does this exist? What problem am I trying to solve?
- Ask. If I put it in the future, how guilty will I feel?
- Ask. What significant consequence occurs if I don’t complete this task?
- Discern. How many times have I punted this?
- Edit. Rewrite the task to describe the task in terms of the next achievable step.
- (Last resort) Mark it complete. Don’t think. Do.
DO NOT add tags, create projects, or create other to-do infrastructure to manage your to-dos better. This is procrastination disguised as productivity.
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