My productivity journey pt2

When we last left our intrepid hero. He was overwhelmed, stressed out and looking for a way to check out while making nice precise lines in the yard.

I wasn’t looking for a life change, I was looking to be able to stuff more into my day, to do more things effectively, and ultimately achieve by stealing hours from my evenings and weekends.

Instead, what I found was a promise. David Allen encourages his readers to seek out a “mind like water.” You see, when a stone hits water it causes ripples. But… those ripples quickly fade away and you are left with a calm peaceful exterior once again.

David Allen told me, in his book, that if I followed his system, I could also achieve this state. I could be calm, have a good idea of what I had to do and when I had to do it, and as a result, stop stressing about all the stuff I had to do that that I was forgetting, overlooking etc etc.

I hope that reading this blog post doesn’t give you enough of a summary that you skip reading his book. Besides the Bible, getting things done has had a greater impact on my life than any other book.

That’s not to say that there aren’t other productivity books out there that are helpful… But it is to say that if you haven’t read “Getting Things Done,” you are missing out.

Ok, enough of a lead in, how do you get the mind like water? Well, first of all you realize that your mind isn’t the place to store your lists!!

I remember hearing this part of the book, and thinking to myself (as I was mowing the lawn) hold on here, I can’t adequately process this book as an audiobook. I need to be able to take notes, to think about it, because if he’s right, and the mind is not the correct bin in which to store our lists (if mental notes are in fact not notes at all but a vain attempt to keep information in our mind only to be reminded of them at inopportune times) then I needed to completely rethink my system.

And completely rethink it I did.

So if our mind is not the place to keep our thoughts what is? Allen asserts that we need a capture system. A place where we put everything from figuring out what is wrong with the dryer, to replacing the batteries on the smart lock that is blinking red, to completing the refinance paperwork on my house, to planning my next sales meeting.

He goes on to make the case that we shouldn’t just record the tasks, but should do some thinking about the tasks and as we write them down answer two questions about them. 1) what is the ultimate outcome I want with this task? And 2) what are the next few things I need to do in order to achieve this outcome?

If we take, for example, the four tasks outlined above we can see this in action- please note all of these are actual tasks I need to complete or am in the process of working on.

So the first one. My dryer has recently begun to take three cycles to dry clothes. So I record a task which is figure out how to fix the dryer by googling what could be wrong and or calling the handyman who has done work for me. I put a date on this for the next Saturday I’m free, and then go about the rest of my life.

Then for the second task… the smart lock that is blinking red… It’s telling me it needs new batteries… So I slip off the cover, take note of the batteries it takes and but them on my shopping list for the next time I go to the grocery store.

Then the refinance paperwork. I need to open the email, login, and both my wife and myself need to e-sign the raft of paperwork we received before the 24th.

Finally for the sales meeting. I need to make sure that all the promotional material is completed, build an agenda, research whether or not the state will allow us to meet outside (or if I should do this meeting virtually) and finally I need to look into supplying masks for my sales folks if we end up meeting in person.

I know that you might be thinking that this sort of process is overwhelming and potentially even unnecessary but consider this for a moment. How many blinking red lights do you have in your house, office or hobbies? How many undone or completely ignored tasks do you have? Stuff that nags at you, that wakes you up in the middle of the night?

For me… I had a ton of them. And these tasks were making it impossible for me to have a mind like water. Instead I had a logjam. Filled with the mental notes and scraps of paper where I was writing down what I couldn’t forget.

The problem was that I didn’t have a system that I trusted to hold all those notes. And my subconscious knew that. So, instead of a being able to write something down, and trust that I’d look at it again, I would write something down and then stress out because I knew that I wouldn’t remember to look at it.

When I first read this book, electronic “todo” lists were not yet widely available. I spent several more year trying to find a system like what David Allen outlined that would fit the brave new world of email, text messages, and every other sort of input.

In my next post, I’ll talk about the system I decided to use, and the way that this system helps me effectively triage my todos so I can get the right things done.

For now, I’d like you to think about whether or not you have a system that you trust. Do you have lots and lots of undone tasks that are mounting around you, calling out to you when you open the proverbial junk drawer or look at your physical or electronic inbox?

Does that stress you out?

Realizing that I was completely jammed with tasks that I would never remember to complete was a huge eye opener for me.

I hope this has been helpful for you, and am grateful that you have read this far with me.

Until next time.

How to start and finish work.

If you are in thought work, management, etc, chances are that on or around the middle of March you woke up and found yourself working from home. For some of you this may have been routine, and for others this may have been a completely new development.

I get it, I’ve played at working from home for the past few years, grabbing a day here and there, mostly retreating to this space when someone was sick, I was needed at home, or I had a really difficult project that had to be completed with focus.

However, now that all of our kids are at home too (not to mention the cats, neighbors, and our significant others) working from home has changed from novelty to necessity and for those of you who are high achievers it could threaten to blur the lines between home and work life even further.

For me, I’ve found that this is a huge problem. I wake up, and if I’m not careful work can creep into every moment of my day. And by work, I don’t always mean the tasks that we set for ourselves but instead the email we read while rolling out of bed that nags at us while we are eating breakfast, reading God’s word or praying. There have been many many times when I’ve made this mistake and have had my peaceful morning completely upended (note if you manage people don’t send them a strongly worded email late at night or early in the morning… It never has the desired effect).

So, what do we do in order to create distance between work and home especially when work is now at home? We set boundaries.

First, you need to make a conscious decision to not check your phone before you are ready to deal with the inputs. For me this means after I’ve read scripture, prayed, journaled, read the newspaper, eaten breakfast and gotten dressed. Your mileage may vary, but get yourself set up to receive the day. Your company expects your mind to be fully at work when you are ready to work. Ensure that you are ready before you dive in.

Second, you need to come up with a way to convince your mind that you are now in “work” mode. I’ve read about this idea for years but not really done it well until recently. For me, the first thing I do to remind myself that I’m at work is to get my tools ready. I open my day planner and review the appointments I have for the day, I open my task manager and look at the stuff I have scheduled to accomplish during the day and I review in a lightening fast way, the couple of things I must get accomplished in the day ahead (my big three). Often, I’ll also review the top two or three things I have to get accomplished in the week, and the two of three goals that I need to get accomplished in the quarter.

I’m trying to stir up momentum for the day ahead, get my mind spinning on the things that need to get done today rather than the many things that will flow in once I’ve opened the flood gate of slack (or Teams) and my email.

Once I’ve completed this quick 10 minute process I’m ready. Then I throw open the doors and quickly review my email from the prior evening and morning (is there anything so important that it rearranges my priorities?), then I might also peak at social media, Teams, etc and make sure that I’m still aiming at the correct goals. Once that is completed I’m focused and ready for the day ahead.

And… 5 or 6 pm rolls around. Whew! Another day is done. I’ve worked hard, checked a bunch off of my list and am ready to call it a day. But how should I shut things down in such a way that I’m finished (and I mean really finished) with work? How do I fully log off so that I’m not tempted to check one more thing or allow my ever curious brain to delve into any additional email?

First, I systematically close all the open programs on my computer leaving Teams and email for last. Then I clear out any unread texts and transfer action items to my todo list. Then I clear Teams in the same way (letting those folks with whom I am in active conversation know that I’m logging off) and lastly I spend some time emptying my inbox. If I have something that I can respond to I do. If it can wait I move it into a folder that says tomorrow, note these actionable email on my todo list, and then switch over to my calendar. From there I spend some time writing down my appointments for the next day in my planner. Not a ton of detail but I want to make sure that I’ve captured the rocks that will define my next day.

From there, I clear out my todo list, making sure that all of the tasks that I’ve captured throughout the day are in their correct bucket.

And finally, I decide on the couple of things I’m going to accomplish the next day, leaving my planner open on my desk to those pages, signaling my brain that it is time to move on, today is over and work is complete.

As a last step, I turn off my computer and put it away, dock my phone, iPad, keyboard and mouse and wipe down my workspace. I’m finished for the day, my tools are away and I’m ready for whatever fun we can get into that evening. This might mean you go jump on the trampoline with your kids, go prepare dinner, go for a family walk or just sit outside and enjoy the weather. The point here is to reward yourself. The day is done, work is away and you are in a new phase.

Life is too short to let work consume you. Frankly, you can’t work all the time and be effective, so, we all need to shut down, log off and distance ourselves. Boundaries are good. And if we are going to stay sane during this time, it is really important to put up some walls to separate our personal and professional lives.

Until next time… Thanks for reading.