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The Productivity Show #39 - Doug Fisher (Mission Control)

April 6th, 2008

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Doug Fisher is President of Mission Control, a productivity methodology for increasing productivity and reducing stress. Sounds like Getting Things Done? Well here’s a comparison from someone who has done both; GTD-er’s Perspective on Mission Control. Mission Control adds a layer of time based action into your calendar, so that the things/actions you are going to do are set in time. Mission Control also looks at how you are being with the things you think you “should” do.

We also talk about Team Productivity and High Performance Teams.

(Disclosure. I work for the company (JMW) whose owners also own Mission Control)

Accomplishing things and wanting to make things happen -What does it take and how can you be fulfilled in the doing of it.
How can the IT solution deliver on the promise to the end-user - Alter what people see as possible so they can accomplish a new realm of performance.
What is Mission Control? - Power! Having what you say realised. Producing the results you say you’re going to produce. Resourcing time and resources. Power in your life.
Key Productivity Issues - Changing your habits. Our ingrained habits worked for us in the past. Our habits may also limit our level of productivity. More channels of information hitting us. Now over 20 communication modes 24/7. Not the same world we live in as when we developed our habits.
What occurred to me as “Work” first in my life - I developed my work habits based on what I developed aged 9! Do these habits work now!
Altering your work habits - Resigned about our ability to change our habits.
What we see as possible - Changing our world of what we “See”. Fundamental assumptions that limit what we see and limit our productivity.
We should get it all done! - And we’re failures if we don’t. Let’s challenge that. You’re never going to get it all done.
What if you can’t get it all done? - What are we going to choose if we can’t get it all done? Give people more power to change their habits.
How do we mentally deal with all the things to do?
Implementing Mission Control
- One and half days, but can vary, with coaching and support to implement new practises.
Calendar based productivity - We live in a fantasy of when things get done…..Later! For something to get done there has to be a duration of defined time to do it! Schedule it. Schedule 50-100% more time than you originally think!! - Top Tip
Sticking to the schedule - Make it something I want to do rather than something I have to do.
Compelling Occasions - What I have in my calendar creates my future. A holiday/vacation give me an uplift. So “Do Expenses” doesn’t give a compelling future, it’s something we have to do. What’s fun and compelling for “Do Expenses”.
Being Fulfilled - Why do we do what we do? Because it’ fulfills something of fundamental interest or importance. Keep asking “Why is that important to me” even with something “I have to do” keep asking why to get to something of fundamental importance.
Why do we have dread about certain projects or calendar entries? - Ask why we’re doing them to get to something more compelling and less tedious which we’re less resistant to.
Go into something more positively disposed to it - More focused, and accomplish more in less time.
Tony has a spreadsheet for shopping - Just a checklist, nothing more sinister.
A compelling future is more uplifting in the present.
Making a conscious choice about what you are aren’t doing gives you control.
Contact Lists - I’ve moved from Outlook Tasks for each person to Contacts with categories, and then call the group, but also calendar single phone calls.
Waiting For - Drag sent email into Calendar for review. Emails are handled as calendar entries where there is follow up.
Agendas - Capture what you want to review or say to people you meet consistently
Team and Group Productivity - Start with existing habits in the group. Naming the habits that bother us, in each other. Notice and examine our own and other’s existing habits that would effect the group, and shared habits of groups that are unwritten. People recognising their own habits so that other people can talk to you about it and you don’t take it personally because it’s for the performance of the group. Start to talk about things that haven’t been talked about before.
What’s the “noise” in the work group - Lack of clarity about commitments, lack of communication, misinterpretation. Having the difficult conversations.
Meetings and Emails - Protocols that work which reduce the meetings by half, and reduces the average meeting time by half. Less email by 30%.
High Performance Teams - What does the Group exist for. Defining the group. Freedom to communicate. Meetings and email consistent with what needs doing. People take on a new level of performance because they’re freed up!
Flow of information in the group - Best sharing of information that allow people to have their attention on producing what they need to produce.
Taking on Breakthrough targets - End up with more to do to have Breakthrough performance. What are the things you’re not going to do.
Footballers’ Favourites - Capture to pad and then Outlook. “If you’re gonna do it, Schedule it!”. Italian.

The Productivity Show #38 - John Duckworth (Cognitive Weekly Review)

March 24th, 2008

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My guest is John Duckworth. He wrote to me a few weeks ago with a short guide on doing the Weekly Review. He asked me to read the guide for him. Better than that, I invited him on the show. John has read a wide variety of productivity books, and combined that with cognitive solutions to getting the Weekly Review done.

Getting Thing Done - To help with software development.
Weekly Review - Needed improving and John looked at other systems to help do GTD.
Web Development - In Wigan, Lancashire
Mixed Nuts - The greatest productivity tool ever. John hates them and uses them with the guide of Aubrey Daniels. Need to reinforce something immediately after the something happens good or not. Getting off the internet. Mixed nuts worked best! Use something you hate, immediately, to reward yourself for bad behaviour!
Stopping things being a chore - Don’t see things like the Weekly Review as a chore, but something you’re motivated to do. Improve the thing you’re doing so you love it.
What is a weekly review - An hour per week, to review. But many don’t give the time over to fully do the review or something interrupts you.
Divide the Weekly Review into tasks - It might not end up as a single complete hour, but several tasks which can be split. Split the parts of a weekly review into actions which can be completed in different contexts.
When to do the Weekly Review - Calendar it. Make it crucial to start it to get into the habit of doing the weekly review, even if you don’t complete it, to get into the habit.
Why don’t we do our Weekly Review? - Procrastination. Not well defined. Give it a next action. Have a checklist to complete for the review. Picture it in your mind so that you encourage yourself to do it.
Task list of physical action to do for the review - Get Folder out. Dump papers in in-tray. Small tangible things.
Commit to the Preparation - The set up to get you moving. Mark Forster’s Do It Tomorrow. Getting ready to do the action. Getting the ironing board out as a precursor to ironing.
Essays, Reports, Proposals - We have the solution! Morning Pages (The Artist’s Way). Something to get you moving with a set (small) time.
Make Tasks Smaller - If a task is endless you probably won’t do it. “You can do anything for 5 minutes” Set the time as smaller and smaller until it gets you started. It breaks the resistance down.
8 minute training! - There’s a school in the UK trialing Eight Minute Lessons! With 10 minute breaks! YouTube?
Match your concentration span to your task - Cut it down to chunks of your concentration span. Why 1-2 hours of working on something when it doesn’t work for you.
Flow - Paul McKenna. On auto pilot in the zone. Focused on the single activity. Getting into a flow state. Flow - The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Just to Get Going - The preparation to getting going. Next action. What about after the first action? Do the next action at the same time.
The Weekly Chore! - Convert into something more pleasant. Anthony Robbins - Quality Quantifiers. Change the environment, put music on, gingerbread man! Improve the experience at the time of doing it, not as a reward afterwards. Make things fun.
How to enforce the habits - A reminder. But also make it a pleasant experience. Get the GTD Buddy.
Rehearse a Habit - Do it 20-30 times.
Getting Horizons of Focus to work - Do It Tomorrow (book), Scatter Mapping (text only mindmapping).
Follow through on projects - Belbin Roles (John’s a Plant), putting a flagging project in every day even if it’s 10mins per day. Authors of productivity books fix themselves but this doesn’t always work for the readers.
A Perfect Mess - We don’t need to be organised.
4 Hour Workweek - What would you do with only 2 hours in a week to do things.
Capture Notes - Task diary (Do It Tomorrow tip), capture goes into next day’s diary, projects captured in John’s own coded software. Capture on to mobile phone. Take a photo of any visual notes/reminders. Use the voice/note taker on the phone.
Footballers’ Favourites - Windows Mobile, MyYahoo, Do It Tomorrow, Buy a Kitchen Timer, Less Travel, OMD, Bad, Huey Lewis, Bolton Wanderers.

The Productivity Show #37 - David Gray (Global Geek)

March 16th, 2008

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I thought it was time to go back to the technology of productivity, and who better than David Gray of the The Global Geek Podcast, to discuss all things geek and beautiful.

Patient Admin Systems! - Tony sold ‘em, Dave now uses them. They record things like blood pressure straight into the patient record. They didn’t in my time! They now have bandwidth to move X-Rays. They didn’t in my time!
Frogs - Love of all things Frog
Getting Things Done - Dave needs the pressure to perform. Once you start, you stick with it. Use the deadline to drive you.
Geek Distraction - A disease. Cool stuff. Twitter.
Twitter and Second Life - Help or Hindrance to productivity? Twitter as a quick blogging and marketing communication tool. No need to engage in a conversation. It doesn’t have to be just a social networking tool. Make sure you control the tools and they don’t control you.
Twhirl - Twitter client running on Adobe Air. multiple accounts, cross posting to Pounce and Jaiku.
Chat - As a knowledge sharing productivity tool to find things.
Second Life - For sky diving! Improved levels of communication. Great potential meet up service. Easy to get distracted but a good potential video conferencing tool so you don’t have to physically travel. Greener to use video conferencing than all that real transport.
FeedDemon - RSS Feed/Reader gives Dave 10 fold productivity for reading a large number of websites. Subscribe to specific searches in your reader for key words that come up on the web. Dave has 281 feeds and 9848 unread items! I have 24 feeds and no unread items in my SharpReader RSS Feeder.
Follow the Readers - Robert Scoble will read the sites for you so you don’t have to! Or try Louis Gray for early geek stuff. TechCrunch, Mashable for early news on tech. You might have to avoid sites with too many postings because it will snow you under.
XP - Vista No Thanks.
Notepad and Google Docs - for creation and sharing documents.
Thunderbird - For email. Getting off Thunderbird is a bit difficult. Rooting email via Gmail.
Tucows and Domain Direct - Not good for my pop3 email. Go Go Daddy. Gmail spam filter is very good.
BlackBerry - For tasks and contacts but not sending email.
Cheapo handset for making phone calls - That’s what mobiles are for aren’t they. Nokia 2310. Pre-paid call divert to another mobile. Vodafone Australia pre-paid won’t let me do it.
iPod for music - In the car. No radio for 3 years. No TV in over 3 years. Dave watches when he wants to watch.
Tony doesn’t listen to The Global Geeks Podcast because the show is too good!! Similarly, Merlin Mann, Kathy Sierra, and Guy Kawasaki, are too good to read! You want to save them to study them in more detail but never get round to it.
RocketDoc - Get rid of your icons and look like an Apple! Dip cursor to look at applications and clean up your desktop.
Launchy - Launching applications with short cut keys. And word completion as you type for which application. Not good for Tony if you have the memory of a goldfish, but good for most people. Index your entire Start menu. Makes it much easier to launch applications.
Skype - For VoIP of course. I’m recording this podcast on to CallBurner.
Roboform - Password manager. Plugs into your browser and Roboform fills in your password and can generate different passwords for each website. Dave has 90 site passwords. Or Keepass which is an open source product.
Tony’s Software on new 2GB Laptop - Office2007, Outlook2007, MindManager, GyroQ, Skype, Firefox, Gmail, Microsoft CRM. No Twitter, RSS Feed, or Second Life yet.
Gmail Plugins - Better Gmail via LifeHacker, to change the Gmail interface.
Desktop Search - I’m missing my Google Desktop search at work. Will it slow the laptop down?
Life Streaming - Aggregates all your content, Blogs, Facebook, Linked-In, Twitter, into a single feed of yourself, or of other people you want to follow. FriendFeed, takes data from all your sites and puts them in one aggregated place, or track other people. Shareaholic to share links you find, straight into Twitter, Facebook etc.
The Future is Mobile and Wireless - Mobile web applications.
What takes up Dave’s time? - Podcasting! Trying to record live, to save time.
Pressure needed to perform and Get Things Done - Remember those last minute assignments and essays. Never Again!
Kill the Perfectionist - Near Enough is Never Good Enough! Just Do It, to overcome the perfectionist. Action Action Action. Kids will kill the perfectionism.
Plan in Real Time - No long term life plan. Recent guests tend to be living in the present and organically growing their goals. Finishing tasks no matter how small. Completion.
Footballers’ Favourites - Try video blogging. Traveling. Midnight Oil. Worst Habit.

The Productivity Show #36 - Sue Knight “NLP at Work”

February 17th, 2008

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I talked with Sue Knight, author of NLP at Work, and a pioneer of the use of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) in business. Sue has great experience as an NLP Practitioner, trainer, and coach, and is a great person to have on the show, to discuss what motivates us in terms of productivity. Enjoy.

NLP at Work - Way of studying excellence, and discovery of what makes outstanding performance.
NLP - Neuro Linguistic Programming, what makes outstanding people. Ways in which we think, patterns of our language, running programmes on ourselves.
What makes for high productivity - Distinguishing between what deviates from goals and what takes you towards goals, and high pay-off and low pay-off contributions. We often hold beliefs about ourselves which may get in way of how we use our time.
Procrastination - “I’ll think about it” encourage to think about it now rather than later. Do it now.
Artist’s Way - To help do it now and get writing.
Perfectionism - Action to overcome perfectionism. Keep writing even if it’s rubbish. Just Do It. If “blocked” write something easy to write, note to self, journal entry, something you enjoy.
Writing a book - Setting time aside, and maybe changing the environment. Cut off from day to day environment. Routine for the day. Ride a bike to formulate your thoughts.
Integrate the things you love doing into your work - Riding a bike is part of your work.
Training - Work in the moment, real time, not knowing. Coaching rather than lecturing. It just seems to happen.
Alignment and Goals - Checking in with what’s important to you. Take the opportunities on what important to you at the highest levels of your alignment. Things will work out. Just live your life that is truthful. We start to filter towards the things we really want.
122 year old Yogi - Starting a new business in India! It shows what’s possible.
Success in business - Do what you really want and believe in. Specialise. Dedicate yourself to it. Area of interest and become a specialist. Do what you love.
Explore without failure - Many don’t believe their talent, or think everyone has their talent, but they don’t.
The higher levels of productivity - Finding your bliss. Everything we do is a step in right direction.
Blackberry - For picking up emails whilst travelling.
Airset - For actions and bookings, and joint access. Fridge list of things to do.
Wi-Fi Sniffer - Detecting where Wi-Fi is available.
Intuition - For getting things done, and quick decisions.
Google Mail - To keep documents online and label them.
Sue Knight’s Website - Blogging before blogs, online diary in the 90s
Footballer’s Favourites - More patience, Less Milk! Shane Fenton! Beatles. The coolest first concert yet!

The Productivity Show #35 - Tim Ferriss “The 4 Hour Work Week”

January 30th, 2008

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Welcome Tim Ferriss author of The 4 Hour Work Week. For me, it’s the most important adult non-fiction book I’ve read recently, maybe ever. Why? It questions my belief about time and how I use it, and how I can cut out 80% of the things I think I should be doing. Tim’s legacy to me from the book, is I’m reading novels and I’ve given up the business books. Thanks a lot Tim! But I’ve also restructured and had a look at what’s important in life to me, and it’s things that don’t usually involve money except for skiing and holidays with the family.
We talk about the writing and promoting of The 4 Hour Work Week, Productivity, Outsourcing Your Life, and Future Projects.
The 4 Hour Work Week - Based from class lectures on profitable cashflow without outside financing. The volume approach and overwork ethic is epidemic and isn’t scalable or sustainable.
15 month sabbatical - Tim developed concepts for lifestyle and a student suggested writing a book. Many people are earning good money but feel unfulfilled.
Getting Things Done - Read The 4 Hour Work Week before Getting Things Done to cut 4/5ths of of your workload before you set up Getting Things Done.
The book was turned down by 13 publishers! - There are 5 potential books within The 4 Hour Work Week.
How to write a book - Vagabonding (Rolf Potts), Bird by Bird (Some Instructions on Writing and Life), writing is hard! Feel better by identifying the demons.
Is there something missing in your life? - You are not alone!
Filling the Void - Depression can set in, when you have it all. What next!
Using Google Adwords to research book titles that work - The Four Hour Work Week wasn’t the first or favoured name. A title that appeals to people and gains media attention.
Activity v Productivity - Identifying what’s important and stopping the procrastination tools. Get a clear list of priorities. One thing to do and complete today. Busyness is not necessarily true productivity.
Reduce your procrastination - You don’t have to be perfect about it.
Breaking the 9 to 5 thinking - You don’t have to literally work 4 hours per week. Overcoming the guilt from preconceived notions.
Need for Speed - Fill it up, fill it fast. Filling in time by feeling productive, by checking email, and not just one email! Art to creating a lifestyle and designing a life that isn’t just filling in time.
What are the 3 things you do to fill in time? - Meetings? Email? We fill the hours to avoid the important things. It’s what we all do.
The Deferred Life Plan - Trade peak physical time in life for something you’d rather not be doing! So why not distribute retirement throughout life, rather than at the end. Putting things off through fear and not living your dreams now.
Vague FUD - Overcoming fear - Definition and Action. What is the worst case scenario. Seldom that bad or permanent.
Media Diet - Ask a waiter. Only glance at the front page of a newspaper.
How do you keep informed - What “should” you be reading. Information overload. Catch-up rather than Keep-up. Go to a conference every 6 months, to summarise.
Think and Grow Rich - Henry Ford, knew where to go for the information, he didn’t need to know it all.
Outsourcing your life - Automation and Income generation. Creating a life after you’ve outsourced everything.
Purchasing Power Parity - Enables you to pay other people in the world, where they are satisfied and you are satisfied, because the dollar you pay them is worth more in their country. Big Mac Index. It’s NOT slave labour.
Delegation - How well do you delegate. Elance, Brickwork, Get Friday to find people you can delegate to. Save yourself one day per week and employ a person for $5 per hour, for 8 hours to save you a day of your life! Give it a go!
The Anatomy of Automation - p185 nice diagram for automating your life. Ways to free up time.
Book Promotion - What uses up the most time….Book Signings!! New channels to market - Blogs, Podcasts, Second Life, Scott Adams (Dilbert) YouTube groin kicking!, radio satellite tour. Referencing to shows there the answers have already been given.
Future Projects - It’s not about aiming to sit on a beach for the rest of your life. Social Media and education impacting 15,000 students (LitLiberation.org) including many well known guests you all know. Science and Maths education. New TV Series from Tim!
Tim doesn’t stand still - The 4 Hour Work Week Blog - more impact than the book, and check out the book chapters and community. Tim blogs for pleasure not just part of his 4 hours. Educating the future thought leaders.
Tim’s Footballers Favourites - Do not check email first thing in the morning! More Delegation. Less replying to email. Whinging Poms.

(The show was recorded, using Callburner for recording Skype conversations, so shout out to Jeremy and Paul at Netralia)

The Productivity Show #34 - Kyle McFarlin (Visual Strategist)

December 14th, 2007

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I talked with Kyle McFarlin, who specialises in visual capture tools such as Gyronix Results Manager and MindJet’s Mindmanager. I bag MindManager 7 and Kyle defends it! A good discussion for how we capture and learn.

Gyronix Certified Trainer - Results Manager gives you a dashboard summary of you mindmaps
MindManager - For MindMapping, nearly 1 million users of the software
Why MindManager 7 - The Ribbon Bar. Works well with Office 2007 look and feel. The ribbon bar brings up more options. More visual and aesthetic. Isolate single topic/branch.
Message to MindJet! - Spend more time on the interface. Easier to print, overlap topics, fit more on the map, slanting and zig-zagging branches. Cut the cord or add organic options. Yahoo MindManager group.
The future of Mapping - Concept Mapping, Linking topic but not centrally, flow charting, less of the bullet like maps.
Second Life MindMap - George Kurtz vertical mindmap in Second Life. Go fly around a mindmap.
Microsoft Research - Image Visualisation, unbelievable future of software, creates 3D map from tagged photos.
Uses for Second Life - Scott Adams book promotion. Conferencing, interacting, 3D. Building the interfaces for 2D software.
Virtual Reality - To move around a spreadsheet. Wow! The Croquet Project, open source development software for online worlds. I have seen the future of my 3D spreadsheet. Check out the YouTube demo.
Kyle’s GTD - Results Manager for Getting Things Done. Yet another Moleskine user! VSS template sets. “Eat your own dogfood“. Input folder on PC. Projects in VSS templates. Horizons of Focus - 3 main objectives. Bi-weekly review. List of actions and project generated by Results Manager.
GyroQ - Pop-up text box for capturing info and thoughts, and web addresses, which each generate a branch/sub-topic on a mindmap. Capture manual notes into GyroQ.
Tony’s reset his life - Kicked out most projects by reviewing my Core Values. What are we doing projects for? Intent of our plans. Highlight intent and values to work out what you really want to work on.
The World’s most offensive rap album! - Massive Undertaking
Are the projects you capturing really necessary - Are the people you’re dealing with really necessary!
Visual Strategist - Entrepreneurs and high level business managers coaching.
MindMap projection on wall - Capture of meeting/thoughts/ideas
Go To Meeting - Coaching over the internet. 90% of Kyle’s coaching is over the internet. Cost, Time, and Green savings. Remote meetings.
Skype Prime - Charge a per minute rate for the service you’re offering.
8min Chunking - 8 minute lessons and 10 minute breaks! All learning will be in 8 minutes.
Tablet Laptop - Replaced by DV9000 to run Second Life. Tablet to highlight PowerPoint presentations. Go cold turkey and burn the bridges to force tablet pen use. Marc Orchant and The Tablet PC Show.
Outlook - Strip out the attached files to reduce the .pst size.
Windows Mobile - Palm Treo
Turn the technology off once per week - Get a life, get out.
Less Fried Chicken
Hocus Pocus by Focus - Tedious! best summarised by Louis Balfour and Jazz Club.

The Productivity Show #33 - Randy Dean (PDA Email Guy)

December 6th, 2007

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Today’s guest is Randall Dean, The Totally Obsessed Time Management PDA Email Guy, who specialises in training people in productivity, dealing with email overload, and using PDAs. Oh, and he attended David Allen training long before Getting Things Done, so he’s seen it evolve.

Totally Obsessed Time Management PDA Guy and Email sanity expert.
David Allen early workshop - Randy attended a course in the early 90s, a planner system. Evolution to Getting Things Done and included Horizons of Focus for a higher view.
Business diversification - Corporate workshops, University sector, conference speaking, overseas work, open/public course, book, ebook.
Taming the Email Beast - Randy’s new ebook on dealing with email overload. 25-50% of the working day is spent on email, and less than 5% have had formal training on dealing with email. More info on emailsanityexpert.
Issues around email - Time spent on email. Not leaving enough time for the bigger picture. Bad habits around email, such as “blinging” - dropping whatever they’re doing to read email just arrived, which can drop their IQ!! Messy inboxes. 21,000 emails in an inbox.
Utilising Outlook Tasks - Do it in 2 mins or drag and drop email into a task. I didn’t know you can do this - drag the email to the task icon in Outlook, and it creates the task with the email text in the notes field. And saves the email. Cool.
Re-reading email - Waste of time. 3min one look rule for email
Media diet for a week and only look at email at midday and 4-00pm - 4 Hour Workweek
4 Hour Workweek - Get rid of 4/5ths of everything you think you need to do!
Single Tasking - Working on one task at a time and stop multi-tasking. Stop the send/receive on your email.
Find a new desk or work area - Working at home, set up another blank desk another room. Grab the one thing you want to work on and take it out for a coffee!
Major Satisfactors = Major Success - Randy’s first book. Major Satisfactors. Fun/Energy. Necessities (Eat and Pay the bills). Empty Satisfactors (TV, too much news). A brilliant way to sort out the things you do into the four sectors. Love it.
Ask a waiter for the news!
Working from home - Give yourself time for fun during the day, rejuvenating. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
PDAs - Pick the device, or no device, that works for you.
The Outlook 5- Email, Calendar, Tasks, Notes, Context - synchronised with Blackberry.
Blackberry email - Do as much as you can on a PC/Laptop keyboard. Use Blackberry to clean up junk and Spam. Use deletion key, and answer emails on laptop, or brief reply on Blackberry.
Call phone number from email on Blackberry to not send email. Save time.
Don’t respond to email on a PDA - Or get a keyboard, or be 17 years old.
GTD - David Allen principles from 20 years ago and combined with Randy’s own principles.
Capture - Outlook and paper, portable office on the road. Tasks and Priorities. No distractions in a hotel room.
2-3 min rule after kids have gone to bed - Improves family life
Horizons of Focus - Long term goals
Daily Review - Pick up weekly what’s missing. Morning review of everything. Get things to top of pile. 3-4 hours of planning time per week.
Mid to long term goals - And look around your office to check if discipline is still there. Don’t let little things stack up.
Life Planning - Every 12 months
Get systems into place - If it’s not working, Get Help!
Promoting Your Business - YouTube, National Speaker Association, Books, Speaking, Networking, ecommerce, PR, Public Courses, Web enabled courses, MultiMedia, eBook. Spokes of the wheel. American Society for Training and Development. Alex Mandossian on teleseminars.
Outlook Tip - Drag email to task to create new task.
Randy’s love life! - More time to slow down and read books, self-help and fiction
Delegate more busy work - Time to grow company and delegate activities
Deep Dish Pizza - Chicago style Gino’s Pizzeria
First Concert - New question for Footballers Questions

The Productivity Show #32 - Meet my GTD Buddy Daryl Cook

November 20th, 2007

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An outdoor recording with my Getting Things Done buddy Daryl Cook. We talk about GTD and his implementation of it. Apologies, the wind was blowing against the mic, I’ll know to keep the mic cover on next time!

Sponsored cycle - Amy’s Ride. Discussing GTD whilst cycling into a 40km/h wind!
Buddying - The value of buddying up with someone to implement GTD
Re-Read GTD - If you’ve read the book, read it again a few months later. You’ll pick up new things and a different perspective.
Toilet Reading - Skim reading a book a second time!
Natural Planning within GTD - Getting everything captured, including the small stuff.
Buddy Timetable - Skype call every week, Friday afternoon, meet-up once per month. Keep at it, even if you miss a call.
Capture all thoughts on A4 - Capture everything in your head on to separate pages of A4.
Weekly Review - The one area most people fail with productivity and GTD, doing the 1 hourly weekly review.
GTD Flow Chart - Quick reference guide available from DIYplanner.com.
Capture Levels - Importance of 30,000ft, 1-2 year actions. What are we doing today that helps us with our medium term goals. Focus on short term goals as a means to achieving long term goals.
Desire to achieve the goal - Creating the desire to achieve your goal.
Moleskine front end capture - Handwritten capture and MindMaps.
Apple mail client - Daryl’s a Mac boy. iGTD for Macs and managing tasks. Another reason to get a Mac
Reviewing higher level long term goals and projects - When changing jobs.
Reviewing goals achieved - Congratulate yourself on what you have achieved.
Setting the right contexts - Setting up the right contexts for where you do your work really helps. Know what you can do in a cafe or on the train.
Procrastination - Perfectionism causing me to procrastinate. It has to be done perfectly or not at all. None completion for fear of failure. Overcoming the internal critic.
Advice to kids - Compound Interest! Set several projects off and expect most of them to fail, but one will succeed big time. Throwing mud at walls.
Breaking Projects into the smallest do-able action - Define action and then do it! Widget Widget Widget.
Distractions - Working at home, the dog, Dick Dastardly, Wacky Races, Catch the Pigeon.
Capture Tools- NOT Microsoft Project. Don’t need a Gant Chart! Detailed plan with an Outliner or MindMap.
Feedreader - Google Reader.
MindMap Tool - Inspiration, MindManager, FreeMind.
Footballers’ Favourites - Nokia N73 synched, Mac Mail, Both way synching, Just Do It, Don’t put it down, put it away, Bike, Less Time at Desk, Veggie, Coventry City, Kiss.

Curiosity is Killing this Cat!

November 19th, 2007

I’m just reading the most important book of my adult life.  The 4-Hour Workweek by Timothy Ferriss.  I recommend it more than any other book.  You must read it!

Yeh, it shows you how to get down to a 4 hour workweek, but don’t judge it by that and think that’s impossible.  It’s about how we use our time, and how we distract ourselves, it’s incredibly practical with suggested tasks to try, and highlighting what’s not working for us, and what’s most important in our lives.

For me, it’s my curiosity which takes me to newspapers, news, websites.  It’s killing me, I’m burning up time.

I had thought about getting more into the psychology of why we waste so much time, but this book bypasses all that by just getting on with it.  I reckon this book is the foundation layer below Getting Things Done.  GTD allows you to gather all that’s in your mind and give you the option on when you deal with each thing.  The 4 hour Workweek gets rid of 4/5ths of everything!!

You don’t believe me?  Read the book.

Just a few things I’m implementing.  A no-media diet for a week, no newspapers, books, news, feeds.  Email at midday and late afternoon.  What do I do now, nothing to distract me!!  No multi-tasking, oops, slipped up on that one, writing this!  I’ll write some more in another post soon.

The Productivity Show #31 - An Orgy of Organising Tips!

October 31st, 2007

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Today’s guest is Lissanne Oliver, author of Sorted! The Ultimate Guide to Organising Your Life - Once and For All and director of Sorted!, a Professional Organiser, who provides hands on organising of your home, your business, yourself. We talk about getting organised, not just online, but around the house and workplace. (Thank you Cait for putting me in contact with Lissanne)
Sorted! the Book - 40+ recipes for organising yourself in different situation.
Sorted the Company - Getting organised, consulting with people to have a better quality of life, and improve their time management.
Key Issues to getting Sorted! - Dealing with paperwork. Not having a handle on mess. Too much email. Feeling overwhelmed. A Perfect Mess - relationships and different mess areas. Time management in a relationship.
“Get on with it, or Get Over it!” - Commit to doing it, or let go, say no, do less. I’m letting it go.
Procrastination - Sometimes a good thing to making the right decision. But you can let others down with it. The choice . How to overcome indecisiveness. Perfectionism and Procrastination. If you don’t complete anything you can’t be judged.
Getting in Action - The cost of things not being in order and in action.
Getting Organised - A practised skill, like getting fit. We know how to do it, but we don’t always apply it.
“Don’t Put it Down, Put it Away!” - My 24 hour commitment to put everything away instead of putting it down. Opening mail over the rubbish bin, and file the mail after it’s opened. Completion. Coming back from holiday, but not unpacking. Lack of completion is fear of failure if you did complete it.
“Clutter is anything you Don’t Love, Don’t Use, or Don’t Need.” 82 Litre Bins! We expand to fill our space. If we move to bigger house, we fill the space. Set criteria for getting rid of clutter.
Managing Information Overload - Make friends with your Del key. Use it or chuck it out. Using desktop search to not be slave to filing.
Starting up the Sorted! Company - Professional Organisers.
The all time best quote - “She’s the kind of person who’d fold the clothes at an orgy!
Tidy is a misconception - It’s more about being organised - planning, time management, decision making. Being in control and doing action, not being super neat. It’s organic and balanced. Flexibility.
Lissanne Oliver - Collector of Snow Domes!
Footballers’ Favourites - Eudora, Thunderbird, Nokia, The “Magazine” Home, More Nothing, Blondie, Abba, and Debbie Harry!