Posts Tagged ‘GTD’

May 10th, 2010

My new favorite web app, FollowUpThen, and how it made me love gMail

All the cool kids use Gmail. I’ve had accounts for years, but have rarely used them.  I use my own domains, and when Google finally introduced accounts for business, I looked into it. I’ve always loved the idea of threaded emails. But I find it clunky in Gmail, and the whole app is slow to me. I’ve been using fastmail.fm for years, and because everything is a page refresh, I just open lots of windows. You can do that in Gmail, but it’s not as nice… Anyway, I’ve never loved Gmail. And I had my way of working.

A month ago I finally made the jump. I decided I could be a grown up and revise my email habits. I moved over for techy and nontechy reasons. The techy reasons involve cleaner headers and better spam handling. The nontechy reasons include integration with the other services, and a great address book that syncs with my iPhone.

It’s been rocky, but an okay experience. The plusses and minuses have been about even.  I’ve really had to change the way I think about email and organization, and I struggle with that.

The biggest thing is Gmail uses tags, which I love. However it use them instead of folders, which I find clunky.  You can emulate folders, but it’s just not the same. I lose emails. It freaks me out that everything is in one folder. Some get tagged, some don’t, so emails don’t land in the “folder” I expect them to be in, and then I can’t fnd them.

A couple weeks ago, I had an idea of reminders to help me not lose emails. Okay, I still lose them, but what if they popped back up at the right time? It turns out this already exists, as a really well built FREE service called FollowUpThen.com from Internet Simplicity.

When sending an email, BCC the service when you want a reminder, and it pops back up, on the same thread. If there’s an email thread I want to put off till Tuesday, I’ll forward it to tuesday@FollowUpThen.com, and then archive it. The thread pops back up on Tuesday. Perfect!

So now I worry less that emails will fall out of my field of vision, and subsequently I’ll forget to follow up. I follow up on ideas, conversations, deadlines, invoices, anything. Like so many good things, it’s dead simple, free, and works well.

I can’t recommend it highly enough.

July 22nd, 2009

What if you had to pay for clicks?

Google has made a million dollars on their pay-per-click adSense, but that’s not what I’m talking about. I’ve been reading books like the 4-Hour Workweek and there’s a big push for efficiency. It’s great. “Check your email twice a day. Not more. Really. You’ll survive.” It’s amazing – I never thought I could do it, but it feels good, and is actually more efficient. Less changing gears. But I digress. This sort of tip has made me think about efficiency in front of the computer. Things like thinking things through before even touching the mouse. Putting pen to paper. Working on one project at a time. Like that.

And then I realized a great measurement would be clicks. Imagine if you had to pay for clicks? Or there was an odometer on yr mouse? How efficient would you be! I’ve tried to think about how to do things in fewer steps, fewer movements, fewer mistakes. I’ve gotten better about focusing, and def am more efficient. Give it a try and let me know what yr results are!

April 15th, 2009

Lessons I’ve Learned: Think before you act

Lessons I’ve Learned: Everyday, all the little things you do, try to give a little thought to them before you do them. Ask what you will get out of it, and walk through the steps you are about to do. Nothing formal and it doesn’t have to be long. But being conscious about actions has helped me do a lot better work and make fewer mistakes.

I took me a really long time to develop this as a habit, but I’ve seen a huge benefit.

This goes for speaking, too, thought that’s a lot harder to develop as a habit.