new experiments in productivity

I’ve decided to try to become more organized and productive.
Unlike many who with this aim, I have a profoundly different goal.  I do not want to be more productive and organized.  My productivity I would grade ‘Good’, while my organization I would grade merely ’Adequate’.
My goal is simply to expend less time to get the same results I get today.

Methods
I will not try to use GTD, because it is so difficult to implement.  I am familiar with GTD, I have read the book, and I think it is a good methodology.  Much of what I will do is based on the ideas in GTD.  But I’m not running the microwave division of General Electric, so I don’t need anything with flowcharts.  I need something simpler.

What I Will Do:

  • I wil use GMail and Ta Da List.
  • I will do the items on Ta Da List.
  • I will attempt to answer all of the emails, and do the action items associated with them.
  • If an action item is substantial, I will transfer it to the Ta Da list.
  • Once an email is answered, I will archive it.
  • I will aggressively archive emails that acquire no action.
  • I have also created a delegate and a ‘wait on’ tab, but I don’t do either of those very much.

Results So Far
So far, I have gotten to inbox 3 in my work email, inbox 6 in my bmic email, and inbox 4 in my personal email.  (And both of the personal action items involved copy editing manuscript portions.)

My TaDa List has 10 items in each category, and all of them are slowing getting done.  They are what Stephen Covey would call ‘Quadrant II’ items.

So far, it’s going well.

Will it work out long term?  I’ll let you know.

Do you use a productivity system?  How do you stay organized?  Does it work? Leave a comment…

introducing Grattisfaction: the minimum viable blog

The minimum viable product is a product with the minimum viable feature set to get usage and therefore feedback from an early adopter audience.  (This idea was originally popularized by Eric Ries.)

We’ll come back to that.  I promise.  But haven’t you always wanted a blog?

I have always wanted a blog.

Why have I always wanted a blog?

- I want to write, and writing has many intrinsic good qualities.

- I want to experiment with getting out there on the social web.  I read a lot of blogs,  I really enjoy a lot of blogs, and I have learned many truly interesting things from blogs.  Now I can contribute to the knowledge that’s out there.

- I want to meet more people in the startup community.

- I’m one of the few lean startup/customer development people I’ve heard of in mobile, so I might be able to share some good knowledge.

Being the student of customer development/lean entrepreneurship I am, I have decided to launch the minimum viable blog.

(It will not be a true MVP, because there will be real content, and it will look acceptable, because blogs are aesthetic projects as well as products.)

So, it may suck.

In fact, it may suck for a while.

But if you tell me why it sucks, I’ll change it.

So here’s what I’ll do: I’ll write a few posts.  And you can tell me what you like or don’t like.

(Actual posts!  If it was really minimum viable, there’d just be post titles on Twitter with bit.ly links.)

I know, right?  But I have that much good stuff to get out there.

And whichever one you spend the longest time on/most people read, I will move in that direction.

And if it sucks, tell me why.  And we’ll fix it.  And then, you’ll like it.