To-do lists can be daunting. Do you feel like you’re getting anywhere with them? Do you feel overwhelmed when you look at yours? Here’s some tactics and best practices which may help!
The concept of a To-Do list isn’t new, and with the advent of smartphones, many of us have moved them from paper to electronic and the “cloud”. If you have one, and use it regularly, it’s worth congratulating you on that. By writing it down, you get it out of your head, and the chances of remembering to accomplish everything increase significantly. I was reading an interesting article which shared the statistic that people forget 50% of the content of a presentation within 1 hour. Your brain can’t remember it all. By writing it down, you’re ahead of the game more than half the time! Here’s a few more to-do list tips and tactics.
Categorize Your Lists - Important business tasks, and remembering to do the laundry, should not be on the same list. Just one big list ends up being overwhelming. You need a few different categories (but not too many either). Often the below are a great place to start:
—Personal Now - Stuff in your personal life that you can act on right now if you have a few minutes.
—Work Now - The action items you need to do for work that you could act on right now if you have a few minutes.
—Waiting/Follow-Up - Actions you can’t take right now, perhaps because you’re waiting on something or someone or it’s something you need to follow-up on, but it’s important not to lose track of these, they’ll likely be moved back into the ‘Work Now’ or ‘Personal Now’ lists at some point in immediate future.
—Someday/Maybe - Actions that you’re not sure if or when you’re going to act on, so you write them down to get them out of your head. This way they’re here for you to refer back to in the future.
Personal Lesson Learned: I spend most of my time focused day-to-day in the ‘Now’ lists, so I’ve found it’s good to have a calendar or email reminder to myself, once per week, which reminds me to review all the other lists and make sure nothing from the ‘Waiting/Follow-up’ and ‘Someday/Maybe’ lists need to be moved into ‘Now’.‘Now’ lists are actionable right now - Each item on your ‘now’ lists should be small actionable items you can execute on right now. If you have a broad item, like “Write a book” or “plan a vacation”, it’s too big to really accomplish it ‘right now’. The easy way to break them down into small actionable items is to think about the ONE thing you could do right now to move forward toward that task, even if it’s small. For “write a book” that might be “write the introductory paragraph” or “write the outline”. For “plan a vacation” it may be “pick the dates on the calendar,” “pick the destination,” “book the flights,” or “contact the travel agent”. This may mean that when you cross that item off, you may need to add the next ONE thing you need to do. That’s a good thing! You’re moving forward!
Knowing how to prioritize - There’s so many items on your to-do list, what do you do first? When you are faced with this challenge, a simple way to make decisions is the Eisenhower Decision Matrix model. It is a tool that aids in your decision-making and helps decide what to do first. In most cases, in the accompanying figure, you’d start with the green DO tasks which are both important and urgent. Once those are complete, try to focus on the blue DECIDE tasks which are important and not urgent. These often will become urgent in the future if you don’t work on them, so be proactive and plan to work on them now. Not Important red and gray categories often just fit in wherever they can.
Different approaches work for different people. These are some of the tips that seem to be most helpful during discussions on to-do lists that I wanted to share in case they’re helpful to you!
**The category names ‘Waiting/Follow-up’ and ‘Someday/Maybe’ I first heard about when reading the book, Getting Things Done, if you’re looking to really dig into your todo list and productivity some more, and haven’t recently read it, I recommend it! Great ideas in that book!
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I’m Brian Nelson-Palmer. I created Productivity Gladiator because I saw what a difference it made to share very small and very specific actions you can take right now, right away, to be more productive. They make a difference in your life, little by little, and the impact grows and grows. I want you to start doing the things you WANT to do, not get stuck chasing what you NEED to do. If any of this resonates with you, send me a note. It brings me joy to share my Productivity Gladiator passion.