I’m always fascinated by people obsessed by productivity and its range of tools.
I consider myself pretty highly productive. Typical week had 8+ meetings, calls, follow ups, research, thinking time and sometimes coding. Typical CTO and CPO stuff. I tend to get 90% of important things done. If not more.
I’m fairly busy, but just use my inbox with search, Apple notes and Apple reminders. Works fine for me.
It's not really about productivity. It's about creating a sense of control over your life. The reason there is an industry around this is because the need is never sated, and the productivity methods are switched around like fad diets because the underlying issue (anxiety and lack of satisfaction) is never corrected.
This becomes obvious once it comes to your attention that the people who are supposed to be experts in this, apply their productivity towards selling more productivity. Which is delightfully perverse.
In reality, if you are embarking in projects that are important to you, you rarely need that many reminders and get by with the simplest system (such as what you are describing) or none at all. All trivial other tasks can fit in a single list. And the things in your personal life that are actually meaningful, such as fulfilling relationships, are not something you can Zettlekasten your way into beyond setting a reminder for some birthdays.
4000 Weeks was a game-changer for me. I found the takeaways liberating, and more in-line with my perspectives in general.
My ‘system’ now is just focusing on one major goal outside of the regular work/family stuff.
I use tools for quick capturing of ideas. I always keep a pocketmod and a pen on me. Notebooks at home. Voice Memos and Voiceliner for when ideas hit late at night.
Jonny Decimal synchronized with Dropbox. Org-mode for digital notes. Organice for mobile access.
Nothing rigid though, process should not get in the way of just living.
I'm 70% done with the book. Definitely a game-changer and already one of my all-time favs. One of those books that I need to buy and own a physical copy (I usually just read ebooks)
I would be willing to take productivity porn seriously, if the people obsessing over it were provably exceptionally productive (like, I don't know, "here's how I learned multiple languages and musical instruments while finishing a physics PhD as a single parent" or whatever).
For example, even the creator of SuperMemo seems a fairly average person and not the polymath/hyperpolyglot one might have expected him to be (or at least I could not find any indication of that).
Likewise, what has David Allen actually done beyond writing the same book half a dozen times?
As far as I can see this stuff mostly exists to fill a need for structure, but it does NOT make one exceptionally productive (also accounting for the time that needs to be invested in the tools and techniques themselves).
"One researcher famous for his extensive use of [Zettelkasten] was the German sociologist Niklas Luhmann (1927–1998). Starting in 1952–1953, Luhmann built up a Zettelkasten of some 90,000 index cards for his research, and credited it for enabling his extraordinarily prolific writing (including over 70 books and 400 scholarly articles)"
Then, we have had decades to observe whether this approach (that I assume to be familiar to at least many in his field by now) actually made sociologists more productive (at whatever it is that sociologists do), or not.
I tried Zettelkasten, but I think it’s a good solution to a problem I don’t have. I take notes to remember and find information, not to publish it. ZK is more geared toward sharing with others.
I think that’s much closer to “Linking Your Thinking”. Short version: your PKM is a wiki. Make lots of index pages like “Restaurants Index”, with a master index that maps to all of them.
ZK wants to apply a linearity that just isn’t relevant to the things I want to record.
I'm partly the opposite. A lot of life advise I see comes from people at the top, meaning they have all the resources they need and are looking for a way to maximize their time. Their methods may not be applicable to randos like me, so I tend to dismiss it.
Stories by people that were once at the middle rungs and made it to the top through better organization would be a lot more interesting and relatable.
I tried, I just wasted a few minutes clicking "Random Page" and ALL results are about the supermemo software itself, most are support emails republished as wiki pages.
Click one of the articles from the front page. The short articles about the app are because the wiki is also used to answer questions from users of the app.
Depends :) Maybe you are awesome in managing all that in your head (which would be an exception to the norm). Or maybe you think you are handling at pretty well, not knowing how much better you could handle it. I noticed you only referred to work. GTD is a life-centric system, valuing personal stuff as much as work stuff. Some people use all their brain powers to manage all of that, and then have very little less to keep up with the responsabilities/expectations that are part of a healthy personal and family life. That, for me, its what always made GTD stand apart from other systems.
Here's the productivity blackpill — most "productivity" improvement are dwarfed by immediate skill improvements. Want to be a better insert relevant profession? Get good at skills relevant to profession, don't try to improve some abstract "productivity" that's 10 steps removed from the actual craft.
You're probably not missing out on much. You've hit the 80/20 long ago.
Complex GTD systems are useful in unorganized workplaces where things are left to individuals to solve.. It's a way of juggling constantly changing priorities. So if you don't need them, it's likely that your workplace organizes well.
I have a job, a side business I'm trying to get profitable, house, garden, 4 kids and wife. Stuff keeps pulling on me constantly. Things need to get done in every aspect, and events planned and done.
Without productivity tools, my life would be a stressful chaos.
Being busy does not = being productive. That is not to say you aren't productive, I don't know you. But it is easy to be "busy" while not getting anything done at all.
For the people who get a little bit too into it I think it's a kind of a displaced attempt to bring some measure of control over a life that feels out of control. It sates anxiety.
E.g. you cant control how your boss treats you but you can control how you organize your tasks.
I delved deeply into this world and over time, have largely gone back to almost precisely what you do.
I use Apple Notes/Reminders for most things. Calendar is critical. Lastly I do use Trello, similar to Cal Newports recommendations, just so I know how to organize my sets of tasks. But seriously, Apple Notes is a godsend in its simplicity.
Sounds like a specialized productivity tool would be of little help there, since no tasklist can withstand the problem of just not being able to get started on a task. And something like GTD is only going to be another burdensome and anxiety-inducing task for someone with executive dysfunction.
A simple but constant reminder system (perhaps with a smartwatch or phone) can be of more use.
Organizational tools can help with #2, and can also help break down tasks to be less daunting, which can help sometimes help #1, but only if the executive disfunction is being managed with other means like medication.
And then if you use a system malleable enough to reduce starting effort to 0 across anything (project or task) you do... you just about solve that problem
How can a productivity system reduce the starting effort of any task to zero? There’s such a thing as activation energy.
Sure, you can try breaking a task down to its smallest component, but not all problems can chunk like that. And even the smallest component will take non-zero work.
I would be curious to learn about a system that could actually accomplish that.
No, it sounds like you have worked out a good process as opposed to obsessing over tools.
To expand, when I teach people productivity, I keep it simple. I am familiar with both GTD for tasks and BASB/PARA for knowledge. Both approaches boil down in to having a central location to put stuff, organizing stuff around based on how immediate it is, and then having a regular review process to trim excess.
It's very similar to scrum. Dump everything into the backlog, organize it around what's going to be the most actionable, and then periodically trim/refine it.
> I’m fairly busy, but just use my inbox with search, Apple notes and Apple reminders. Works fine for me.
That's the key. It works fine for you. It wouldn't come close to working for me though. I've had to dedicate many hours building a system that works for me.
That said, I've never been into productivity porn. I've spent my time figuring out what wasn't working and how to fix it. Reading about 'productivity' is an unproductive use of my time.
I consider myself pretty highly productive. Typical week had 8+ meetings, calls, follow ups, research, thinking time and sometimes coding. Typical CTO and CPO stuff. I tend to get 90% of important things done. If not more.
I’m fairly busy, but just use my inbox with search, Apple notes and Apple reminders. Works fine for me.
Am I just missing out on something?