![]() ![]() The list prints nicely to a single page, and ends with a trip to the vending machine as a reward. Then to make sure I don’t miss something I later look specifically at those that don’t have an action associated (custom perspective but I would assume possible with other software). It also helps that my projects are split by areas of focus, some of which don’t need much in depth review to make sure things are on track. I usually can decide just looking through the list which ones I should spend actual time reviewing that week (and this is often tied to how much time I have - I’ll review more if I have 2-3 hours than if I just have 1 hour). The full list is below, but the unfortunate thing is a lot of the time is summarized in the step “Review projects list, dive deep into key projects” which is probably where the OF review feature would normally be used. Having the review printed helps me go through in a structured manner - heavily based on GTD weekly review with modifications for me. (For planning / higher level stuff I like paper checklists - so I have printed checklists for a weekly plan, a weekly review, daily tasks, and a monthly review). I have a separate printable checklist that I use every Friday afternoon for my review. After a week testing these apps I tried to understand why Nirvana was not cutting it for me anymore. Latest updates changed the projects behavior, but Calendar integration and total flexibility is its highlight. Karma also allows you to gain Todoist Karma points as you go. One of my all-time favourites for task management. I’m an Omnifocus user, but I don’t use the review function. Todoist Karma is a reward system built-into Todoist for users to tally daily and weekly goals. Todoist is very GTD-friendly it has a dedicated inbox to close open loops, allows you to nest Tasks under Projects and has options for context to help better organize your list. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |