GTD in Windows Mobile">Fast GTD in Windows Mobile

(This was orig­i­nally posted on the old ver­sion of JK.net with pic­tures, but this is all I could sal­vage out of the Google cache.)

I’ve been a fan of David Allen’s Get­ting Things Done time man­age­ment method­ol­ogy for years. And while I had it down to a sci­ence on my var­i­ous Palms and Treos, a really good GTD imple­men­ta­tion has eluded me on Win­dows Mobile until just recently. There are lots of dif­fer­ent ways to do it, of course, and a few ded­i­cated appli­ca­tions designed to guide you through the GTD work­flow on Win­dows Mobile.

The prob­lem I have with those is that they’re all too bulky. They either don’t sync with my Exchange server or they don’t do it well. It’s too much effort to set up the sys­tem, and too cum­ber­some to use it in the moment. One of the hall­marks of GTD on paper is that it’s fast. Fast enough to be usable. Fast enough to become a “I don’t even think about it any­more” habit. Every sec­ond, every frac­tion of a sec­ond, that you add to that process makes it less likely you’ll actu­ally stick with it.

Make things as sim­ple as pos­si­ble, but no sim­pler.”
– Albert Einstein

So I set out to cre­ate a GTD imple­men­ta­tion that used as lit­tle out­side soft­ware or struc­ture as pos­si­ble. I wanted it to sync, mostly, via Exchange, which meant lim­it­ing myself to Con­tacts, Tasks and Cal­en­dar (with one excep­tion). I wanted it to be fast to use on the device, just as glance­able as the paper ver­sion, but with even less over­head due to the dig­i­tal nature of the data. It should be easy to col­lect, process, decide and do. And I think I pulled it off.

As you might expect, the sys­tem is based around tasks. Accord­ing to Allen, you should not pri­or­i­tize your task lists, and for the most part I agree. This freed me up to use the high/​normal/​low pri­or­ity sys­tem in Outlook/​Exchange for some­thing else: defin­ing your lists.

Three kinds of things go on task lists in GTD. Next Actions (things you can actu­ally do some­thing about), Projects (lists of Next Actions relat­ing to the same goal) and Someday/​Maybes (things you might do at some point but have no com­mit­ment towards). In my sys­tem, Next Actions are all set to High impor­tance, Projects are Nor­mal impor­tance and Someday/​Maybes are Low impor­tance. When sort­ing your task list by pri­or­ity, this shows all your Next Actions grouped at the top of the list, then your projects. Run­ning out of Next Actions is a good sign to look at your Projects and cre­ate more Next Actions to move things along.

In each Project (nor­mal impor­tance task), I use the note field to jot down poten­tial Next Actions. Allen cau­tions against doing too much or too detailed hier­ar­chi­cal plan­ning on the the­ory that it will almost cer­tainly change once you actu­ally get into it.

No bat­tle plan sur­vives con­tact with the enemy.”
– Gen­eral George Patton

Allen instead rec­om­mends “back of the enve­lope” plan­ning, just jot­ting down a sim­ple list of things you know the project will require. This gives you the flex­i­bil­ity to do things in what­ever order makes sense in the moment and still be sure you hit the major points. When nec­es­sary I copy each line to a new Next Action (High Impor­tance task) so it shows up on the main list, and the next time I have the Project open I put an X in front of the ones I know I’ve done. When all of the actions are done and I can’t think of any more, the Project itself gets marked as complete.

When view­ing the list as a whole, I can either look at all my Next Actions or I can fil­ter the list by con­text. A curi­ous side-​effect I’ve noticed of using mobile tech­nol­ogy is that I tend to need far fewer con­texts than most peo­ple. I don’t need an “@phone” con­text, for exam­ple, since my smart­phone is always with me. Nor do I need @internet, etc. I only have four con­texts that are mean­ing­ful for me:

  • @Computer, for things that require a desk­top PC
  • @Home, for things to do inside or around my apartment
  • @Out, for things I can do pretty much any­where, or things to do on the go
  • @Work, for things to do at my office

That’s it. Indi­vid­ual tasks can be assigned to any or all of those cat­e­gories, and I can fil­ter the list to show just the Next Actions I can actu­ally do in any par­tic­u­lar con­text. This fil­ter­ing is a built in fea­ture of the Win­dows Mobile tasks appli­ca­tion, as is fil­ter­ing to show only Active Tasks (not com­plete, with a start date either null or before today). I assign Projects to the !Project con­text, so they don’t show up in my nor­mal con­text lists (Projects will usu­ally span mul­ti­ple con­texts any­way) and so I can catch things I for­got to cat­e­go­rize by using the built in “No Cat­e­gories” filter.

The nice thing about this sys­tem is that it’s all in Tasks (so far), which means it all syncs auto­mat­i­cally to Exchange and thus is all avail­able to me any­time, any­where, no mat­ter if I’m using Out­look at home, my smart­phone or Out­look Web Access at the office. But tasks will only take you so far. I still need to cap­ture ideas about stuff to do in the first place.

I talked about this recently. I have a sim­ple plain text file called Notebook.txt on my device set to sync to my desk­top, and I have short­cuts in my desk­top and hand­held Start Menus to open this file quickly and eas­ily. When a thought occurs to me, no mat­ter what it is, I open this file and jot it down. Every so often, usu­ally once a day, but some­times more fre­quently and some­times less, I open up that file and cut and paste from it into new tasks, appoint­ments, other doc­u­ments, what­ever is appro­pri­ate. Notice that I said cut. Once it’s processed, it’s gone from my note­book. I like to keep the note­book as clean as pos­si­ble. If I’m doing my job and pro­cess­ing new ideas reg­u­larly, that text file should be 0 bytes big more often than not. I use PHM Notepad for this just because open­ing the file is nearly instan­ta­neous, but Word Mobile works nearly as well if you don’t want to install extra soft­ware. It takes a sec­ond or two to open the file, but I’m look­ing for speed. (This is also why I keep my note­book in a plain text file instead of a Word doc­u­ment; I want it to open instantly on the phone and the desktop.)

And that’s the whole sys­tem. It’s quick, sim­ple and all but one text file syncs via Exchange. The only part that doesn’t sync doesn’t strictly have to, if you don’t mind hav­ing sep­a­rate “col­lec­tion buck­ets” on dif­fer­ent com­put­ers. And it catches the basics of GTD with­out unnec­es­sary over­head. Give it a try, and let me know how it works for you in the comments.

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11 Comments »

  1. Rockdragon Said,

    October 18, 2008 @ 1:53 pm

    I guess you don’t want to hear these two lit­tle words — “word­press backup”. Sorry to hear you lost every­thing from your last blog. Yours was one of the first sites I found about using GTD with mobile devices and appli­ca­tions.
    If it is any con­so­la­tion to you, I like the new theme a lot bet­ter :-)

  2. Andrew Mason Said,

    October 19, 2008 @ 11:32 am

    Nice post. I am a Mac user myself but I used to use Out­look and Win­dows Mobile to orga­nize my life before I started with GTD.

    Andrew..

  3. GTD and Productivity Links - 19th October 2008 | Did I Get Things Done? - Getting Things Done GTD with Personal Development and Motivation for Success Said,

    October 19, 2008 @ 11:41 am

    […] fourth link is a link to a Win­dows Mobile GTD post from JeffKirvin.net. Now I am a Mac user but the post gives some great easy insights into using Out­look and Windoes […]

  4. Dan Said,

    October 19, 2008 @ 11:26 pm

    Great arti­cle.

    I pref­fer web-​based appli­ca­tions for GTD, the one I am using is http://www.Gtdagenda.com

  5. Eddie Said,

    November 10, 2008 @ 8:14 pm

    Been using your sys­tem for a few days now and I have to say so far I love it! Makes GTD much eas­ier and I too have reduced the num­ber of con­texts I require.

    The only draw­back is the note file. Don’t like hav­ing to man­u­ally syn­chro­nize every time I get back to my machine. As a mat­ter of fact — I rarely sync. To much of a has­sle — some­times it works — some­times it doesn’t.

    I pre­fer all my syn­chro­niza­tion to hap­pen­ing in real time. So Exchange is def­i­nitely a plus. But for cap­tur­ing ideas noth­ing beats Ever­note on Win­dows Mobile. It’s sur­pris­ingly fast and I can even send my self audio notes when dri­ving etc. Jott is also great if you pay for the tran­scrip­tion service.

  6. mustafa ispir Said,

    November 25, 2008 @ 11:27 am

    I like your method, because it is very sim­i­lar to my usage of GTD :) Even I have same con­texts, except com­puter. I removed it also. Instead of a text file, I am using Out­look Notes as inbox. the uncat­e­go­rized notes are my unprocessed items. it is fast enough on PC and Smarthone, to enter new uncat­e­go­rized not.

    One of the thing that I have some dif­fi­culty to over­come is the project plan­ning. my projects are too big, and there are too many thoughts just come up. for exam­ple “fin­ish­ing phd the­sis” is one of my project. do you have any method­ol­ogy to han­dle big project plan­ning. Or should I remove big projects and cre­ate some small projects which are man­age­able by your methodology?

    Thanks for this great sharing

  7. Produktiv am Pocket PC: GTD mit Windows Mobile @ Durchblickerblog - Selbstmanagement, GTD & Lifehacks Said,

    December 4, 2008 @ 4:50 pm

    […] Auf­gaben — Die bei Win­dows Mobile mit­gelieferte Auf­gaben­ver­wal­tung lässt sich mit etwas Überlegung auch als GTD-​System nutzen, und wird von Haus aus mit Out­look syn­chro­nisiert. Eine aus­führliche englis­che Anleitung zu so einer Meth­ode kommt von Jeff Kirvin […]

  8. Samy Abou-Shama Said,

    January 4, 2009 @ 8:52 am

    Thank you for that arti­cle.
    It really helps, since I have out­look, an Exchange account with web-​access and a mobile device I will give it a try.

    As for the note file — how about send­ing your­self emails with your thougths? Can also be enhanced with an auto­matic for­ward rule, to a pre­de­fined out­look folder :-)

    Samy

  9. Productivity - my take on GTD | CoolNerd Said,

    January 6, 2009 @ 11:36 am

    […] GTD in Win­dows Mobile — JeffKirvin.net out­lines using GTD on Win­dows Mobile — very sim­ple and easy to understand. […]

  10. 葡挞生活 › Windows Mobile 上的快速 GTD Said,

    March 22, 2009 @ 8:38 am

    […] 原文链接:Fast GTD in Win­dows Mobile […]

  11. Jason Said,

    October 27, 2009 @ 10:31 am

    Nice arti­cle, I’ve been doing pretty much the same thing, although I do not have an exchange server to sync with.

    I use ActiveSync for tasks and cal­en­dar, and use OneNote on my phone col­lect my Projects, Someday’s and ran­dom notes. I have OneNote installed on my desk­top also, and ActiveSync takes care of sync­ing them.

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