
I also played with Nozbe and Evernote and loved that marriage between the two as they play in the GTD sandbox rather nicely. My good virtual friends at 40-tech have a great post about using just 1 notebook for Evernote for everything.
BULLETED LIST IN PRODUCTEEV HOW TO
I read dozens of blog posts and forums on how to setup Evernote as your one and only GTD resource for tasks and reference folders. That’s when Evernote came along and changed everything for me.

However, using these apps were only effective for tasks – not for my reference files. Enter digital GTD.Īfter much research, I found Remember the Milk for my tasks. However, I knew something was missing – the ability to quickly search by context and area of focus quickly no matter where I was or what device I had handy. All of this was fine and good – and frankly, what I think I needed to best understand how to leverage the most out of the GTD methodology. I read here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here to learn how others setup their context, projects and next actions. So I setup 43 folders and bought a half-dozen Moleskine notebooks ( which I have professed my love for here), post-it notes, index cards, and a Fisher Space Pen. When I saw the errors in my unproductive pre-GTD live, I realized I needed to change. Yet, while it sounds somewhat paradoxical, it also made my life more complicated. Reading David Allen’s Getting Things Donechanged my life.

I’ve spoken before about how the vast sea of productivity tools can actually make you less productive.īeing a productivity junkie though, I can appreciate the need to get things done.

There are so many apps out there to help you get organized that you can literally spend more time searching and setting up your so-called perfect setup that you will actually end up spending less time getting things done.
