Your Brain on To-do List - DBR 043
Manage episode 434806635 series 3562406
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What to do if our primary tool is not really helping us? I argue that this is the case with our to-do lists. I’ll talk about why and what you can do about it. To Do Busy Right, we are fighting three enemies: interruption, multitasking, and distraction. Distraction is the most difficult to defeat. To-do list is another tactic to deploy in that fight. Everybody knows about to-do lists; most everybody uses them. In my experience, they are by far the most common tool. But we don’t do detail on them; we don’t have a vetted process. You don't hear about doing them, right? But you don't hear about them in the same way you don't hear about toothbrushes, because it's taken for granted. I think that you need to have a list. It’s good to get things out of your head. But there are better and worse ways. Somehow, there's got to be something where I have my tasks written out. I think implementation of this can vary a lot. The problem that a to-do list should solve… Cal – not a quote, but from A World Without Email - [We] try to pick this ‘congealed mass’ of expectations, tasks, and commitments apart. We do this because we want to figure out what to DO. General steps for creating a To-do list
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- Generate the items (how do we ‘know’ what is on the list)
- Put it somewhere (generally calendar or paper)
- Normal ways to generate the list: 1) make it up from scratch daily or 2) collect it from various places.
- Make it up from scratch
- From scratch – Q: what’s the problem? A: it’s a bad question for our brains
- The first part gives us brainstorming – “what COULD I do today?”
- The second part gives us urgency (only)
- Priority is always situational, contextual, and relative.
- Collect the things from multiple places
- This usually means a lack of a clear, repeatable process
- It's easy to forget the odd places – everything needs to go to one place.
- The challenge of multiple places – sub-prioritizing by source – pick and choose and leave everything else there then everything downstream is ‘filtered’
- BTW, if you’re not sure you have a good process, take a look at Attention Compass.
- Either way, these 'lists" are fragile and unwieldy
- Sorting the list (and re-sorting) is bad. Sorting is a hard exercise for your brain
- If you don't believe me, take the sorting challenge
- With the list, you’re putting your brain into a sorting situation – minimize the number of times you have to do this.
- “On the same piece of paper” is a category – but it ignores context
- What do we do when we don’t finish our paper list?
- Often we set that piece of paper aside for in the morning – another place to collect from
- But, are yesterday’s priorities automatically today’s?
- The calendar is a bad place, no better (really) than paper It's: too fragile, 'must begin at', and has no sense of probability.
- If we either run short or run long, then the Calendar tool begins to show its weaknesses - fragility
- When I say ‘fragile’ I mean it ‘shatters’…
- A list is a static, steady state tool - What to do with “pop-up” priorities?
- The assumption when we make the to do list is, well, if nothing else pops up, this is my plan – how’s that working for you?
- Regardless of what you say, you have to deal with some people’s emergencies
- Ideally, we would have less fragility
- Definition
- It's in one place.
- It is continuously sorted
- It is never complete
- It is fluid, so less fragile
- Why a backlog cannot be on paper
- A proper backlog takes care of this for us. It’s built into the AC backlog and processes
- Processing takes care of the sorting
- Deals with fragility
- The “next thing I need to do” is already in the backlog
- Daily review takes care of the overnights and the calendar
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