Me: I live in Silicon Valley with my wife, child and cat. I have worked at Microsoft since I graduated from College, both in the Macintosh Business Unit on products such as Outlook Express, Entourage, IE, and Virtual PC and in Windows Live on Hotmail, Calendar and People. I am currently a Principal Lead Program Manager on the Windows Live Social Networking team. I basically manage a team of Program Managers responsible for delivering features to support our web and client applications. I've been blogging since 2001 and like to play around with .NET in my spare time working on projects such as dasBlog (the blog that powers this site) and Send to SmugMug (an application for uploading photos to SmugMug). I blog about a number of technology and productivity related topics.
Powered by: newtelligence dasBlog 2.3.9074.18820
Disclaimer The posts on this weblog are provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confer no rights. The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.
© Copyright 2010, Omar Shahine
E-mail
It was about 2 months ago that I started using the Getting Things Done system. First I bought the book, then I got the software, then I organized my life and now I'm a lot happier for it.
LauraJ just wrote a post on how GTD has impacted her, and Marc's blog has many useful posts on the subject. I feel almost exactly the same was Laura does, so read her post and then come back to mine. Also check out some of Marc's articles:
First of all, if you are like me you used to have a work style where you were constantly scanning your inbox for things to do (and then procrastinating because it was overwhelming). You thought you had everything you needed to do stored away in your head and you've been fairly successful "Getting Things Done" but at the end of the day you were constantly assessing what was in your head, what was in your inbox, things you needed to do... always thinking about things you needed to do. This leads to stress and constantly being on mail. In a culture like Microsoft where people one office over will e-mail you before walking to your office (we have these strange device on our desks where you can speak to some one far away and they speak back, but no one uses them).
I didn't realize how badly my "system" was this was till I read the book. The analogy is that you are keeping all this stuff in RAM, and constantly looking for it. You end up feeling guilty when you don't get to something because you feel like you've broken a "contract" with yourself. A better way to do things is to store them away in a secure system. By secure I mean a system that you trust will capture every single actions you need to take for any given project. It's trustworthy because you no longer have to remember the actions you need to do, and know that they are being managed by software or whatever.
Here are aspects of the GTD philosophy that have really worked well for me. I love the software because it makes it easy for me to use the system, and in some senses kind of fun. Checking off tasks that are really e-mails underneath (actionable e-mails) is kind of fun. And that small amount of fun makes me actually continue to use the system.
Email - using the GTD software for Outlook + Outlook2OneNote
Paper, Files, Mail anything else
Based on techniques described in the book, I went out and bought a top of the line Brother Label Maker that can make Manila style labels. I bought 200 or so manila envelopes and filed every single piece of loose paper as well as tossed every hanging file folder I had and replaced them with manila files. It's amazing how much more you'll tend to file something if it takes less than 1 minute to do so. That's not possible with the hanging file folders, and that is what makes the system work so well. Plus you can store many more manila files in a drawer than a hanging file folders, they are also easier to transport.
Every manila file is placed alphabetically in my file cabinet. I don't hesitate to file a single piece of paper if I need to. I just grab the label maker and do it. It feels great knowing that the barrier to being organized is so low. I was very ad-hoc about this before and again, it was another system that I didn't trust.
I did this both in my home office and at work. My desks are empty, no lose papers, and it just feels good.
Results
The end result of this is that I feel less stressed. I know what I have to do and I no longer remember it. Each week or so I scan my task list and figure out when and how I am going to do things based on context. This concept is explained in the book so I won't go into it here. The beauty of the system for me is that it really only took a little bit of structure, and a little bit of software, and I have a system that makes me feel less stressed out, allows me to think and plan better, and generally frees up my brain to do better things than constantly assessing the same things over and over. Even better is that it helps me use the tools I know and love (a Personal Information Manager) to use a task list and a calendar in a manner I never did before. Why shouldn't you make appointments with yourself to do certain tasks? At ms where we use free/busy a lot it's a good way to tell people not to make any appointments with you at this time. The task list was something I never used before (tried to many times and failed). Not that e-mail = task and there is a strong correlation between the two they are more actionable and granular. My old tasks were like "finish project". Not actionable and they stick around for ever.
Lastly, I can't express how amazing it is to go home every day with fewer than 10 items in my inbox. I used to be consistently in the 100-300 messages range. The book only costs like $15 bucks and doesn't take long to read. It will pay for itself very quickly.