he David Allen Company RSS Log Out Profile FAQ FAQ Forum Home
+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 29

Thread: What to do with reoccuring daily tasks?

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Ontario
    Posts
    14

    Default What to do with reoccuring daily tasks?

    What should I do with the things that need or should happen on a daily basis. I certainly don't won't to enter "scoop out cat box" in my @home context every day. But at the same time I want to be reminded that "scoop out the cat box" is something that should get done every day.

    I end up with lots of these things which need to be in my face but would be a waste of time to enter in a GTD system every day, like:

    -write blog entry
    -wash dishes
    -water plants
    -respond to online communications

    I work from home so my day is fairly gelatinous and lacking of any hard goals or constraints.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Posts
    1,477

    Default

    I scoop out the cat box right after I feed the cats. The cats complain if they haven't been fed. No reminder needed.

    If I don't wash the dirty dishes, they pile up in the sink. The cats investigate, and loud crashing noises ensue. No reminder needed.

    A lot of daily tasks can be handled this way, as they are (or become) habits. Do you need a reminder to brush your teeth?

    For recurring tasks that do need a reminder, I use a program called Sciral Consistency. Lets you set the reminder interval, uses color codes to signal whether a task has been done. It serves a similar function to a checklist, which would also work.

    Answering email is part of routine inbox processing. You might want to schedule a time every day, in part to keep it from completely taking over your day.

    Katherine

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Ontario
    Posts
    14

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by kewms View Post
    I scoop out the cat box right after I feed the cats. The cats complain if they haven't been fed. No reminder needed.

    If I don't wash the dirty dishes, they pile up in the sink. The cats investigate, and loud crashing noises ensue. No reminder needed.

    A lot of daily tasks can be handled this way, as they are (or become) habits. Do you need a reminder to brush your teeth?

    For things that do need a reminder, I use a program called Sciral Consistency. Lets you set the reminder interval, uses color codes to signal whether a task has been done.

    Answering email is part of routine inbox processing. You might want to schedule a time every day, in part to keep it from completely taking over your day.

    Katherine

    Well I scoop out the cat box when the smell wafts into the living room. This is a natural reminded but hardly productive one.

    The problem is my "scuzz factor" to too high. Higher than I would like it to be, so yes, I would need a reminded to brush my teeth if I wanted them to be healthy and clean. This wasn't a problem when I had a day job and my life was a serious of routines, but now I don't have to wake up at 7am if I don't want to, but I still set an alarm clock to do so for productivity reasons. I don't have to brush my teeth, but I can't set my alarm clock to remind me.

    Also there are project related tasks that should be maintained to keep the vitality of the project. Theres are things I don't have to do, but should be reminded to do them. I'd rather not wait until the scuzz factor of a failing project takes over.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Posts
    1,477

    Default

    FWIW, my experience of working from home is that some kind of structure is essential. Otherwise "work" deteriorates into "sitting around watching TV," which is ultimately unsustainable. So you might want to think about ways to create structure rather than one-off reminders.

    Katherine

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Plano, TX
    Posts
    68

    Default Kewms--More about creating structure, please

    Quote Originally Posted by kewms View Post
    FWIW, my experience of working from home is that some kind of structure is essential. Otherwise "work" deteriorates into "sitting around watching TV," which is ultimately unsustainable. So you might want to think about ways to create structure rather than one-off reminders.

    Katherine
    Katherine, I try to create structure but my schedule is variable (sometimes at home, sometimes at clients' offices) so I tend to just give up on it. How do you create structure for your days. Maybe if I had an idea of something that works, I'd stick to it better and work harder at making it work for me.

    I fall into the tv or just vegetating states too often.

    Thanks,
    Glenda

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Posts
    1,477

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ggrozier View Post
    Katherine, I try to create structure but my schedule is variable (sometimes at home, sometimes at clients' offices) so I tend to just give up on it. How do you create structure for your days. Maybe if I had an idea of something that works, I'd stick to it better and work harder at making it work for me.
    You might have a look at Julie Morgenstern's Time Management from the Inside Out. Her key insight, imo, is something called a "time map," which is essentially a schedule for blocks of time devoted to various activities. She would suggest, for instance, that you try to schedule all of your client visits on the same days every week, or in the same part of the day, in order to have the rest of your time consistently free. Another example from my own experience is planning phone calling time when most of the time zones I deal with are at work, thereby creating phone free time elsewhere.

    Second, but equally important, she recommends keeping track of how long things actually take. If you consistently underestimate time required, then no schedule will work. (Common examples from my own experience include planning meeting time without accounting for preparation or travel time, failure to realize how long preparing a final draft takes, not accounting for the phone tag component of trying to arrange a meeting, and so forth.)

    Both of these tools depend on self-awareness. If you work at home, no supervisor is going to yell at you for watching TV (or forum surfing. eek!), so you have to build structures that will let you catch yourself, and then guide yourself back to what you should be doing instead.

    Good luck!

    Katherine

  7. #7
    kellyraef Guest

    Default

    I work from home too. Since I'm here all day I like to keep on top of the housework without it interfering with my work hours.

    What has been working for me for the last couple of years is having several checklists. I have one for the morning, lunchtime, end of the workday, evening, and bedtime. The checklists list all of the things I want to get done during those times and they are pretty detailed (yes, I wrote down "brush teeth".) I use a simple checklist program on my smartphone, but if you don't have a palm-type device, you could laminate a printed list and cross them off with a dry erase marker as they get done.

    They really help. I've had "fabreeze dog beds" on the morning checklist for about 2 months and I still forget to do it at least half the time until I check my list.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    213

    Default

    I actually *do* put stuff like this on my list every day (I use a PocketPC/Outlook, so it's easy to cheat and let the software do it for me). I continue this until it becomes a habit.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Washington DC Area
    Posts
    582

    Default

    I work at home often and scheduling the difference between home and office is key. Most important though is that you do certain tasks at certain times. If you work at home, don't suddenly clean the dishes when you really need to be doing office tasks. But take care of it later in the day, so that it doesn't bother your when you are supposed to be working the next day.

    I keep a daily checklist that includes things to do and new habits I'm developing. I review it daily. I need the structure. There is no need to make the list fancy - it can be as simple as can be. I have built a high-scuzz tolerance at times so that I can put aside home things during office hours. But then again I'm a very clean person, so I keep a list of tasks. If I'm under a time constraint I pick the 5 or less things that bother me the most (my "energy drains") and just do those .

    Sometimes it's just a matter of letting it become a habit. Even reviewing a daily checklist needs to become a habit. Even the simplest thing needs to be a habit. For example, I want to make certain I floss every day rather than just a few times a week, so I put it on a daily check list. After checking this off 21 times, which is what I read makes something become a habit, I should be flossing daily. If this doesn't work, then I'll keep it on another 21 days. It works.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Lumberton, NC
    Posts
    111

    Default

    I would suggest that the easiest way to go would be to make a checklist for "Daily Things" and put it in a convenient place. I suspect that after a while, you won't need to refer to the list since many, if not all, of the items will become automatic.

+ Reply to Thread

Similar Threads

  1. Tasks in 0utlook 2003...keeping track of incomplete tasks, and Blackberry syncing?
    By kingfisher in forum PUBLIC: Discuss Gear & Software for GTD
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 08-31-2009, 05:46 PM
  2. Birthdays and reoccuring yearly events
    By indigodreaming in forum PUBLIC: Discuss Getting Things Done
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 08-07-2008, 08:47 PM
  3. hard-landscape tasks on non-daily timeframes
    By timheilman in forum PUBLIC: Discuss Getting Things Done
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 06-15-2007, 01:36 AM
  4. Daily Comitments?
    By slaie in forum PUBLIC: Discuss Getting Things Done
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 03-29-2006, 09:55 AM
  5. repetitive daily tasks
    By keymoo in forum PUBLIC: Discuss Getting Things Done
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 07-11-2005, 10:54 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts