Thursday, February 20, 2014

Recently I was at the seminar GTD David Allen at Nyenrode. I was there at the invitation and went t

Tips & Tricks by David Allen himself - Lifehacking
Recently I was at the seminar GTD David Allen at Nyenrode. I was there at the invitation and went there really only there because it seemed fun to see him. Once in the flesh Though I certainly would call me a GTD expert's theory was clear to me. I also worked for some time more or less according to his method and had well benefited. Downside cytoskeleton was that my lists from time to time became so polluted that I'm completely started again a few times. I was doing my duties under control, but through all my lists, I felt that I got more to do. My own explanation was: "GTD is cool, but not really my thing." I did not really expect it to be different after this seminar, but I have been mistaken me.
The fun of such a seminar is that a speaker who gives his subject totally controlled and regularly lectures, looking to go to floor. cytoskeleton That you need to keep it interesting for yourself and therefore you remain interesting for your audience. And then you get to hear things cytoskeleton like public so that the books have remained. Un-or under-exposed I have a few new things learned that day, that a world of difference for me.
"The mind can not let go of things, only if there is a plan or trusted system" I've cytoskeleton probably read in his book, but when not attached to the value it deserves. But when he said it, he had to get my attention. The essence is that you should trust your GTD system to 100% otherwise it will not work. It lies mainly confidence in the word. How many frames you have, if you can not be confident that your actions at the right time to show up, continues the feeling of unrest, crowds and powerlessness exist. That has nothing to do with the amount of tasks, but the fact that your implementation of GTD is unreliable, or has become.
"Your next action Should Be simple and reachable" Reason? cytoskeleton Because there are different actions remain on your list that never get off. And lists that slowly filled walk unreliable. It is one of the main causes cytoskeleton of the emergence of distrust of your own system. All your tasks that you place on an action list should cytoskeleton so simple and feasible. Example: instead of "book writing" you start with "Wrap Text writing" or "Garage siding" cytoskeleton with "inventory items" and then "Create list of what can go" and then "buy boxes", etc. On my lists were after Over time, too much unenforceable tasks, which therefore no longer went from. Now I make neatly simple cytoskeleton and executable tasks when I afstreep them, I think the following simple and feasible task.
"Your maybe-later-list is NOT your bucket list" This actually depends quite closely related to the previous one, but for me was a real eye opener. Heard on your bucket list to be dreams. And that ought to stand up to the moment you decide to make them come true, and only then do you incorporate into your GTD system them there. GTD is about the things you are doing. On current events. Only when I decided to make my dream come true a trip to New Zealand actually going to carry out, only then I will take action. But I also know this is not going to happen. The next few years GTD is for now and the next 3 months. But not for a year, you have to dream about it. And it's nice that the better your GTD system works, the more time you have to dream.
"The Weekly Review is absolutely necessary" This I knew, but attached insufficient value. The fact that David but relentlessly Trust, made me realize that you really have to do this. You ensure that your system remains reliable. You look back and you look forward and you determine your next actions. And if you do not do this with a regular basis (every week, same day, same time), then you create in no time a system cytoskeleton where you no longer can rely on.
In fact, it is these four insights that make the difference between a good and moderate operating GTD system for me. Maybe your GTD system is not entirely to your liking and they also help you further.
My name is Jacco van der Pol. For as long as I live, freedom is my highest value. The urge for freedom took me on my 26th to become an entrepreneur. As (co-) founder of QIMS later Manual Master, I learned to take to overcome cytoskeleton adversity and to follow my heart. Risks I chose freedom to do what I find interesting, and all have thus worked as a software developer, team leader, technical director, trainer, training actor and NLP coach.
Wonder if there are digital images are available for this presentation.
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