Friday, January 4, 2013

The One Change That Produced the Most ... - Legal Productivity

Last year I chucked electronic to-do lists and started writing down my daily tasks, ideas, and notes on paper. It?s the one change I made that kept me on track and boosted my productivity day in and day out.

Look, I?m all about paperless ? using tools like Evernote, Dropbox, Google Docs, Rocket Matter, and a host of other apps to keep my hard drive lean and my information accessible from anywhere, at anytime. But there?s nothing like having a notebook with you at all times, with your daily to-do lists and notes, crossing off completed tasks, and recording ideas. A notebook that you can bring to meetings and reference at will.

Here?s how it works:

The Notebook

The $15 Action Book, based on the Action Method and designed by the Behance team is awesome. At its most basic, the page is divided into three sections ? Action Items (that would be your to-do list for the day), Notes, and Backburner (ideas for later).

Or, save a few dollars and get a set of 5 notebooks from the fabulous MUJI for $3.95. They?re located at many airports and an outlet happens to be close to where I live. Divide the lined pages by drawing a line down the middle with ?Notes? on one side and ?Action Items? on the other. Draw a horizontal line near the bottom of one column for your ?Backburner? ideas.

Process

Every night I write down my action items for the next day: Legal Productivity blog post on?, marketing meeting, sync with Larry, webinar follow-up, etc. I try to keep it to 5-7 core items each day. Too many, and you risk being overwhelmed and the quality of work suffers.

If an idea pops up, I put it in the ?Backburner? column, usually in a different color ink so I can quickly leaf through the notebook and identify them at the end of the week or month. MUJI also has a selection of cool pens.

The ?Notes? column is filled up during telephone conversations and meetings. I don?t worry about having enough space in this column since I use Evernote for the majority of my note-taking.

Result

I no longer scramble every morning wasting time to figure out what I need to accomplish that day; I experience a visceral sense of accomplishment as I cross off each completed task; and ideas are no longer lost or forgotten as they?re captured in my ?Backburner? section. I can also now quickly review notes related to each day and task.

Many of you probably do some form of this already ? on a post-it here, and a slip of paper there. Try formalizing the process with an ?Action? notebook and see your productivity increase and your nerves tamed.

RELATED POSTS:
Time Management, To-Do Lists And The 3 + 2 Rule
How To Not Make Mistakes Using A Surprisingly Simple Tool: The Checklist
Use Evernote As An Ideas File For Your Blog Posts

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Source: http://www.legalproductivity.com/get-productive/the-one-change-that-produced-the-most-productivity/

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