![]() ![]() "Fix parsing" isn't as good as "Fix the parsing crash bug" which isn't nearly as good as "Sync crashing code and follow steps to reproduce the crash". Wording a task for actionability can help a lot. Doesn't matter if you have to go and do something else and then come back, the project list keeps track of where you were. Whenever you pick the project up, you just continue on that same list. ![]() The project list itself acts as a stake in the ground. It's anything with multiple steps and a single goal. That means a dedicated list of tasks for a specific goal.Ī project can be to organize someone's birthday, fix a bug at work, buy a new sofa, or prepare and hold a presentation. The best way of organizing most tasks is in projects. Something to find them by when the time comes to do them. ![]() So all tasks need a project or due date or label. And one big long list for everything doesn't count, that's just a soup where tasks go to die.Īn untied task gets lost and a lost task isn't very actionable. That means a due date, project list, or label, whatever your tool has. A task won't get done unless it's found, so it has to be tied to something. ![]()
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