An idea for 2006: Track completed GTD projects (plus some "greatest hits" for 2005)

For a long time it had seemed to me that life was about to begin - real life. But there was always some obstacle in the way, something to be gotten through first, some unfinished business, time still to be served, or a debt to be paid. Then life would begin. At last it dawned on me that these obstacles were my life. -- Fr. Alfred D'Souza

In Creating your own "productivity guidelines" for 2005, Sally McGhee et. al. suggest we review accomplishments in the previous year, reflect on lessons learned and successes (hopefully WILD), and apply them to the coming year.

I thought it would be useful to do something similar for 2005 in GTD fashion by looking at completed projects. Sadly I haven't been tracking finished projects (I've simply checked them off and moved on), so one of my projects for 2006 is to record completed projects. I hope that this will help me re-focus on those small "stealth" projects that I find sometimes slip by, in spite of my discipline.

However, in the spirit of openness and experimentation, I present my partial GTD Projects "Greatest Hits" for 2005. In no particular order:

  • Adopted GTD "100%"
  • Got unpleasant dental scaling done (more to come - ugh!)
  • Started this blog
  • Got picked up by the OfficeZealot.com Getting Things Done Zone (thanks, Marc!)
  • Started exploring GTD consulting, and coached 1/2 dozen practice clients.
  • Committed to designing and delivering a GTD seminar at work
  • Got our research lab to try "Boss blogs" (see Applying 'Boss' Blogging to a Research Lab)
  • Lost 15 pounds (and it's running around the neighborhood, so don't be alarmed if you see it. Repeat after me: "Fat has no teeth. Fat has no teeth...")
  • Attended GTD | The Roadmap seminar
  • Sold my mountain bike, and started Tae Kwon Do (after a 20 year break)
  • Cured my insomnia
  • Made major mental perspective shift in a back problem, and got some serious pain under control

I'd love to hear some of your greatest hits for 2005, and goals for 2006.

Related

  • In Planning for the Future, LJ has some insights gained by reviewing completed projects. I particularly like this idea:
    I went over my project list and examined the motivation behind each one. I found that many of the projects had been placed there by other people in the form of "shoulds". I decided which ones were important to me and did a massive culling of my someday/maybe list.

  • In Getting Things Done: the Roadmap, terrie passes this along from David Allen:
    It might be useful to keep a list of completed projects, but don't bother with a list of completed next actions. It's not worth it.

Comments

I hadn't thought about

I hadn't thought about saving NAs; thanks, GadgetComa. I can see that the positive reinforcement would be a nice motivator. You reminded me that I heard David Allen say that tracking Waiting For items could be useful when evaluating relationships. I think he was speaking in the context of supervisory ones. Thanks for the comment.

I love saving my completed

I love saving my completed Next Actions. I have found a method using Outlook that gives me a bit of a mental boost: During my weekly review, I move completed Next Actions into an archive PST file. This way, they don't show up in my active Next Actions list. However, because I use Outlook Tasks to track Next Actions, I can look at my archives and see how many Next Actions I've completed on a given day, week, month, etc. It gives a great sense of accomplishment!

Hi Jeff. Regarding getting

Hi Jeff. Regarding getting my back pain under control, I did two things: From Five life changes that ... uh ... changed my life:

Problem: Severe lower back pain

What helped: Applying the book Back Sense (web site here), in addition to taking lessons in Alexander Technique from a local center.

Details:
The book's perspective is that most (>90%) back pain is caused by stress, not structural problems. At first glance this is a "sure, right" idea, but it's very deep, with significant treatment implications. A mind-blower, but it required a big change in my view of back pain. The Alexander lessons are helping me use my body more efficiently, and are increasing my awareness of situations in which I'm tightening up. Somewhat steep investment, time- and money-wise.


Hope that helps! Feel free to email if you want to talk more.

Matt: I'm curious how you

Matt: I'm curious how you were able to get your back pain "under control". I suffer from it as well ... any thoughts or hints are appreciated!

Cheers.

Jeff

Matt, I was afraid that you

Matt,
I was afraid that you would ask that question.

Not really, other than the fact that many of my projects consist of just one action item.

I think that tracking projects this way would be a good habit to develop but I'm not there yet.

Tom

Thanks for the info, Tom. Do

Thanks for the info, Tom. Do you also track projects this way?

Matt, I keep all of my Next

Matt,
I keep all of my Next actions in my big list of stuff in Excel. I search the list for "Next Action" when I want to look at my next action list. When I complete a Next Action, I edit the item, changing "Next Action" to "Done" and append the date of completion. A quick search provides a list of completed NA without much extra work.

Tom

Home | Testimonials | Services | About | Contact