Weekly Review - How I GTD, pt 2 | Kendra Bork

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12

  • @AvaGld2309
    @AvaGld2309 2 місяці тому

    This channel is a Godsend. You explain everything and succinctly. THANK YOU.

  • @paulahunte1903
    @paulahunte1903 5 років тому

    awesome review please do weekly....I love your reaction when another thought occurs...I will watch again..

  • @Nina771118
    @Nina771118 3 роки тому +1

    Do you still use the weekly review list that you used in the video? How can I get it? 😊

    • @KendraBork
      @KendraBork  3 роки тому +1

      I have it pretty much memorized at this point, so in a way, yes. I do have a version of it available for sale in a variety of sizes in my shop on either Etsy (www.etsy.com/shop/KendraBorkPrintables) or my website (kendraborkprintables.com).

  • @pinkskiestoday
    @pinkskiestoday 6 років тому

    Thank you for this video! Off to watch Part 3. Have a great week ahead. 💜

  • @marykappesser3878
    @marykappesser3878 6 років тому

    would like to see how you do a weekly review /plan for your work

    • @KendraBork
      @KendraBork  6 років тому

      Because I use a bullet journal style for my work planner, there isn’t really a weekly review aside from what I do in my Momentum planner as far as trying to figure out when I’ll have time to move major projects forward. Each evening before I leave work, I note my appointments, recurring tasks, and then any other one-off tasks I need to get done. There isn’t usually a weekly review since it’s all daily.

  • @VooDooSue
    @VooDooSue 6 років тому

    Hi Kendra, thank you for your GTD series. I've been enjoying your process and have learned I'm not alone in my aversion to a weekly review. 😁 Funnily enough, I always feel better when complete. Do you manage your work in the same planner as personal? I have a very active work inbox and project listing as everything I do requires multiple steps. My integration of both is awful. Might you have overcome similar challenges?

    • @KendraBork
      @KendraBork  6 років тому

      I have a separate planner for work and use a bullet journal. (I recently published a setup video for it, if you would like to see how I use it.) One thing I've found that helps is that unless it's a very large project that requires scheduling, most of my projects only have a next action that acts as a place holder. Essentially, I only need to know where I left off and what I need to do next. After I complete that, I keep working until I need to stop, and then I make a note about my next place holder. That way I don't find myself listing a bunch of steps that are obvious when I'm in the midst of pushing a project forward - and wasting time by writing them all down. Hopefully that makes sense (and answers your question). 😊

    • @VooDooSue
      @VooDooSue 6 років тому

      Kendra Bork Hi...sure makes sense. I'm in the same situation and work in the same way (not wasting time writing the steps down and tracking my next action). I haven't yet figured out the best way to "bookmark" my progress in a routine way. I'll definitely look at that video. My attention was on the title of bullet journaling which I sorta ruled out. I'm still on the fence and hadn't considered how that may compliment GTD.

    • @KendraBork
      @KendraBork  6 років тому

      The bullet journal is just my method of implementing GTD. I end up implementing GTD differently for work vs. personal because of the different amount of items that I have to track. For work, I keep all of my to do items/next actions in the back of the bullet journal in my own "contexts." I'm using the Strikethru method (which, in brief, lets you write the full task in a list, then reference it in a daily list by a page number and item number plus, my choice, a brief description of the task) Definitely check the video out. Even if the exact implementation doesn't work for you, something might spark an idea that would work better fro you.