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).
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.
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?
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). 😊
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.
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.
This channel is a Godsend. You explain everything and succinctly. THANK YOU.
awesome review please do weekly....I love your reaction when another thought occurs...I will watch again..
Do you still use the weekly review list that you used in the video? How can I get it? 😊
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).
Thank you for this video! Off to watch Part 3. Have a great week ahead. 💜
You too! 😊
would like to see how you do a weekly review /plan for your work
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.
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?
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). 😊
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.
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.