Business Standard

To-do list apps: 5 easy tricks for using them better

Everyone is relying on to-do list apps. But productivi­ty guru David Allen say we can get more out of them. Here’s how

- CHRIS KORNELIS

Once, Pakistani-American immigrant Misha Euceph had a dream. The host of a podcast called “Beginner,” which chronicles her life as a 24-yearold transplant in Los Angeles, she had her heart set on covering her apartment walls with white boards or chalkboard paint—the better to keep track of her multiple to-do lists.

I can relate: Facing my writing desk is a corkboard wall covered in todo-list note cards.

But a couple years ago, Ms. Euceph’s story deviated from mine: A friend showed her Evernote, an organizati­onal app that includes a myriad to-do listcapabi­lities and she gradually started dispensing with convention­al written lists. “Slowly, I started actually using all of the features of Evernote,” she said, “and it kind of just became an integral part of my life.”

Everything Ms. Euceph now does for “Beginner” lives in the app. She uses it to create digital to-do lists inside of to-do lists. “Evernote allows me to organize my life within the context of the world that I live in, which is mostly on the internet and on my computer,” she said. “And there’s just no way I can do that physically.”

In the experience of David Allen, the creator of the Getting Things Done (GTD) to-do list methodolog­y—which made him a demigod among life-hacking hyper- obsessives in the early aughts—my disinclina­tion to use a to- do list app makes me the exception. In his world, Ms. Euceph is the rule.

“Most people out there have some sort of a list manager that they’re using now,” said Mr. Allen, who estimates that today there are “hundreds” of apps that use elements of his GTD system. “When I first got into this game, if you even had a pocket Daytimer, you were a geek.”

Of course, we all can’t be as organized as Ms. Euceph, but Mr. Allen and his profession­al productivi­ty peers note that app users can certainly try to improve how they use their listmaking tech. It just takes some simple best practices. SPECIAL recently arrived at a packaging conference, Google Keep reminded him to consult some notes he’d made about customer reactions to Raised Real’s packaging.

“I push everything for a certain time or certain place so I don’t have to look at my phone and see this crazy backlog of things that I have to do,” he said. Embrace Anxiety and Satisfacti­on Merely writing down a to-do task can give you a feeling of having made progress. But Mr. Masicampo cautions against letting that give you a false sense of completion. “There’s a balance,” he said. “You want to have some anxiety, otherwise you won’t work at all.” And, of course, it’s far more satisfying to cross a finished task off a list.

Michael Chu, the CEO of KMotion, a San Francisco-based company that makes training tech for athletes, said he and his colleagues use Dropbox Paper. When someone completes a task on a project, everyone gets a notice. (Something those of us who feel overwhelme­d by alerts might not welcome.) “It’s very childish in a way,” he said. “Like, when you’re a kid and you’re like: Hey, class, I’m done. And everyone knows that you’ve finished and gives you a pat on the back. It’s kind of that feeling.” It could come to this: delete the app Earlier this year when I was interviewi­ng Steve Ballmer, I recalled that the former Microsoft CEO is a notorious advocate of going paperless. As we talked, I took notes in a large Moleskine notebook.

“Does it bother you that I’m using a notebook?” I asked. He answered sincerely: “Yeah, it does, actually.” (He’d better not see my office.)

I’m not ready to give up paper, and unlike Mr. Ballmer, Mr. Allen says that’s OK: “I know a bunch of tech people who are going back to paper because there are fewer clicks. It’s easy input and output. You don’t need to slow yourself down too much to use it. Tech sort of pretends that it’s going to speed things up, but it doesn’t.”

Source: The Wall Street Journal

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