Sadly MLO (and GTD) do not have anything to offer the likes of you and me
(as far as I can see). Both pretty good at helping you to work out what you
should do next (and keeping the short term ToDo list manageable) but pretty
useless at telling you whether you are going to be overloaded in a week's
time (or whenever)
Which is why some of us have been asking for some sort 'calendar/gantt'
chart facility which will help visualise what is upcoming over the next few
days/weeks and better, if possible, to indicate whether you are overloaded
on any particular day/week in the future.
However, although there has been some indication that such a facility may
appear in the future, I think the team are very focussed on building mobile
apps at the moment.
Also there is a significant group of MLO users who are very hostile to this
particular idea (they either don't appear to need to plan beyond the next
few days and/or GTD says it is not necessary therefore nobody could possibly
want such a feature - those that ask are just not doing GTD properly)
So who knows?
So as I really like the features that MLO is really good at (managing the
short term ToDo list), I have started using Toms Planner as a way of
visualising work over the next few weeks/months. Very simple to use, basic
and cheap so the amount of duplicated keying is relatively small).
Incidentally, I had a quick Google for Smartplans (which sounds interesting)
but the only thing that came up was this (which appears to be a mobile app
of some sort)
http://appshopper.com/productivity/smartplans-lite-productivity
Was this what you had in mind?
Richard
Hi all,
Some solutions:
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Thanks for the update on SmartPlans – won’t waste time on that one in the short term.
Toms Planner does not provide any mechanism for entering times and calculating day by day or week by week workloads. It is just a visual planner but I find having a visual plan which I can eyeball to see potential clashes very helpful, particularly if it is very quick to update (which it is). So not ideal but the best thing I have found so far to complement MLO.
It also good because you can put other people’s work on it as well and see the relationship between what you are doing and everybody else.
And I would agree with you with regard to the absence of anything that helps you with the ‘How much work have I got on during period x’ problem. Microsoft Project does it but it is complicated to use and expensive as it is designed to support very large projects.
I think it is partly the GTD mindset that says (as far as I understand) “don’t bother with forward planning it is a waste of time.”. This works fine for things like household tasks where there are no particular deadlines but is useless for you and I who have clients/customers who expect things done by certain dates and, rightly, are not very happy when you miss those dates.
The view which was expressed recently that it wouldn’t help if you did know whether you could take on an extra piece of work, just doesn’t apply as quite often people will accept a delay in starting a piece of work but find it much more problematic if you fail to deliver by the agreed date (as they have then planned in other activities around your delivery date). And even if they go elsewhere, they may come back later whereas, if you take it on and then don’t deliver you then have a seriously unhappy client (or you find yourself, yet again, working an 80 hour week).
So I, for one (and there are clearly many others here), would welcome something in MLO which helps us see more clearly what is coming up in the next few weeks and the workload implications of that. Not easy but I think many of the elements are in place. And as you say, I think it would fill a significant niche.
I would also be interested to hear how you have achieved something in MLO that helps you with this task. I use a ToDo view that groups ‘Key Tasks’ (which are higher level tasks that I flag) by Start Date which helps but I just don’t find the visual layout very helpful and there is nothing that sums the time allocated to each task by day or week.
Richard
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I think it is partly the GTD mindset that says (as far as I understand) “don’t bother with forward planning it is a waste of time.”.
A question and observation...
Question: so how do you do your forward planning?
Observation: I agree all the issues you identify are issues which would need to be addressed in some way but those ways include not using the facility. For example, I have significantly reduced my use of recurring tasks because a) you can’t easily reschedule them and b) as you say, 2nd and subsequent occurrences don’t appear in the current ToDo view.
Alternatively <light bulb moment>, the new ‘Calendar’ view could treat these artefacts differently. So the existing behaviours would be retained in the To Do view (keeps existing, Calendar hostile user happy) but in the new Calendar view (which can be ignored by those that don’t want to use it), things like recurring items would be displayed differently (makes Calendar fans very happy).
Looks like I have addressed all the objections of those who don’t want the calendar (just ignore the calendar tab). J
Richard
From: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com [mailto:mylifeo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Neal
Sent: 23 January 2011 4:41 PM
To: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [MLO] Preventing bottlenecks due to conflicting/crashing project deadlines
On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 5:27 AM, Richard Collings <r...@rcollings.co.uk> wrote:
--
Sent from my BlackBerry.
It offers no help with the question: 'Can I get all these different pieces
of work done by their various deadlines (and how hard I am going to have to
work to get them done)'
And that is the very important thing for many of us. The first is also
important - which is why I stick with MLO.
And yes, the beauty of MLO is that it can support different ways of working.
My dispute is with those who argue, you don't need this
'calendar/planning/gantt' capability because GTD says you don't need it.
So given that MLO can support multiple ways of working, we would like
extended a bit to support our particular way of working. And whilst I agree
that adding this facility is not going to be easy, I do think it is
possible. I have lots of ideas - drawing in particularly on some of the
forms and techniques used with the Pomodoro Technique - only problem is that
I am flat out designing a different system for one of my clients at the
moment.
--
I am afraid that my brain is just not up to this sort of planning which is why I need something to help me see the work I have got coming up in the future. And it is clear that I am not alone in this respect.
Don't get me wrong - I find some of the GTD approach useful in helping me
focus on what I need to do next. But it is a one trick pony. I want
something that does more than this. And as far am concerned, the fact that
GTD doesn't do what I want, doesn't stop me from wanting MLO to help me in
with this problem ('Am I over committed next week') because I think it
something that can be achieved without compromising the existing
capabilities.
-----Original Message-----
From: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:mylifeo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Mike T
Sent: 24 January 2011 2:31 AM
To: MyLifeOrganized
Subject: [MLO] Re: Preventing bottlenecks due to conflicting/crashing
project deadlines
--
Sent from my iPhone
This works fine if the individual tasks don’t have individual deadlines. But tells me nothing if they do.
I agree completely that if you live in a world where you just want to know what you are going to be able to get done in the next month then there is no need to plan on a day by day, week by week or whatever basis but when you have multiple short term deadlines, then unless I am missing something, it doesn’t help.
You have, as Mary is doing (I think), to start allocating tasks to time slots (daily, weekly, or whatever) and then you can do what you have set out with regard to seeing whether everything fits into those slots
Again I am happy to agree that this is more work and less flexible than the scheme you set out but quite a lot of us have meetings for which we have to prepare materials, clients who want work done by certain dates, etc and are prepared to accept this overhead in order to get a better picture of whether we can meet those individual deadlines.
I would like to be able to do precisely what you have set out but be able to do it day by day or week by week basis and I would like to be able to do it in MLO.
And if it is done in a separate Forward Planning tab (shall we call it that rather than Calendar), it will no effect on those who don’t have deadlines who can continue to just use the ToDo tab to work out what they should be doing next and whether they can get it all done in the next month.
Richard
From: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com [mailto:mylifeo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Neal
Sent: 25 January 2011 4:43 PM
To: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com