By Matthew McVickar
An organizational method and task management system that uses TaskPaper and a few scripts. It is lightweight, easy, and unobtrusive. I use this system as-is every day, but please consider it a starting point rather than dogma. You should use whichever set of methods and tools helps you work the most effectively. I encourage experimentation and customization.
This system works with the wonderfully simple TaskPaper.
All projects, tasks, events, and notes are listed in one of five windows, or 'tiles': Todo, Daily, Monthly, Waiting, and Scratchpad. The entire set of five tiles is referenced repeatedly throughout the day as necessary. Enter your tasks in whichever tile you deem appropriate, and reorganize/add/edit/delete them as you work.
The screenshot above shows my recommended placement and size for each tile. Adjust as necessary.
Every task that isn't recurring, doesn't have a scheduled date, and isn't in another task management system like Basecamp or GitHub stays here. These are personal todos--for hobbies, side-projects, or certain freelance work. I use the TaskPaper table-of-contents sidebar to break it up. At the very bottom of this list is the Someday/Maybe pile.
A heading for things that recur each day of the week, as well as things to be done each morning and night or on a certain day. My two lists in here are 'Daily' and 'Sunday'.
A heading for each day of the month. If you're familiar with GTD, this is something like a tickler file. You can move tasks into this tile from Todo if you want to schedule them for a particular day. I use Monthly for tasks and all of my events and appointments.
This list can be generated using the TaskPaper Month Generator (which has its own repository). You can use a very simple syntax to add tasks to the generated month.
Keep track of incoming postal packages, money owed, and entertainment with a release date--things you have no direct control over but of which you want to keep track.
Absolutely anything can go here. I don't let anything stay for more than a day or so — this is for information you need but don't want to commit to permanent storage or things you don't know if you'll need until a little while later. I love this tile because it allows me to just dump things for later and not worry about where to put them or where to find them later.
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I use the 'Standard' theme with a base font of Helvetica 14pt. All black text. No note handles, no project handles, a project list vertical divider only for the Todo tile.
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The perfect placement of the tiles is accomplished with Divvy.
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Do a review of all of the panels at the end of each week to stay on top of it and get rid of things you'll never do. I have Taskpaper Review in my Sunday list in the Weekly list.
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You can use the Quick Entry window in TaskPaper to add tasks for later sorting. I set the destination document as Scratchpad.
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Set a keyboard shortcut to open and hide TaskPaper so that you can get to it (and then get out of it) instantly. I use F5. The included AppleScript will do this. To activate it with a key, you can turn it into a service and attach a keyboard shortcut in the Keyboard panel of System Preferences, use FastScripts, or use your application launcher of choice (I use Alfred).
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Store the five
.taskpaper
documents in a Dropbox folder so that they are backed up, versioned, and accessible from anywhere, like the Taskpaper iOS app. -
For extended, complex, and collaborative projects (like website or application development), I use issue trackers and collaborative project management software (like Basecamp or GitHub). TaskPaper Tiles is for everything else. (Although I do keep a short list of my own, current and upcoming tasks for those kinds of projects in TaskPaper, and use it as a place to enter tasks quickly for later organization into a collaborative system.)
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Store notes and ideas in Notational Velocity. Extended sets of notes don't belong in TaskPaper Tiles; the idea is easily-manageable brevity.