graham allcott

We are taking our popular “How to Get Things Done” workshop on tour, we will be visiting London, Brighton, Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol and Bath with the aim of helping all you wonderful people increase productivity, beat stress, feel more in control of your work and develop playful, productive momentum

Our workshops have developed a strong reputation for being amongst the best in the business on personal productivity – popular with staff at leading organisations like British Airways, Barclays Commercial, University College London and the Cabinet Office, as well as with charity Chief Executives and even Members of Parliament! Our public workshops take us on the road to give you a chance to see what all the fuss is about.

Here’s a quick vid I did as part of the Virgin media pioneers site. I made this video really to make the point that networking doesn’t always have to be about wearing a suit and going to stuffy hotel function rooms. Networking is about building relationships, much the same as we do when we meet friends or strangers in the pub. I recorded this at Brighton Twestival recently and what struck me was that this is the archetypal half-way house: part-business, part-pleasure. If you come away having made some new contacts for your business that’s great but if you don’t, well you’ve probably had a great time anyway!
For
Brighton Time Management Training, check out our public workshops page, here.

If you run a business, chances are you hate book-keeping. Getting things done that you don’t necessarily enjoy doing is an important skill and habit to develop, but maybe – just maybe – we can convince you to look at your book-keeping in a whole new way! Here, Lisa from Boogles provides some tips to help you keep on top of the numbers in your business. Lisa is as passionate about transforming how people perceive book-keeping as we are about doing the same for time management training – the world needs more people like Lisa! And if you’re struggling with your own book-keeping, maybe give her a call!

Here at Think Productive, we’re so tired of bad Time Management Training! We’re on a mission to make Time Management Training much more relevant, by helping people to appreciate that we no longer live in a neat, 9-5 world where we get to the end of the day and everything’s done. With information overload comes infinite possibility and alot of the old models for Time management don’t reflect this. So here’s the thing. Think about your attention and energy as much as your time. Is what you really need actually email training (or for your colleagues to improve their email etiquette!). Either way, check out our Getting Your Inbox to Zero and How to get things done workshops – we’ll help you to do just that and as a result, love your work!

My laptop bag is like an extension of me! If I’m working, this bag will be close at hand. Of course there are the obvious things we all carry around, but everyone has a few of those nifty things that make life easier. I spend a lot of time on trains and traveling around on my way to running workshops, so I carry a lot of stuff to make that easier, and other stuff too. What are the things you couldn’t do without?

7 ways to make GTD stick!

1. Read the book! Not sure if you have already, so thought i’d start at the beginning! It’s useful to come back to and dip into. Also, i’ve found reading other books to compare and contrast – at the end of the day, it’s about finding what suits you, and GTD ‘pure’ is not for everyone. Others to check out:
– Tim Ferriss – 4hour Work Week (great for thinking about automation of tasks, and some good stuff
re 80-20 and parkinsons laws)
– Sally Mcghee – Take Back Your Life (great for how to use outlook as an organising tool)
– Get Everything Done – Mark Forster (lots of nice ideas re using energy and attention)
– The War of Art – Stephen Pressfield (beating procrastination)

2. Make it a game! If you’re stuck on a bit of gtd, and thinking more about the system than the tasks, make it a game. E.g. with emails, getting your inbox to zero becomes the game, rather than actually what you’re sending in the emails – forced decisiveness is the result. Check out http://www.43folders.com/2006/03/27/process-to-zero and other articles in the inbox zero series

3. Do a weekly review. If you’re ever stuck with gtd, i find this is the tool to get unstuck. I use a tailored version of the gtd weekly review checklist. It’s a great discipline, and the ‘thinking time’ invested pays off, big time. http://zenhabits.net/2007/02/weekly-review-key-to-gtd-and-achieving/

4. Cut down how much you actually do. Counter-intuitive, but part of my weekly review is about reducing what’s actually on the lists without doing them – i have a ‘force delete’ then a ‘force delegate’ section on my checklist. It’s a great tool for being ruthless in renegotiating with yourself what there is to do.

5. Morning habit – develop a morning routine. I have to say this is the one i’m failing at right now, but working on! I’ve previously had a really good rhythm going which included eating breakfast, jogging, and ‘worst first’ – completing the worst and most nagging thing on your to-do list first, and almost using the other parts of the routine as a way of ‘tricking’ you into starting the day with great momentum.

6. Think about, and write down your good and bad habits. Then expand upon the good and eliminate the bad. Sounds easy, but not something we often think about. I think the key is in giving yourself structures that allow you to change your habits without thinking about it. Personally, my natural style is strategic, flaky, intuitive, spontaneous, etc – but gtd and the other systems I use give me a much greater certainty about how well i’m doing, how much is on my plate, etc.

7. Get some training! You can find info about the official GTD workshops both in the UK and the USA. We run our own time management training workshops, both public ones in UK cities and in-house. Our workshops refer to GTD but also to other time management methodologies and models.