Does your company vision support you to make daily decisions?

Do you even know what it is?

How does it relate to your decision making authority or approval processes at work?

I grappled with these questions for most of March. I work for a UK based personal productivity training company called Think Productive. I visited our head office in the lovely seaside town of Brighton in February and will travel there annually for business trips. The rest of the year, I run Think Productive Canada from Calgary – a 9 hour flight from the majority of my co-workers.

Communication with head office is conducted through email and Skype during the small window of our overlapping business hours. If we were a ‘normal’ company, this might not be extraordinary or even challenging. But, this year, we are not behaving in a very typical way.

Graham’s Experiments

Graham Allcott, founder of Think Productive, and my boss, is conducting a year of extreme productivity experiments in which he is the primary lab rat and his team are unwitting (yet mostly-willing) participants.

Hello

Photo by Sarah Fleming

Each month brings a new experiment.

Here is the schedule for the first quarter;

  • January – email access ONLY on Fridays
  • February – decisions made by the roll of dice
  • March – working 60 minutes per day, 7 days per week.

March also marks my first official month on the job as Canadian Director and Productivity Ninja (trainer). I am writing this in the final few days of March…almost to the end!

Autonomy by Necessity

I like to be autonomous. I’ve run my own businesses for years, making all the decisions- for better or for worse. I joined Think Productive when I realized my strengths were more operational than strategic. I wanted to be part of something bigger than I could create on my own.

This propelled me to seek a company with clear direction, solid values, a great product, and cool branding. And, who wouldn’t want the job title of Productivity Ninja?! Graham’s excellent leadership and strategic thinking balance my tendency to focus on detail. He provides the vision and direction; I make stuff happen. Our working relationship seemed compatible enough to get us through March’s experiment with ease. Or so I naively thought.

Misplaced Focus

Do you ever feel like you’re imposing when you ask for help from a manager or co-worker? Especially when you’re new in a role? That’s how I felt for the first two weeks of March. I second-guessed every email to Graham and wondered if I was demanding too much time and attention. I didn’t want to be the squeaky wheel. I was in a perpetual state of low-grade worry knowing Graham only had one hour a day to respond to all the demands on his time.

I struggled with a number of decisions ranging from developing content for a speaking engagement to customizing a workshop for a client. In retrospect these worries now seem pretty minor. Both events went just fine, but in the moment I fretted about doing the right thing and pleasing my manager.

As the month progressed and I gained confidence in my role, I had a revelation about perspective. My focus was misplaced. I realized all I needed to do was look to the company vision: “to improve working life for people and replace ‘information stress’ with playful, productive momentum & control.” Once I had this clarity of purpose I shifted my perspective to consider ‘what is best for the client and how can I make that happen’ and things worked out quite well.

Asking Forgiveness Instead of Permission

Image of 2 rats by Sarah Fleming., Click to acccess Flickr version

The lack of access to my boss really forced me to prioritize what I needed “permission” for. As we entered week 3 with a few milestones accomplished, I realized the world was not going to end if I didn’t get a stamp of approval from management on every little thing. This was quite empowering and gave me the confidence to make a larger decision to hire an assistant without asking or agonizing. And, not surprisingly, this decision was greeted with positive feedback and support from the team.

So despite the restricted access to Graham in my first month of operation, we fared pretty well. A clear vision statement serves as a guidepost for daily action as well as larger decisions, and helps support productive outcomes.

As Graham’s ’60 Minutes’ experiment comes to an end, we will regroup and mutually assess the successes, challenges and mistakes. I have benefitted from being pushed outside my comfort zone. I also realized that while I was a little bit tortured in the process, Graham has had the worst of it.

For the other side of the story, check out the ‘60 Minutes‘ section of our blog and see what Graham learned about pushing the boundaries between work and life!

 

Like this? Try these

Sign up for one of our time management workshops with a difference

Read about Graham’s April Experiment – Pay Attention

 

You may have had a new gadget for Christmas, or just need some extra help to keep those New Year Resolutions.  Either way, here are some of the things to think about when choosing a new productivity tool.

Find out more about personal productivity at our How to be a Productivity Ninja Workshop 

 

apps

Functionality

This is the main factor to consider – so I will spend the most time on it.

Above all, you should look for one that has at least the following:

 

> A way to add Projects (often called ‘lists’).

>  A way to create sub-list categories for your Master Actions List (often called ‘contexts’ or ‘tags’). They will often have both a tags and a context function, in which case you can use both for different things!

> A way to mark priorities, such as high, medium and low (this can either be used as it is intended, or actually used for Proactive, Active and Inactive attention).

> Ability to synchronise with your phone – this is where you start to get the added benefit of being able to view your lists or capture new ideas anytime, wherever you are! Other added extras to look for here include:

> Good search functionality and the facility to save some of your regular searches.

>Date and alarm functionality – personally I trust my system enough not to need to schedule a lot of things by date and my system is enough of a reminder, but many people find this a good additional facility.

>Location/GPS functionality – the ability to have location-specific actions pop up on your screen when your software detects you’re in that location (again, not a necessity, but pretty cool!).

> Ability to capture straight into the program from other places. (For example, one of the most popular apps, Remember the Milk, allows you to capture items inside it by sending them as tweets on Twitter, through Gmail and through web-browser plugins).

> Ability to synchronise with another program such as Outlook (often this is a paid for added extra rather than inherent in the program itself).

> Ability to export your data out of that program if you decide it’s no longer working well for you. (This is also a nice safety feature if you’re worried about one of these apps going bust and your data being stuck in there, which is admittedly pretty unlikely!)

Reliability & track record

With any piece of software you’re trusting to store a lot of data on your behalf in ‘the cloud’, there’s always a small risk that there may be short periods where their servers go down and all of your lists are inaccessible.

Read reviews of the software to look for any issues of reliability, notice what’s being said about customer support if things go wrong and make sure you’re entrusting your valuable data to someone with a track record that suggests they’re able to look after it. Reviews count.

Stylishness

Stylish user interfaces that make it both easy and fun to use are of course a big part of the appeal for the tech-savvy. If something feels easier to use, you’ll instinctively use it that little bit more.

Price

Last and certainly least in terms of consideration should be price.

Paying a couple of pounds for a good phone app that you’ll use every day for years should never be an issue when you think how easily you might waste that money elsewhere.

Similarly, spending £100 on the perfect app has paid itself back very quickly if you imagine the extra revenue, extra commission, pay rises or reduced stress that it brings.

 

Like this? Try these

Our How to be a Productivity Ninja Workshop

7 Productivity Boosting Apps Think Productive

100 Time Management Tips to Boost Productivity Think Productive

Lifehacker Pack for iPhone: Our List of the Best iPhone Apps

 

You may have had a new gadget for Christmas, or just need some extra help to keep those New Year Resolutions.  Either way, here are some of the things to think about when choosing a new productivity tool.

Find out more about personal productivity at our How to be a Productivity Ninja Workshop 

 

apps

Functionality

This is the main factor to consider – so I will spend the most time on it.

Above all, you should look for one that has at least the following:

 

> A way to add Projects (often called ‘lists’).

>  A way to create sub-list categories for your Master Actions List (often called ‘contexts’ or ‘tags’). They will often have both a tags and a context function, in which case you can use both for different things!

> A way to mark priorities, such as high, medium and low (this can either be used as it is intended, or actually used for Proactive, Active and Inactive attention).

> Ability to synchronise with your phone – this is where you start to get the added benefit of being able to view your lists or capture new ideas anytime, wherever you are! Other added extras to look for here include:

> Good search functionality and the facility to save some of your regular searches.

>Date and alarm functionality – personally I trust my system enough not to need to schedule a lot of things by date and my system is enough of a reminder, but many people find this a good additional facility.

>Location/GPS functionality – the ability to have location-specific actions pop up on your screen when your software detects you’re in that location (again, not a necessity, but pretty cool!).

> Ability to capture straight into the program from other places. (For example, one of the most popular apps, Remember the Milk, allows you to capture items inside it by sending them as tweets on Twitter, through Gmail and through web-browser plugins).

> Ability to synchronise with another program such as Outlook (often this is a paid for added extra rather than inherent in the program itself).

> Ability to export your data out of that program if you decide it’s no longer working well for you. (This is also a nice safety feature if you’re worried about one of these apps going bust and your data being stuck in there, which is admittedly pretty unlikely!)

Reliability & track record

With any piece of software you’re trusting to store a lot of data on your behalf in ‘the cloud’, there’s always a small risk that there may be short periods where their servers go down and all of your lists are inaccessible.

Read reviews of the software to look for any issues of reliability, notice what’s being said about customer support if things go wrong and make sure you’re entrusting your valuable data to someone with a track record that suggests they’re able to look after it. Reviews count.

Stylishness

Stylish user interfaces that make it both easy and fun to use are of course a big part of the appeal for the tech-savvy. If something feels easier to use, you’ll instinctively use it that little bit more.

Price

Last and certainly least in terms of consideration should be price.

Paying a couple of pounds for a good phone app that you’ll use every day for years should never be an issue when you think how easily you might waste that money elsewhere.

Similarly, spending £100 on the perfect app has paid itself back very quickly if you imagine the extra revenue, extra commission, pay rises or reduced stress that it brings.

 

Like this? Try these

Our How to be a Productivity Ninja Workshop

7 Productivity Boosting Apps Think Productive

100 Time Management Tips to Boost Productivity Think Productive

Lifehacker Pack for iPhone: Our List of the Best iPhone Apps

 

It’s easy to fall off the GTD wagon, but thankfully, it’s equally as easy to get back on it again! Here at Think Productive HQ, we’ve found that being accountable to one another provides a great way to make sure that we’re on top of our personal GTD systems. We’ve also found that having a bright red poster on the wall provides a difficult-to-ignore reminder of the importance of weekly reviewing!

This, we’re sure, will remind you of two vital GTD habits:

1. Keep calm
2. Weekly review!

And remember – it’s called a weekly review for a reason! Do it every week and watch your productivity levels soar.