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- January 2, 2010
Intermittent Task Tracker 2010 Updates
January 2, 2010Read moreProject Management Index Cards
I’d forgotten about this old Task Order Up! (TOU) variation, the Intermittent Task Tracker (ITT). A reader just asked me about making an update, so I went back to my 2006 Form Variations Folder and found it again. I updated the typography a bit and have just posted it.
The basic idea behind this design is to keep all the details relevant to a project on a single 4×6 index card over the course of several days. The intended purpose was to handle projects that one intermittently worked on; these are things like auxiliary support projects that can’t be completed in a single day. An ongoing maintenance task is a good example of this. The TOU cards, by comparison, are really designed to handle a single task that can be completed in a block of continuous time.
The ITT card is also interesting in that it uses the Concrete Goals Tracker (CGT) point system. You could create an ITT card as an alternate way of logging what you’re getting accomplished that is in alignment with your overall goals. The focus of the ITT card, though, is on a kind of project; if this reduction of scope is useful for you, then maybe it will work out well.
This is the larger “recipe size” card, which happens to feed more reliably through my printer than smaller 3×5 cards.
Download the 2010 Intermittent Task Tracker Cards
Enjoy! For more information, visit the ITT Page.
- January 2, 2010
The Importance of Daily Blathering
January 2, 2010Read moreSUMMARY: I’m at the end of my first five years of blogging, and with the dawn of a new decade I’m wondering what the next year is going to be about. More daily conversations, I think, are in order. If you’re here for just productivity talk or design, update your RSS subscriptions to the topic-only feeds listed in the sidebar. (more…)
- January 1, 2010
Day Grid Balancer 2010 Updates
January 1, 2010Read moreIn May 2009 I started to explore what work-life balance meant to me in terms of day-to-day activity, and I created a mash-up of some existing forms that I called the Day Grid Balancer, which I then released with a Creative Commons license. You can read more here on the official Day Grid Balancer page about design rationale. If you’re using the DGB forms as-is, you can download the following PDFs. If you are interested in remixing these forms, you’ll need Adobe Illustrator CS4 to modify these fully-editable files.
Download 2010 Updates to Day Grid Balancer
- Download Day Grid Balancer Draft 1, which features the “balance grid”
- Download Day Grid Balancer Draft 2, which has a biorhythm-inspired grid
Enjoy!
- January 1, 2010
Plain Five Day Planner 2010 Updates
January 1, 2010Read moreEarlier this year I posted a summary of a 5-day liveblogging of my day. I made a grid in Excel that helped me visualize not only where the time had gone, but what kind of time it happened to be. This was an interesting exercise, and I made a 5-day planning format form loosely based on the Emergent Task Planner. For more information, read the Five day Planner (P5P) Page.
It’s pretty straightforward, which is why it’s called the “Plain Old 5-Day Planner”. Basic grid paper, downloadable as a PDF. You’ll need Adobe Acrobat Reader to print it out. Updates for 2010 are minor; I just added separate “starting hour” times for each of the five days by request.
Instructions
- Fill in the hours on the left-hand side.
- Jot down what you need to do, when.
- Keep notes on the right-hand side.
Download 2010 Updates to the Plain 5-Day Plannery
» Download the Plain 5-Day Planner US Letter size
» Download the Plain 5-Day Planner A4 sizeEnjoy!
- January 1, 2010
Resource Time Tracking 2010 Updates
January 1, 2010Read moreManaging and Scheduling Multiple Projects
After a year break, I’m re-introducing the Resource Time Tracking (RTT) forms I first tried out in 2006. At the time, I was trying to figure out a better way of visualizing future time to a number of different simultaneous projects.
This is a two-part form, consisting of a task scheduler and a task quantizer. The Task Scheduler is basically a calendar that shows what deliverables are due on what days of the week in addition to when production time is allocated. The Task Quantizer is a kind of worksheet to allow you to determine what those deliverables are in the first place, and how long it will take to to them. The Quantizer forces you to measure in standardized blocks of time, which comes in handy when it comes to fitting them into the Scheduler’s time grid.
The 2010 update is unchanged from the original 2006-2007 form, other than some standardization of typography
Download 2010 Resource Time Tracking Forms
For more information about the use of the Resource Time Tracking forms, check out the original post. Enjoy!