Archive for the 'Organization' Category


Organize your breakfast cereal bags

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

Breakfast cereals are one of the more expensive items on our grocery list. To save money, we buy them bagged instead of boxed. Generic brands of cereals often come in bags, as do bulk bags of brand-name cereal at places like BJs and Sam’s Club.

The problem is that these bags are hard for my kids to handle. There isn’t as much structure to a bag as to a box, so more cereal often ends up on the counter than in the bowl. Also, they don’t stack or stand up well in a cupboard.

Tupperware-type cereal bins are fairly expensive. I had several plastic drink pitchers that weren’t being used, so I poured the cereal into them. The spouts allow the smaller cereals to pour through. For larger cereals, it is easy to just pop the top off and pour. This has been working fairly well for the kids. Both my cereal cupboard and the cupboard where I kept my pitchers are now less cluttered as well.

Small, simple hack but I hope it works for someone else.

Saving Time by staying within contexts

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Recently I started implementing David Allen’s Getting Things Done (GTD) system, as described in his best-selling book Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

This system appealed to me for many reasons, but one was his use of labeling tasks with “contexts” — the location in which the task needs to be done (i.e. office, home, car). I had already been using a similar system, but it was “in my head”, exactly the wrong place it needed to be.

My contexts need to be more specific, as “office” and “home” didn’t categorize my tasks well enough to be useful. I already knew, basically, what I need to do at home — starting with the three Ds — Duds (laundry), Dinner, and Dishes.

I own a website development firm. I do have an office out of the home, but the nature of my work is so virtual that most of my work tasks could be done either from home or the office. I do use home and office contexts, but since I use my GTD system within Evernote, I can apply multiple contexts to a single task.

Maybe I’m being really anal here, but for the amount of time it takes to launch a program, get going, get focused, it’s usually easier for me to do similar tasks in one program before switching gears and moving on to another program. The days I feel most inefficient are the days I jump from one task to another.
For example, Quickbooks is kind of a memory hog and takes a bit of time to load up. I apply the Quickbooks context to all of my bills that need to be paid, invoicing, statement reconciliations, etc. When I fire up Quickbooks to do something time-urgent, I’ll just take 30 minutes to an hour afterwards to finish off all the rest of my Quickbook tasks. I’m in the right mindset anyway. It makes me feel great to knock off all of those little tasks, and I’ve saved time by not having to constantly wait for Quickbooks to load, find the invoice or reconciliation screens, etc.

Here is a breakdown of my GTD contexts:

  • @home (housecleaning chores, organizing, kids’ projects, cooking, etc.)
  • @car (errands to run, podcasts to listen to, notes to record)
  • @laptop ( I have certain programs installed on here that aren’t on my tablet)
  • @tablet (I have certain programs installed on my tablet pc that aren’t on my laptop)
  • @Dreamweaver
  • @Quicken
  • @Quickbooks
  • @webjobs (a web application that I am seriously modifying for a bunch of clients)
  • @phone
  • @offline (most of my work needs to be done online, so offline are things I can do on my tablet while waiting in doctor’s office, as a passenger in a car, etc.)
  • @office (these are mostly just filing related tasks, big copy or faxing jobs, etc.)
  • @with kids (I save any tasks that the kids can help with for this context — like baking — as they are constantly seeking my undivided attention.)
  • @people (insert names here of husband, parents, kids, employees, partners) (things I need to discuss with or give to certain people, includes helping kids with school projects, etc.)

I may have too many contexts, and I definitely have too many “Next Actions”, but this is Month 1 of my implementation of GTD. I assume I will tweak it until it fits.

What contexts do you use?