I had a manager who believed in mutable lists. Every night, you leave yourself a list in priority order of what’s not yet done. As you work through the day, you add to the list AT THE BOTTOM… or occasionally jump off the list and manage a crisis. Last thing in the day, you build a new prioritized list for tomorrow. Anything that’s been on the list more than a week simply gets put on the “someday” list… and thus forgotten.
I found it cumbersome for my work style, which is much more about having ONE item (plus inevitable interruptions) you’re working on. And a bucket of “when I’m done with this” items. Pretty often I’d build the pieces of the project and then merge them… but sometimes I’d build a project scaffold first and then hang functionality on it. The “software as a service” folks prefer that latter: You can ship on a moment’s notice… with some pieces “TBD”.
A novelist, Dickens I think, was in college and in debt. So he sat down and made a list of debts and assets, the former much longer that the later, and how to mange them. Took him most of a morning. He then reread the list, heard the noon bells, decided to think about it later, tore up the list, and went off to borrow a shilling for lunch and a beer.
thevideostoreguy about 1 month ago
Procrastinating so hard it’s pre-emptive.
Concretionist about 1 month ago
I had a manager who believed in mutable lists. Every night, you leave yourself a list in priority order of what’s not yet done. As you work through the day, you add to the list AT THE BOTTOM… or occasionally jump off the list and manage a crisis. Last thing in the day, you build a new prioritized list for tomorrow. Anything that’s been on the list more than a week simply gets put on the “someday” list… and thus forgotten.
I found it cumbersome for my work style, which is much more about having ONE item (plus inevitable interruptions) you’re working on. And a bucket of “when I’m done with this” items. Pretty often I’d build the pieces of the project and then merge them… but sometimes I’d build a project scaffold first and then hang functionality on it. The “software as a service” folks prefer that latter: You can ship on a moment’s notice… with some pieces “TBD”.
sandpiper about 1 month ago
A novelist, Dickens I think, was in college and in debt. So he sat down and made a list of debts and assets, the former much longer that the later, and how to mange them. Took him most of a morning. He then reread the list, heard the noon bells, decided to think about it later, tore up the list, and went off to borrow a shilling for lunch and a beer.
sandpiper about 1 month ago
Frazz would be wise not to become an item on Caulfield’s ‘to-do’ list. Could make for frustrating days.
DaBump Premium Member about 1 month ago
That’s when you realize how comfortable you are doing all those silly little time-wasting things — it’s even worse now with cellphones and idle games.
The Wolf In Your Midst about 1 month ago
Never put off ’til tomorrow what you can get out of doing entirely.
rshive about 1 month ago
Caulfield learns of life.
JudyAz about 1 month ago
First item on the list:
“Make a list of…”
DM2860 about 1 month ago
He just needs to cross off the useless ones.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 month ago
Top 10 Reasons to Procrastinate:
1.
gammaguy about 1 month ago
My favorite list is a starboard list.