![]() The brilliance of Things’ ultra-simple design and glanceability is what makes this such a useful way of organising my to-do list. I do this, because in the Today view, Things groups all of my tasks by project, so I can immediately see what I’m working on (or who I’m working for) each day. For me, an Area will signify either a client or subset of my business, and within each Area, I’ll place Projects for task categories.įor instance, for my reviews brand, I have an Area dedicated to that (it’s technically a subset of my main business), and within the Area, I have separate projects for admin stuff, blog work, videos and more. I don’t use tags for this, but I do make use of Things’ Areas and Projects. Like most people, I have a number of different projects I work on every day, and they all relate to different areas of my business. Some of my techniques might work for you some may force you to ask “why isn’t he doing it the other way?”. Things is a great example of how I use the absolute bare bones of a platform to get stuff done. I rarely dig particularly deep into feature sets or use the inevitable Siri integration that now comes as standard with most productivity and business-centric apps. However, if you’ve spent any amount of time digesting my content or chatting to me on my Discord server, you’ll know that I’m not particularly adventurous when it comes to my software usage. ![]() Certainly, this blog would probably never have seen the light of day. Without my to-do list, I’d inevitably end up sacking myself. ![]()
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