Comments on: A quick guide to GTD and projects https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects David Allen's GTDĀ® Methodology Mon, 05 Dec 2022 23:39:31 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 By: John Forrister https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-175614 Mon, 05 Dec 2022 23:39:31 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-175614 In reply to Jose Antonio Garciarivas Gutierrez.

Hi Jose Antonio,
Project Support would only contain potential future actions, meaning actions that you cannot yet do. They do not need to be categorized until they become next actions. Your next actions do not stay in Project Support. The next actions go on categorized lists. The intent is that you would not need to look in Project Support when you are ready to do actions within a certain category.

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By: Jose Antonio Garciarivas Gutierrez https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-175465 Fri, 02 Dec 2022 19:31:38 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-175465 In reply to Kelly Forrister.

13 years later, I ask:
So, if actions should be distributed in categories, does this means, that my Project Support should contain these categories which shall contain the actions? (That is paper and/or digital)?

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By: Jordan Epstein https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1508 Mon, 11 Jan 2010 00:07:05 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1508 Kelly-

This is a very insightful article!

I am struggling with a detail of pending actions, and I hope that you can help me with it.

I have a next action that says “contact John DeJohn re: finished project 333-555-1224”

Before I contact John, I want to have
a. Our prototype complete
b. 3 target customers signed up
c. spoken with his subordinate.

a,b and c are all part of different projects.

Contact John would be part of the project “work with local government”.

Now, I have several questions.

1. Is “Work with Local Government” a Someday/Maybe project, if there are pieces that need to happen before I’m working directly on this?
2. Where is the reminder to contact John?
3. Is the change of events that happen before contacting John part of the “Work with Local Government” project support material?
4. How do I make sure that each separate project alerts me that it’s then going to trigger something in another project?

In other words: how do you manage intertwined projects, some pieces of which you aren’t yet acting on.

To get even more complicated, how would you manage parts of a project that you brainstormed as possibilities – and each possibility has several actions – if you haven’t yet decided if you’d follow that path?

Example here:

“Market Research with Children” project
a. Design questionaire
b. Get input from Becky
c. Get design help
d. Find a questionaire online
(a-d are actions)

What if I haven’t yet decided whether I’m conducting market research, but want to store this stuff just in-case….. but the
“Market Research with Children” is just one brainstormed path on a different project (Say – the project “Design New Features”)

I know this is all very detailed, but these examples are what I struggle with, and understanding this will help me SO MUCh. thank you!

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By: Helen https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1507 Mon, 07 Dec 2009 16:06:29 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1507 I believe that at the beginning(when we started using GTD )we all had this problems. We didn’t knew where to start, what to do, is it ok to do this first…? and the list can go on. So we all need these lists! Thank you very much!

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By: Kelly Forrister https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1506 Sun, 06 Dec 2009 17:54:15 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1506 Dean–you are not limited to only one next action on your context lists. If you have a project that has 5 parallel next actions (meaning any one of them could be a choice and are not dependent on one another), then any and all of those could go on your context lists. I have that for a Christmas card project I am working on. I have “buy stamps” and “buy labels” on @Errands, as well as “Photo card order” on @Waiting For and “work on mailing list names” on @Home.

Hope that helps!
Kelly

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By: Dean https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1505 Sun, 06 Dec 2009 03:45:33 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1505 Kelly,

Your clarification of each project down to the next action is very helpful. However, sometimes I have more than one next action within each category for a specific project. If I have all of the information required to start my next action items, why not list them in the context areas, and then use my intuitive judgment to select the next action to work on?

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By: Kelly Forrister https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1504 Sat, 05 Dec 2009 17:10:15 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1504 Hi Jay–

Hold/Pending/Project support all sound the same to me–however–GTD makes the distinction within Hold of current next actions vs. future actions.

Last thing I would want is to have to search through all of my project support for a project to find the one or two that are next actions. I want those triaged out already (on context lists).

Kelly

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By: Jay https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1503 Thu, 03 Dec 2009 14:21:12 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1503 Hmm. So I use an index card based GTD system. What I have been doing up till now is using one notecard per project with the project title up at the top written large. These notecards sit in an easily accessible holder on my desk. But I have been writing both outcomes and series of actions (not NAs) on these cards, which I guess is technically project support. But then I also have a three-tray paper holder on my desk, and the middle tray is my “Hold” folder. In there I put my project support like forms to be filled out and receipts for reimbursements and so on. So I guess what I’ve done is sub-divided my project support into two categories (series of actions, and support documents). I’m wondering if this is a real bad idea and if so someone can explain why. I think part of my problem might be not necessarily seeing the difference between “Hold” and “Project Support” – so if there is a difference between the two and someone can explain that, I would be very appreciative. Thanks for your time.

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By: Kelly Forrister https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1502 Wed, 02 Dec 2009 17:22:43 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1502 Wlofgang wrote: where do all the other nine go? Project support?

Kelly: Yes, project support.

Glad you all found value in this post. It’s a key thing to understand with GTD and so glad I could shed some light on this.

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By: Wolfgang https://gettingthingsdone.com/2009/11/a-quick-guide-to-gtd-projects/#comment-1501 Wed, 02 Dec 2009 11:28:05 +0000 http://www.gtdtimes.com/?p=2382#comment-1501 Hi there,

I have a question, the text says:

“… So if you have a project that has 10 steps, but only 1 of those is a next action (meaning you have all of the information you need to take the action) then only that 1 would be organized on a next action list. …”

Ok, the 1 NA on my NA list – but where do all the other nine go? Project support?

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