Hopefully you caught the news earlier today: OmniGraphSketcher is now final. Congratulations to the OGS team! And hey, if you've been wanting desperately to buy OmniGraphSketcher for all your graph sketching needs but couldn't do so because our store didn't support PayPal, you'd best be buying yourself a lottery ticket because THIS IS YOUR LUCKY DAY.
On a totally unrelated note, let's talk about iPhones! Specifically, what's the most useful/fun/cool thing you've done with your phone lately? I put this question to some of the Omni folk, and here are their answers:
Kris, Support Ninja: “I've settled many a “Where should we go?” hive-mind-cluster-fart by popping open the Yelp app and searching for nearby options. I've also bookmarked my own lil' Zagat Guide of the local places that I love, and places to check out when I travel. Being able to click a link to call for reservations, get a map with directions, or view real people's reviews make this app tremendously useful for me.”
Aaron, Sysadmin: “When we were in a car wreck I felt like I was living in one of those silly Apple ads. First I took out the phone to call the police (everyone was OK, BTW) followed by my insurance company. Then I snapped some pictures of the scene and damage to email to the claims adjuster. Finally, after everything was all written up I used the Google maps app to find the closest tow truck company and call them to come pick up my busted rig.”
Tim, VP Software Development: “I recently bought Jaadu VNC which lets you connect to your Mac's screen on the phone. So, my kids are in the office and I'm out sitting on the couch. I connect to my machine and use Jaadu's keyboard to start using the “say” command in Terminal to freak them out. I live in the future, where technology is good for evil.”
Bill, User Experience Lead: “I recently ditched my real camera because the iPhone 3G S camera is quite adequate for any photo or video I care to take. When I'm listening to the Wait Wait . . . Don't Tell Me! podcast, I like to switch over to YouTube and catch up on whatever current event they're talking about, because I usually have no idea. Uh, I have also used the Amazon app to photograph, research, and buy a book. While standing in the physical bookstore. *shame*”
My own example: last week I was parking in a totally unfamiliar part of Seattle, so I used Maps to drop a pin at my car's location. When I was ready to go home, instead of wandering the streets for hours on end weeping hysterically, I just pulled up walking directions to find my way back. Not only that, but since I'm so directionally challenged I find instructions like “walk south” to be completely meaningless, I used the compass to keep me heading the right way. OH IPHONE I LOVE YOU.
How about you guys? Have any how-my-phone-improved-my-life stories to share?
Behold, the final entry in our thrilling saga of Getting Active With OmniFocus, and in this episode, ALL WILL BE REVEALED. WAS your intrepid blog author in fact able to master the art of personal task management? DID she stay committed to using OmniFocus on a regular basis? After nearly three months, HAS she learned a single blessed thing, other than the surprising fact that the lyrics to “Blinded By the Light” actually feature the phrase “revved up like a deuce”, not the far more confusing and less-savory line she misunderstood for years?
All this and more . . . after the break! Please enjoy this awesome sign I found in West Seattle:

Aaaaand we're back. So, I've talked about the first days of using the app, setting up in-depth task info, and the process of reviewing my OmniFocus document.
Confession: I have not exactly embraced reviewing. In fact, it would be more accurate to say I have not done an official review since talking about what a great idea reviewing was. Just keeping it real over here, folks.
The last topic I wanted to cover is Perspectives, but first, I'll show you what my document currently looks like:

(You may notice my toolbar looks different from YOUR toolbar. That is because I am a unique snowflake. I'll get to that part in a second.)
Until recently, all of my OmniFocus projects were really categories, not a group of related tasks working toward a common goal. I set it up that way because so many of my tasks are repeating and it seemed easier for me to think of each project as a bucket.
Over time, I learned that the downfall with this approach for my working style was the stagnancy of seeing the exact same top-level list every time I looked at my document. It was too easy to start skipping over important areas, or simply becoming le bored with the whole thing. So I re-worked my document to include more actual projects with a beginning and an end, and changed some of the necessary information buckets to single action lists.
As a result, it felt like I suddenly had a LOT more information in my document, and even though everything seemed a lot more organized, I wasn't really able to take the whole thing in at a glance any more. The more stuff you have in OmniFocus, the smarter you've got to be about accessing it. This isn't a limitation of the app—I mean, the thing that really makes OmniFocus stand apart from the task-management crowd is its myriad options for viewing your data—it's just another one of those areas of personal responsibility. OmniFocus is awfully damn smart, but you still have to tell it what to do, you know?
The first step is to figure out how you want to look at your information. Want to only view things that are due this week? Focus on a certain project? Display items that are available, flagged, and under the “Phone” context? By selecting items and fiddling with the View Bar to filter data, you can do some serious fine-tuning to your working environment.
Of course, after you've clicked around and set up filters and gotten everything tweaked juuuuust right for one working mode, you might want an entirely different set of viewing criteria for concentrating on a separate collection of information. This is where Perspectives comes in REALLY handy. In a nutshell, Perspectives allows you to save your window settings, so you can easily switch between viewing environments without having to re-configure everything every single time and consequently lose your flipping mind and ultimately find yourself sobbing on YouTube about how everyone should just LEAVE BRITNEY ALONE, OMG.
One of my saved Perspectives is a focused view of some projects that are relevant to my home life. I set this up by first selecting some projects and single action lists by Command-clicking until I had everything I wanted in my window.

I selected Focus on (Selected Items) from the View menu (you can also do this by clicking the Focus toolbar button), which basically tells OmniFocus to ignore everything in your document outside of the selected items. The sidebar only includes those items that you're focusing on.

I then chose Show Perspectives Window from the Perspectives menu. To create a new perspective, I clicked the little plus sign down there at the bottom left of the window, then typed “Home”. Kerblam: perspective saved, along with all my view settings, filters, and sorting criteria.

I know, I know: you've got burning questions at this point. Like How'd you get that spanky custom icon? and Say, is Omni known for its healthy snacks?
1) On the bottom left of the Perspectives window is the selected perspective's current icon (if you don't see the settings, click the Expand Settings button). To choose a different icon, click the wee little arrow at the lower right of the icon. Awesome, except it gets even better: you can drag in any image and drop it on the icon to replace it. I used custom icons for all of my saved perspectives.

2) No.
Finally, I customized my toolbar to include icons for each of my perspectives. Right-click on your toolbar and choose Customize Toolbar… and you can drag any of the items (which will include any perspectives you create) into your toolbar and arrange everything just so.

Now whenever I want to quickly change views from one work mode to the next, I just click a toolbar button. I even have a perspective titled “Goals”, which is a saved view of some long-term goals of mine. It's not something I look at frequently throughout the day, but it's nice to have it there. Any time I want a visual reminder (or a mental cattle-prodding) of the steps I need to take towards the goals—which range from “Publish a book” to “Teach my son to swim”—I click my pretty little heart-shaped icon and there they are.

One last note on this whole topic of focused view settings: if you're like me, you may find yourself seemingly TRAPPED in a certain view. It wasn't immediately clear to me how to “un-focus”, in other words. Like, great, I'm focused in on a particular project, but now I want to see my entire library again. Uhhhhhh?
The thing you want to do in this case is tell OmniFocus to “Show All”, either by clicking the toolbar button or selecting Show All Projects from the View menu. Whoomp, there it all is. You could also choose “Revert to Default View” from the Perspectives menu to get out of a certain perspective.

THE CLUMSY WRAP-UP:
After three months, I've found that my dedication to OmniFocus waxes and wanes. I launch it every day I'm in the office, but often forget to do so at home. Which has earned me this warning on more than one occasion:

(It's basically saying “Hey, you haven't synchronized OmniFocus on your home machine in a while, you slacker. You want to just unregister that machine, or what?” I just hit Ignore whenever I see this, because there's no button that says SHUT UP WITH YOUR NAGGING.)
I have a bad habit of setting task due dates, then resetting the date once the deadline has passed and I still haven't completed the task. Sometimes I do this, like, a LOT.
As I confessed earlier, I have been entirely remiss in implementing a reviewing process.
Also, I turned off menu bar notifications (in Preferences > Data > Show Due Soon and Overdue actions) so for the express purpose of ignoring items that are overdue. Ahem.
However, I now consistently remember all sorts of things I used to forget. I don't miss the deadlines that are truly important. I have an overall sense of being much more organized, thanks to using one particular system for managing stuff instead of relying on a variety of methods (notepads, Post-Its, the faulty memory-storage recesses in my brain).
One of the benefits we attribute to OmniFocus is similar to the GTD credo, that by getting things out of your head you free yourself to focus on what's really important. I am finding this to be true in ways I didn't quite expect. For me, it's not so much that once something is stored in a system I reap the rewards from not having it lying around my frontal lobe taking up valuable real estate, it's more that the act of focusing on it in order to write it down has a surprisingly positive effect. Engaging with my goals in order to break them down into actionable steps makes me feel much more capable of completing them. Once a challenging project has been turned into words on a screen, it becomes this . . . doable thing, instead of a Lurking Pile of Intimidating Doom.
This mindset has helped me just buckle down and complete some projects, but more importantly, I believe it's helped me actively take on goals I've been mentally kicking around for years. Since I've been using OmniFocus, I've run a 5K race (my first since 1998), began the process of pitching a nonfiction book, and started writing the first chapter in a fiction novel. Now, would I have done these things anyway? Maybe. I'm convinced, though, that OmniFocus had something to do with it.
I've learned a lot about how OmniFocus works, but I'm definitely still learning about my own workflow and what works best for me. I know it will be an ongoing process, and that in order to get the most out of it, I have to put the effort into it. Have I completely changed my unorganized, task-procrastinating ways? No. Will I still be using this tool a year from now? You know, I really think I will.
Thanks for reading along, and as always, if you have any questions or feedback, I'd love to hear from you!
The OmniFocus team has been hard at work lately, and we're geeked to let you know that version 1.5 for iPhone and iPod touch is now available. OmniFocus 1.5 for iPhone and iPod touch leverages many of the new capabilities in the iPhone OS 3.0 software update, including cut, copy and paste, integrated Maps and more. If you read Brian's article on location-based contexts, you know how OmniFocus works with Location Services—OmniFocus 1.5 for iPhone and iPod touch now displays nearby context categories of possible tasks using a map. Just touch a pin to see all the tasks within the corresponding context category.

NOW YOUR TASKS WILL HAUNT YOU WHEREVER YOU GO! Er, I mean, smell the unparalleled productivity!
The app also now features a new Search screen for easily searching through projects and actions, and a new Repeat screen enables the quick set-up of repeating actions and projects. Web links can render directly inside the application itself for quicker viewing. Other new features include “due date” display for each Action list, and direct feedback email to the Omni Group from within the application itself.
What are you waiting for? To the App Store with you, mister/missy, and grab the new version.
Yes, it's yet another article in this why-pay-for-the-full-seat-when-you'll-only-need-the-edge series on OmniFocus: a Beginner's Experience Going from Productivity Zero to HERO. Oh, I know what you're thinking: if you're so productive, Ms. Blog Writer, don't you have something better to do than document every excruciating detail of your OmniFocus learning process?
Well, according to my OmniFocus document, I DON'T. My only tasks due today are “search Twitter for amusing mentions of the Seattle bear” and “bore the pants off the Omni blog readers yet again”. So put that in your productivity . . . uh, pipe . . . and . . . listen, let's just all put our pants back on, okay?
ANYWAY. Where were we? I talked about the first days of setting up OmniFocus, and configuring more in-depth task information like due dates and start times. I now have a bunch of useful information in my document, but I'm finding that unless I assign a due date to a task, it sometimes gets ignored. Take for example “wash car”—I've had that in there for three weeks now, but does my car still have seventeen giant splotches of seagull poo on it? Yes, yes it does.
Plus, things are just getting a little sloppy. My fastidiousness of the first couple weeks has worn off and now I have a few items in there that aren't really defined as an individual action, like “fix website”. In this case, I should break that task into some more specific to-dos: “install latest copy of WordPress”, and “check plugin compatibility”.
It seems like it would be helpful if I had a process for periodically going through my document to re-assess the status of each action and make sure it's correctly filed. Not that I want another to-do, exactly (to-do: check to-dos?), but the whole idea here is to stay on top of things, right? Sloppiness leads to entropy and entropy leads to suffering and something something Yoda.
The Getting Things Done® methodology recommends that all items in your task management system are reviewed at least once per week, to make sure they're properly filed away and that everything's up to date. As I've mentioned before, I'm not a hardcore GTD®-follower, but a weekly review definitely seems doable. I know OmniFocus has a Review function, but I don't really get how it works—how is a “review” view more useful than just, you know, looking at all your projects at once?
To get this figured out, I go and talk to Kris, the Support Ninja whose OmniFocus workflow I briefly described in this post (recap: Kris sets each of his projects to be reviewed every Tuesday). He gives me some background on the Getting Things Done concept of a weekly review, which is a much more big-picture function than I had imagined it to be. It's about looking at your existing tasks, sure—but also processing emails, capturing new projects, reviewing areas of responsibility and goals, and evaluating your “someday/maybe” lists (where things like “Stuff on Amazon I want to buy” and “Holiday ideas” might go).
The actual functionality OmniFocus provides when it comes to the review process isn't super-complex—it's really just another way to group and display your information. You assign review dates under the Next Review field in a task's inspector, and clicking the Review icon in your toolbar essentially just re-orders your projects by this filter. Selecting a task or project and choosing Mark Reviewed from the Edit menu (or clicking the Mark Reviewed toolbar button) makes it disappear from view until the next review process.

To me the importance of the review seems less about how it works in OmniFocus—because, again, it's just another view of your existing data—and more about how you incorporate reviewing into your own workflow. You can use reviewing simply as a way to quickly scan your task list, or to take a step back and do some more meaningful evaluating and organizational processes.
I have to say, I'm sort of warming up to this whole GTD thing. It feels a little goofy—actually, the word I think I'm looking for here is uber-meta (well, or possibly anal-retentive)—but I go ahead and add some GTD-specific items to my document with the reviewing function in mind. I basically take Kris's lead, as he's added some guidelines from the GTD Weekly Review Template Handout that's available inside GTD Connect, although I change them slightly to be more meaningful to me.
Now I've got a little roadmap of sorts for doing my reviews. Like Kris, I set all my tasks to be reviewed once a week, and while I'm looking at my Review perspective, I also open another OmniFocus window that only contains the reviewing guidelines (you can focus on a specific project or folder just by double-clicking it).

WHEW. Okay then, reviewing = deeper than I thought! I'll let you know how that process works for me over time, and I hope it's been at least marginally useful to suffer through this long-winded discussion.
OTHER THINGS I WANTED TO TELL YOU ABOUT:
• By default a project or group must be marked as completed in order to change its status. If you'd rather have it automatically marked as completed once you complete all the tasks within, you can change that setting under Preferences: Data.

• Also, the default Due time is set to 12 AM. Which I think is cuh-RAZY, because if you make something due today it will turn red like INSTANTLY and how depressing is that? Happily, you can also can change this setting in Preferences.

AMUSING TERM THAT ENTERTAINS ME BECAUSE I AM IMMATURE:
• “Tickler file”. Heh. Tickler.
And now for my question of the week: is reviewing part of your workflow? If so, how often do you do it? What sorts of things do you review?

(Actual GTD® Do Not Disturb sign hanging on my actual office door! HA HA HA DOOOOORK.)
Hello! Welcome to the second article in an ongoing series documenting my experiences using OmniFocus as a task manager n00b. The first post is here.
I've been using OmniFocus pretty diligently for a couple weeks now and I'm still learning new stuff every day. It's amazing how much there really is to this app, and I think one of the biggest challenges to making the most of it all is figuring out what sorts of options work best for you. I know there's that helpful book and everything, but the nice thing about OmniFocus is that it's flexible—you don't have to be a hardcore GTD person to benefit from it. Which is good for me, since just between you and me I started reading Getting Things Done but got sidetracked by something shiny about halfway through.
(BTW: has anyone written Doing Things Half-Assed yet? I would totally read that.)
That might explain my approach to projects, which a couple people asked about. If you take a look at my OmniFocus document, you'll notice that the projects I've created are more categories (or buckets) than anything else—they don't have a beginning and an end.

This is just what seems to be most useful for my working style, maybe because I have more ongoing activities than I do projects with steps towards completion. You can, however, specifically tell OmniFocus that something is not a project if you like. Click on a project, open the inspector, and click the Single Actions icon under Type. This will change the way your tasks are styled (in my document, remaining tasks become blue instead of gray); it's just another way to organize your info.

Now that I've got my tasks all squared away into projects and contexts, it's time to add info to the tasks so they're more meaningful to me. I start assigning due dates, which is easy enough: just click the task, open the inspector, and click in the Due field to assign a date and time. Many of my tasks are recurring—blog posts that are due each week, for instance—so for those I start selecting the Repeat Every . . . option and pick the appropriate interval of time.
After I've been working with due dates for a few days, I realize I can customize the way tasks repeat. Some tasks are due on specific days each week, while others fall into more of an “every so often” category. For example, I have a task reminding me to take receipts out of our checkbook so I don't let scraps of paper build up in my wallet and cluelessly empty our checking account because I bought too many zombie-themed comic books one month, not that I have ever done such a thing, ha ha ha *cough*.
I want this task to repeat every three days, and but I want it to show up three days from whenever I complete it. Maybe I'll take out those receipts on a Monday, maybe I'll do it again one day later in a fit of wallet-tidying. Whenever I do it, I want to be reminded three days later, so I choose the Repeat from: Completion date option. Now whenever I mark it as completed, OmniFocus knows to make it due three days later.

This receipt reminder is such a small example, and yet I can't tell how handy it's been. My checkbook is always up to date now, and my wallet isn't straining at the seams with nine thousand “Walking Dead” sales slips. BRAAAINNS! I mean, WIN!
Okay, so now I have lots of repeating tasks, and I can't help but notice the act of marking things as completed is starting to feel unpleasantly Sisyphean in nature. For only the briefest nanosecond do I get to enjoy the reward of checking something off and watching my task get that satisfying strikethrough, then KERBLAM. The task repeats and there it is AGAIN. Almost like it's back from the dead or something.

This really bugs me, maybe because so much of my life is steeped in the sense of continually working at something only to have to do it all over again (hi, please enjoy the typical fruits of my housecleaning efforts). I whine to a few Omni peeps about this issue, and they school me on the concept of a Start date.
For some reason I thought a task's Start date was referring to when you were supposed to start the actual task, but it really means something more like “Make this task available by” (which is of course too long to fit in the inspector, and can I just say I'm only recently starting to really appreciate the myriad challenges of UI design?). So here's what I do for a blog assignment that's due every other Wednesday: I assign a Start date that's two days before the Due date.

Now OmniFocus knows to make that task show up as available every other Monday, rather than just having it lurk in my document all the time. If I filter my tasks to show what's actually available to me, that task will not appear.

It's still there, of course, it's just not cluttering up my document and making me feel burdened with that continually-rolling-a-boulder-up-a-hill feeling. Awesome!
After two weeks I'm falling into some usage patterns with OmniFocus, and I notice that I'm using the phone only as a reminder when I'm out shopping. I should probably get more used to capturing items on the go. I also need to put more thought into how I actually want to view my Focus document contents—there are a million options, and I'm still figuring out what's most useful for me. That's the subject for the next post: filtering, viewing, Perspectives, oh my.
ROOKIE MISTAKE MADE:
• When I was first setting up my repeating tasks, more than once I accidentally marked something as completed when it wasn't. I'd finish this week's task, mark it off, it would repeat (this was before I customized any Start dates), and I'd mark it off again, having stupidly forgotten that I'd already done so for the week. One way to avoid this is to show the Due Date column, so you can tell at a glance which task you're looking at.

A WORKAROUND:
• You can repeat tasks by minutes, hours, weeks, etc, but you can't yet tell OmniFocus you have a task that's due every Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. How to deal? Make three separate tasks that repeat each week.
WEIRD SIDE EFFECT I DID NOT EXPECT:
• The first time I had a task go overdue and the little red badge showed up? I HAD HEART PALPITATIONS. Note to self: dude, it's okay. Calm down. Everyone gets behind, at least this way you're not forgetting it altogether.
RELATED LESSON I AM LEARNING:
• Managing tasks with OmniFocus will get you partway there, but you still have to, you know, do them. Just because it's in the document doesn't mean it's going to magically get completed all on its own. Now that the initial ooh-I'm-so-productive glow has worn off, I'm realizing the no-duh concept: it's about planning your work, then working the plan. I've got all the tools, now I just have to figure out how best to use them.
CONCLUSION THUS FAR:
• I am really and truly finding OmniFocus to be a big help—I'm staying more organized, I'm remembering a bunch of things I know I would have otherwise forgotten, and I don't feel that it's too much of a chore to keep my document up to date. At this point, I think I need to figure out the best way to view/review my data, and maybe establish some habits of when to check in with OmniFocus. I'm going to go back to the comments on this post to find some workflow inspiration, and if you've got any more tips to share, I'd love to hear them!
PS: Last time, when I said I'd try and keep the next post shorter? I LIED.
As threatened promised, here is my first installment of Mastering OmniFocus: Can a Slacker go from Productivity Zero to Guru or Come Up with a Pithy, Descriptive Blog Post Title? Well, we certainly know the answer to one of those questions, don't we?
The first thing I do upon launching my copy of OmniFocus is to delete the paltry amount of outdated info in my document. Wow! That feels GREAT. Look how I have nothing to do any more! I am like some sort of efficiency god. I instantly hit command-Q and vow never to open it again.
Or . . . not. Dang it, I'm committed to seeing this thing through. So I start dumping items in the inbox all willy-nilly, anything and everything I can think of that I need to take care of. After a minute or two, I find this activity enjoyable, and at the point where I find myself dreaming up random pointless to-dos just for the pleasure of entering them (“inhale”, “circulate blood”) I force myself to stop, and move to the next steps: organizing actions into projects and contexts.

This is an area where I've found myself tripped up in the past, so I try not to overthink these categories. I can always change them later, so I don't need to waste time fiddling with coming up with the perfect filing system right this minute. I start with contexts and assign one to each action, then I move on to creating projects. After I add a few projects it becomes more clear to me which folders will be most useful.

I spend about twenty minutes on organizing everything, call it good enough, and move on to setting up synching. I am very nearly as technically skilled as a parsnip, so I'm pitifully excited when I'm able to set up a MobileMe account and perform my first OmniFocus sync. I'm briefly confused when clicking “Sync Now” does not return a mouthbreathingly obvious “Hey dummy, this actually WORKED” window, maybe with a large smiley face or a thumbs up icon, but a quick glance at the “Last Sync” info assures me everything is copacetic.

Next I get my phone set up, which is so easy I can hardly believe it (you click an emailed link and OmniFocus just . . . figures everything out. Awesome). And finally, I sync my home Mac, which is really easy and—wait. What?

After some head-scratching I realize this message is trying to warn me that the copy of OmniFocus on my home machine has nothing in it that looks anything like the current data I synchronized to MobileMe, which isn't shocking considering the only thing in my home document was “USE OMNIFOCUS MORE YOU FORGETFUL FOOL”. I click “Use Server Copy” , and voila! All my data is belong to me!
(BTW: Omni folks tell me a less-potentially-confusing version of this error message will be included with the app soon.)
Now I've got things somewhat organized; all my info is up-to-date and accessible from my home computer, work computer, and iPhone; and I've dinked around with the app long enough to start feeling, well, if not exactly proficient, at least competent. Go me! It's my birthday! It's my—okay, it's not really my birthday.
ROOKIE MISTAKE MADE:
• After I first worked through my inbox and assigned a project and context to everything, I clicked over to the project view and instantly panicked because OMG where did everything go? It wasn't in the context view either! Did everything get DELETED? Answer: no. I had forgotten to click the “Clean Up” button, which is the OmniFocus command for “Clean everything out of my inbox and process it into its appropriate location”. Oops.
AWESOME BUILT-IN AWESOMENESS:
• If you have a phone task, like “Call Benny”, you can add the phone number as a note and when you use your iPhone to make the call, just click the number to dial.
USEFUL FEATURE I FIND ANNOYING:
• I wish there was a preference to turn off the notification badge in OmniFocus for iPhone (you know, the small red whatsit that's all HEY LOOK AT ME!). I find the due date reminders really helpful on the desktop version, but I'd prefer not to see them all the time on my phone.
(My coworker Bill shares this annoyance, and we have filed a bug request. I also asked that OmniFocus periodically release the invigorating scent of lavender.)
PRODUCTIVITY BENEFITS THUS FAR:
• I brought up my “Grocery” context on my phone while I was at the store, and totally remembered everything on my list. Wow, that's a first.
• I am realizing the upside of doing a bunch of related tasks at one time; staying in a certain work mode without switching topics all over the place really helps me finish things more quickly.
• Even when I'm not looking at my OmniFocus document, just the activity of capturing items helps me be more aware of everything I've got to do and less apt to forget things.
WEIRD SIDE EFFECT I DID NOT EXPECT:
• To my last point, actively working with my to-dos has made me more cognizant of all the stuff on my plate, whereas before I would tend towards an “out of sight, out of mind” mentality—which is bad, obviously, but I found that for the first couple days of using OmniFocus I was actually feeling kind of overwhelmed. By my projects themselves (yikes! This is due soon! Must work on it NOW!) and the preoccupying desire to enter new things as I thought of them.
Two things have helped: 1) learning to use the Quick Entry window so I can quickly enter a task from whatever application I'm in and kerblam, send it on its way; and 2) just getting familiar with the system in general. The more OmniFocus becomes a regular part of my day, the more I'm learning to rely on it and the less I'm obsessing over its contents. Which I think is the whole point, right? Get the stuff out of your head so you can just . . . do stuff, instead of thinking about it?
Next up: working with more in-depth task information, establishing a workflow, learning cool tips and tricks. Stay tuned for more HEART-POUNDING INSTALLMENTS.
(PS: Jeez, sorry for how LONG this post was. I'll try and keep it shorter next time.)
In my last post, I confessed my slackerdom when it comes to personal task management, and the subsequent dust that continually builds up on my poor neglected OmniFocus document. In the course of writing that article, I got a glimpse at some of my co-worker's documents, and . . . friends, I think I have finally seen the light. There is a life out there to be lived, one with order and efficiency and things that actually get accomplished on time.
Also, a near-complete absence of “notes” covered with illegible scribblings, mysterious phone numbers, and weird robot doodles.
I've decided to make a concerted effort to get myself organized with OmniFocus, and in the interest of accountability via public humiliation, I'll be posting updates on my progress. Every week, I'll document how I've been using OmniFocus, and what sorts of benefits and setbacks I experience along the way.
IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: this will not be a “Best Practice” series in any way shape or form. Instead, this will be the real-life process of someone trying to change their disorderly habits and become a dedicated OmniFocus user. I do hope to unearth some tips and tricks that may be useful to you, and I'll be asking for your input and ideas, but if you're looking for a good resource on how to use the app, I recommend starting with the manual or the basics video.
Can a person go from productivity zero to guru? Well, I hope to find out. Stay tuned for my next installment, which covers the thrilling activity of writing down my tasks, organizing them into folders and contexts, and figuring out what the heck to do from there.
But first! A getting-started workflow suggestion sent to me from Omni's CEO, Ken Case:
“If you haven't already, drag OmniFocus to your dock right next to Mail, then control-click on the dock icon and set it to “Open at Login”. Now OmniFocus is always running, and adding items to its Inbox (via Quick Entry or Clippings) is just a keystroke away. Even if you're not yet making good (or any!) use of projects or contexts or due dates, you can at least start collecting things into your OmniFocus Inbox and checking them off there.”
DONE. Thanks, Ken!
Until next time, I have a question for you: how long would you say it took to make task management a routine in your life? Did you have to force yourself for a certain amount of time before it became something that felt like a natural part of your day?
I'm going to be straight with you: I'm not good at using OmniFocus. I know HOW to use it, and I'm not just blowing smoke up your heinie when I tell you I think it's a great app, but I haven't been able to . . . well, commit to it.
I've never really managed to embrace the process of recording and organizing my to-dos, and I think this mostly has to do with the fact that I tend to view that activity as just another to-do. I feel like I need a task reminder to write down my task reminders, you know what I mean? Like I need to make a note to myself not to forget to make a note of all the stuff I need to not forget ahhhhhhh I am trapped in an infinite loop of checkboxes SEND HELP ALSO COOKIES.
Ironically, when I do get into little bursts of self-improvement with regards to productivity I find it immensely helpful to have sorted, organized reminders of everything that's on my plate, and I'm amazed at how much easier it is just to bomb through a list of nagging to-dos when they're filed somewhere instead of floating around in the ether. I get motivated to actually pick up the phone, say, and get the kids' pediatrician appointments scheduled, cancel that gym membership I never use, and book a salon visit because duuuuude, it's been too long. Five minutes on the phone and I'm DONE, instead of having those things bumbling around in my head, never at the forefront of my mind but taking up valuable clutter space that could otherwise be filled with Coen brother movie quotes (“Donny, you're out of your element!”).
In short: I definitely get the value of using a system to manage my tasks, but my follow-through is, ah, lacking.
I asked a couple of Omni folk what methods they're using to stay on top of their OmniFocus documents, and I got some really good tips which I thought I'd share:
Bill, Omni User Experience Lead: Bill seems frighteningly organized to me, so it was a surprise to hear he wasn't into task management before he started using Kinkless, Ethan Schoonover's set of scripts that was the OmniOutliner predecessor to OmniFocus. His tactic for configuring OmniFocus to be useful for his work style is to create a bunch of recurring tasks that are either standalone to-dos (“practice guitar”), or send him to other places (“Check Omni email”). He then sets OmniFocus's built-in “Due” perspective to display only those actions that are due today or this week, and that's his default view of the app. As soon as OmniFocus is launched, he's able to see everything he needs to take care of at a glance. Bill also relies on the “Flagged” perspective to only view those tasks which he's flagged as needing to be done sooner than later, but don't have a strict due date.
I like this approach because it really only requires that you set up a bunch of tasks once in order to start making good use of the app. Having a good starting point on a daily basis is probably exactly what I need to be more active with entering and organizing my own information.
Kris, Omni Support Ninja. Kris is a pretty hardcore OmniFocus user, as evidenced by a peek at the long list of tidy folders and actions in his document. His trick for managing all of this information is to set each of his tasks to be reviewed on a specific day per week (you can do this by selecting multiple items and using the Inspect button to configure the date under “Next Review”). He then commits to sitting down every Tuesday morning and using the “Review” perspective to go through all of his projects and to-dos, at which time he re-assesses the status of each action.
Kris tells me this not only helps him keep his document up to date and reflecting reality, but the process of really looking at all of the areas of his life he's managing with OmniFocus helps him realize when certain things are getting out of balance. His point is that we often fall into a trap of putting too much time into one area—our jobs, for instance—without even thinking about it, so there's real value in taking the time to continually assess where our energies are going.
Awesome. I hadn't even thought of that, but what a great side effect of using the program.
I'd love to hear from you folks on this subject. Those of you who are GTD followers or OmniFocus fans, do you have any tips for incorporating task management into your daily life, without making the process itself another odious task? How do you stay committed to the practice?
Did you know you can now reach our support department via phone? If you've got burning questions, dial 206-523-4152 and choose the Support option when the nice robo-voice asks what extension you'd like. You can also press “0” if you'd prefer to bypass the robot system altogether and speak to a soul-bearing entity.
More info on our various support options is here.
SEATTLE, Washington— April 1, 2009—The Omni Group has announced a major update to their web browser, OmniWeb. OmniWeb 5.9.2 is now the only WebKit web browser that offers support for Gopher protocol.
Gopher is a revolutionary network protocol that allows users to search and retrieve items from the Internet such as documents and graphic images. Using Gopher, it's possible to access many types of content over computers: text-based files, mailing lists, even photos.
“Gopher support is something we've been working on for a long time,” said Ken Case, Omni Group CEO. “Now OmniWeb users have the rare opportunity to retrieve data from other servers on the Internet without the complications of using an FTP program. Using nothing more than a simple menu program, users have unprecedented access to the world's information systems. For instance, just today I was able to access a weather report via Gopher, so I knew to bring my umbrella to work. The future is now!”
OmniWeb 5.9.2 is a free download with no licensing restrictions, and the latest version can be found at <http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omniweb/>.
About The Omni Group
One of the first companies to develop software for the Mac OS X platform, the Omni Group is today a leading developer for Apple products and has designed several productivity applications for Mac OS X and iPhone. Founded in 1993, The Omni Group is located in Seattle, Washington.