Organising Work and To Do Lists

Soldato
Joined
29 Jul 2011
Posts
15,603
Location
Near Northants / MK
I'm posting here to get notified...

I'm in a very unfortunate position of primarily handling large projects with other project managers involved, my day-to-day is MS Project alongside Trello but as per your post I've also used things such as Todoist...

I really like Trello for internal tasks...
 
Associate
Joined
17 Oct 2014
Posts
283
Location
10 minutes from OcUK
When I got my first iPhone (the second one they made - the one with 3G), I started looking for To Do applications that eventually sent me down the rabbit hole of the "Getting Things Done" book by David Allen.

My goodness, this really did introduce me to a new way of thinking. I still use many of the principles today, but, having stopped work to move to the homemaker role in 2017, some of it has gone by the wayside a little.

Two of the apps that really struck me back then were Things and Omnifocus. Both were good at what they did, but the Things development team seemed to have some issues at some point, and the user base fell out with them rather, despite (or perhaps partly because of) them winning some Apple design award or other.

Omnifocus it was, then, for a while, but several years ago I switched to Alarmed by Yocotville. As another app reviewer put it, the developer of this has a better understanding of time then most people will ever need.

The only criticism of it I have ever really seen is that it only shows the "next" iteration of repeating tasks, rather than having them laid out ad infinitum. The person criticising this presumably wanted to see how future iterations would affect their calendar.

I love it, and use if for all my repeating tasks.

Hope this helps. I have no connection to any of the developers mentioned; I am just a happy Alarmed customer.
 
Permabanned
Joined
9 Aug 2009
Posts
12,236
Location
UK
Notepad++ for high level work todo list.
Old school paper for personal chores list.
Jira for projects involving teams of people.
I make a google doc for anything significant I work on so I can always look up why I did something a certain way when someone asks me years later. Lost count of how many times this has been clutch.
 
Soldato
Joined
27 Sep 2004
Posts
13,294
Location
Glasgow
I use Asana across the business, great features, nice aesthetics and integrates well with everything, time tracking software, help desk etc etc. My teams would be lost without it, especially under these remote working circumstances.

Its got a free subscription too which is much better than Trello.
 
Associate
Joined
30 Oct 2011
Posts
1,190
Location
Loughborough
I whack everything personal admin related (e.g. haircut, eyebrow wax etc.) in a personal calender Gmail and work stuff in my work one. It means you take the time out to do the job. For long term "to dos" - i.e. planning decorating, purchases etc. I use Todo list but I preferred Wunderlist!

Pro Tip - I have a separate to do list for gift/present ideas which I add to throughout the year and makes Xmas shopping very easy!
 
Soldato
Joined
12 Jul 2007
Posts
7,911
Location
Stoke/Norfolk
At my previous job as a technical Instructor (in Aviation) we would start out with a blank piece of paper and 6 months later we would have mapped out a course, designed it, created all the material and finally taught the entire course, and the entire planning was done using Post-It Notes on a whiteboard in a "Scrum" office for visibility, with once weekly meetings with stake-holders to ensure we had access to all the technical equipment/specialists we needed to complete whatever section of the Post-It Note we were on.

We were a multi-Billion pound international company which carried out training across the world on the use/repair/build our new multi-million pound equipment and we were as "low tech" as using a bit of sticky paper in our office. Whilst it worked it would be a massive failure in our current "WFH due to COVID" times yet when I left in 2018 we still had no plans to transfer to a tech solution "just in case" because "well it's working so far, why change?"
 
Associate
OP
Joined
12 Jun 2018
Posts
41
Thanks guys, all useful. I've played around with Trello and Asana today and like both. Although, revisiting Todoist...I'm not sure why I left. A bit of time spent in IFTT and I have managed to automate some admin I have to do when prospecting leads as well.

Good to see what else other people are doing. I will definitely use Trello or Asana to streamline my next formal RFI/Tender bid though.

Cheers,

Rob
 
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