revisited – David Allen’s killer GTD app

In July 2019, I published a post about an experiment to build a working system as sketched in David Allen’s drawingsThis blog has gotten quite some attention, and I have received many questions. I was also part of some discussions about the concept and feasibility of GTD. I have also posted the links to the used Shortcuts, Applescripts, and Keyboard Maestro macros, which were downloaded a lot.

Because the system has brought and is bringing value to me, I continue innovating the setup. Furthermore, Apple improved iOS/ iPadOS/ MacOS with Shortcuts, Widgets, and many more improvements. On top of that, Drafts 5 and OmniFocus are also progressing continuously (worth the subscription business model). “The way of working” evolved last 1.5 years, and I received some requests to publish the more matured system. I did my best to make this blog post comprehensive as much as possible, but I do believe I must keep trying harder.

How it shows now!

GTD  menu setup
iPhone Home Screen
GTD  menu setup
iPad Home screen
GTD  menu setup
MacBook Home Screen with Keyboard Maestro palette

As you can see, I have the same setup structure on every device. Every device is synchronized with iCloud and Dropbox (the latter for scanned documents and DevonThink) and contains the same information.


It has become somewhat a lengthy post. Below you can click on (underlined/ bold text) the subject of your interest or continue reading the whole post (if you dare):

Index

Guiding principles
My guiding principles for “way of working” with an enabling system are:

I pay great respect and acknowledge used sources but adapt this to my own needs and philosophy, not being dogmatic about it. In the Shortcuts/ Macro’s and Applescripts, you will find the source if I used the concept of “Copy, Improve, Paste” (or so-called the Chinese way). I am grateful to all the wonderful people in the community. However, I am a clumsy programmer. Programming is a real profession, and I am “not fit” for that job

I have written several blog posts to explain some guiding principles further with videos and links to Shortcuts. You can find these by clicking the underlined/bold lines above.

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Way of working keeping simple as possible – ESSA.
I fully embrace the goal to keep the “way of workings” as simple as possible. However, this working method’s enabling system setups are not simply due to the used apps’ rich functionality. The enablers for this way of working are OmniFocus 3 (the heart of the enabling system as task manager), Drafts 5 (for writing), DevonThink 3 (for reference files and knowledge center). I use Shortcuts on iOS/ iPadOS and Keyboard Maestro on macOS and Applescript/ Javascript on both platforms.

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How I translated David Allen’s drawings to my “way of working” in an enabling system

Per sheet in the pile of drawings from David Allen, I will show you an image or video of how I have translated this into my system. I have added links to the building blocks for downloading. Please note that the building blocks are based on the way I have set up OmniFocus with specific Folders, Tags, and Perspectives. (you can find here my OmniFocus setup guide). If you want to re-use the building blocks, please adjust these to your needs in your OmniFocus setup. In the beginning, this is feeling a bit nerdy, but it is not super complex to change it.

I will use the iPad setup of my enabling system to show how it is built. This is a similar setup as on the iPhone and MacBook (the latter with Keyboard Maestro).

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Top menu

GTD killer app - initial view
GTD killer app – Home Screen
iPad Home Screen with dashboard, GTD killer app, calendar commitments and trusted system
iPad menu explained

GTD killer app. All mentioned “menu” blocks of David Allen’s GTD killer app design are build in the top right of the home screen (iPad).

KPI and status on personal effectiveness and efficiency. On the left top and going down, you see KPI’s and the status of my system. This dashboard shows information and KPI’s as shown below (stacked widgets you can scroll). If you want to read more about Dashboarding and access to the Shortcuts, you can read about this here

On the Home Screen, I can view the following items:

  • Time in flight, can I perform the tasks planned for today?
  • Week time, the time I have to spend on meeting and actions (looking back)
  • Week Qty, likewise but now in quantities.
  • Tag division, how much task per Tags
  • Due vs. open tasks
  • Delegation ratio, waiting for vs. own tasks

Below the calendar widget (stack), I have more information about current Tasks:

  • Next actions: an overview of open tasks and which are available. NA are projects without a next action.
  • The 2nd and 3rd widget is the number of tasks per status and required time per status

Calendar commitments. Here, I see my next fixed commitments in the left middle of the screen and direct my calendar events. I use Fantastical.

These widgets’ build is described herein as a separate blog post, including the links to the downloadable Shortcuts and a periodically update widget routine to keep the information up-to-date.

Trusted system. Working with an enabling system is only sticking if it is actual. It is not cumbersome to maintain, avoids any distraction, and you can easily find what you are searching for. The middle part of the home screen is about “keeping it trusted”. I have made a separate blog post about the concept of maintaining a trusted system, here to find.

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In

The GTD killer app design shows a trigger list to put Tasks into your Inbox.

David Allen GTD killer app
GTD killer app – In

I have set up a Reveille process in which, via a questionnaire, I fill the Inbox. Reveille is part of the way I keep the system trusted. If you want to read more about this Reveille process, click here. The Weekly debrief is the most crucial activity in the week, which I perform together with my assistants (who are working in my system, by the way – Omnifocus for the web).

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In process

I have more than one Inbox to process, Tasks (OmniFocus), Notes (Drafts), Documents in the reference file (DevonThink), and Inboxes from several Mailboxes. The Reveille process helps me to collect and process those Inboxes.

David Allen's killer app - Process Inbox
GTD Killer app – Inbox process
iPad Inbox menu
iPad – Inbox menu

The Inbox has been designed into one Shortcut icon (Inbox – menu, click on the picture to enlarge) on the Home Screen and gives several options for processing your Inboxes. The menu is above, and you can download the Shortcut here. Down below, every menu option is described/ demonstrated with links to the appropriated Shortcut.

  • Add to OmniFocus Inbox is an easy step to enter a Task/ Project into the Inbox of OmniFocus and is included in above mention menu Shortcut.
  • The menu option Process OmniFocus Inbox is a routine to process all the Inbox items and is also included in the menu mentioned above.
  • Process DevonThink Inbox opens the DevonThink Inbox directly for processing reference material to the appropriate project. The project structure in DevonThink is equal to OmniFocus project structure and are linked with each other. You can read about this setup here.
  • The option Process Drafts Inbox opens the Drafts 5 Inbox directly, containing all the notes that require further processing. I have written in a separate chapter about Meetings. This chapter is here to find.
  • The options Process VIP mail is opening the VIP inbox in the Mail app, likewise for my other mailboxes. You can download here the Shortcut to open specific mailboxes (need Spark to support this) and adjust this to your setup.

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Project (input)

I have perceived the GTD killer app’s design – Project input as a way to collect ideas/ tasks etc., and put this in a project. Furthermore, as a kind of template for a project template and views of actions within a project. 

David Allens' GTD killer app - Projects
GTD Killer app – project input
iPad GTD menu Projects
iPad – Project menu

The menu is shown above, and you can download the Shortcut here. Below every menu option is explained and, if applicable, demonstrated with links to the appropriate Shortcut for downloading.

  • Project overview in OF asks for which project you want to open OmniFocus. It’s part of the Project menu Shortcut.
  • Cheatsheet – overview of a project asks you for which project you want to show a summary and send an overview to Drafts. I use this when I am meeting to have a quick over a specific project (goals) to complement and or ask questions and know what I still have to do to move this project forward.

The Shortcut, which you can download here, will generate an output in which you can review these specific tasks, agenda events, and note (with links):

  • some project KPI’s
  • goals and results you agreed upon, which
  • next actions are available to do
  • agenda topics for this project you have collected
  • actions you are Waiting for,
  • decisions that need to be operationalized
  • the last 10 (meeting) notes for this project
  • which meetings are planned for this project?

On the right, you see the output. For confidential reasons with some white strikeout sentences ->

Meeting sheet Project
Meeting sheet Project

 

  • The menu option Areas of responsibility – AOR asks which AOR (=folder in OmniFocus setup) you want to view OmniFocus tasks. It is also part of the Project menu Shortcut.
  • The Reference material menu option helps me find reference material directly (the concept of contextual computing) in DevonThink. After selecting which Area of Responsibility and within that which project, it will search in DevonThink for the appropriate reference material. You can download the Shortcut here.
Purpose of projects overview in Drafts5
  • The purpose of the project’s menu item fits in my approach to a value-driven way of working. It selects the Area of Responsibility (AOR) and with which Projects (goals). It generates in Drafts 5 an overview of “purpose per project.” Please find on the right an example of the output, and you can download the Shortcut here.
  • The menu option Outcome of projects works as described above; however, now I can see the agreed outcomes for myself or which I have delegated to others or both. You can download the Shortcut here.
Next action in Area of Responsibility in Drafts 5
  • The next action in AoR (Area of Responsibility) creates an overview of which actions are available to push forward per AOR. It sends the output to Drafts 5, contains the links to individual tasks, and does not have a next action (the project is stopped/ paused/ on hold). Here you can download the Shortcut.

 

  • The menu option Next action per project works as above but now per project. The shortcut can be downloaded here.
Waiting for in Area of responsibility in Drafts 5
  • Waiting for.. in AoR is listing all tasks where you are waiting for completion (delegated) with the selected Area of Responsibility. You can download this Shortcut here.
  • The menu option Waiting for.. in Project has the same dialogue as above. It shows all the Tasks you have delegated in a specific project, with links to the specific tasks. Please find here the Shortcut.

 

  • The option New project – based on a template refers to switch to the MacBook. There is a script which copies, based on a template of choice, a project. I have written about this here.

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Projects

I have combined this concept of the Killer app design in the above menu.

David Allens' GTD killer app - Projects
GTD killer app – Projects
iPad menu Projects
iPad – Project menu

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Next Actions

I use it mostly for projects, the sequential setup. Some projects require discipline, where tasks must be performed in a specific order. Others allow you to mix things up. OmniFocus handles these different scenario’s with:

sequential , parallel , and single action project types.

Sequential projects are those that require tasks to be performed in a specific order. A good example would be drinking tea. You have to boil the water and add boiled water and the tea bag into a glass. You can’t start drinking until after you’ve to finish previous actions. There could be dependency grouping in tasks for parallel projects but not first “to do things.” Single actions lists are what the name means.

The significant advantage of sequential project setup is that if you work with views set to First available or Available, you see only these tasks, which moves a project forward, no clutter from other tasks. I prefer sequential projects as intended in GTD killer app design, and it keeps it more simple.

David Allens' GTD killer app - Next actions
GTD Killer app – Next actions
iPad menu - next actions
iPad – Next actions

The next actions (NA) are in my system part of the Project menu. It is split into the NA’s in a specific Area of Responsibility (here) or within a Project (here).

The Clear perspective is showing all the actions which are actionable (First Available actions). The setup is explained here. I use the Reveille, Weekly debrief and Closure routines to keep the system trusted and perform the activities as indicated in the GTD killer app – drawing for the next actions.

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Persons

The concept of Persons is to see what is happening on a personal – level. What to discuss (agenda topics), waiting for, involved in which projects and points of interest, with the ability to write notes and process these notes into your trusted system.

GTD killers app - Persons
GTD killer app – Persons
iPad - overview of Persons in OmniFocus
iPad – Persons

I use a Perspective called Person, and the setup can be found here. You view agenda topics, waiting for’s, what projects this Person is working on, which goals, which outcomes are agreed upon, and what I have to do together with this Person. However, this is not fitting in the concept of contextual computing, so we have extended this. I have created an extra menu option called Waiting for, which can be downloaded here.

Waiting for – I have several tools to prepare for a meeting with a person. The meeting cheat sheet – person helps create an overview in Drafts, amongst others with Waiting for tasks.

The Waiting for menu on the home screen contains three options:

1) Waiting for due, 2) Waiting for and not due and 3) Waiting for in Area of Responsibility.

Click on the underlined text/ bold to see the Perspective set up and or download Shortcuts.

Agenda topics – If I prepare meeting notes before the meeting, I retrieve all agenda topics for this meeting and put them in Drafts’ meeting notes. See below the Meetings section for further explanation. I can also send an email to the person before the conversation to prepare and not be surprised. See below the setup of this.

Goals – On the meeting cheat sheet, I can view all agreed goals. Realizing outcome and impact is the central part of my job, so I need to frequently set up Goals and track progress. I have created a separate menu for Goals. The conceptual thinking about goals, outcome, and impact is as follows:

From Purpose to Goals to Outcome and Impact
From goal to outcome and impact

If you are interested in the concept of “creating value,” I refer you to this blog post here.

On the left, you see the menu Goalshere to download. You can select your own goals per area of responsibility, the goals you have delegated, and an overall view.

Because of confidentiality, I have collapsed and blacked out some information. By clicking on the specific views (underlined/ bold), you can download the Shortcuts.

Processing – I generate from every meeting/ discussion short notes. These notes are stored in Drafts, and either direct or in the Reveille process, I process this note in tasks/ decisions. See also below, Meetings section.

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Someday/ maybe

I think David intends to overview someday/ maybe tasks and a trigger process to go through the tasks and add new ones.

David Allen's GTD killer app - Someday maybe
GTD Killer app – Someday/ Maybe
iPad - Someday Maybe
iPad – Someday/ Maybe

Overview. The concept is quite simple and can be viewed from a Perspective. Someday Maybe tasks are “put on hold,” not cluttering your available or remaining tasks overview. Please find here the menu Someday maybe, which opens the perspective. The setup of the perspective can be found here.

Someday maybe list

Trigger process. In the “Weekly debrief process,” I have a routine to go through a trigger list, which sends OmniFocus tasks after completion of filling in the trigger list. It is split up into work and privacy related questions and can be done in Dutch and English. The output goes in the Inbox to decide what to do with this or put it on the Someday/ maybe list. Because I cannot always add projects (goals) to tasks, I have a separate “on hold” project under Someday/ Maybe folder. See the picture on the right. Please find here the ShortCut for the trigger process.

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Tickler

I am not quite sure what David’s ideas were on this sheet. It involves a tickler file with events/ notes and can be connected to persons and linked to a Calendar event.

David Allen's GTD killer app - Tickler file
GTD Killer app – Tickler
DevonThinks - tickler file
iPad – Ticker file as part of Reference materials

I am using DevonThink for the storage of all documents. The reference database structure is equal to OmniFocus’s setup (Area of responsibilities/ folders – Projects). You can read here how I link OmniFocus with DevonThink.

Tickler file

The Tickler file consists of the 12 months and within every month the days. When I receive meeting materials per mail, I (mostly my assistances) put these in the folder equal to the meeting date.

I have a Keyboard Maestro script periodically running on my MacBook, which moves all the content from previous days back to the Inbox tickler file to move these to the appropriate project folder after the meeting during the Reveille process. You can download the script here

Documents that other people or I have to (re-)work on can be copied to OmniFocus inbox as tasks you can Tag for yourself or delegate.

DevonThink to do to OmniFocus
Add as to Do to OmniFocus
Due time
Date selection

These scripts are part of the standard functionality in DevonThink, and you can adjust this to your needs.

I am working completely paperless. If I receive a document, it will be scanned by a FUJITSU Image Scanner ScanSnap iX500. The scans are OCR’ed and placed in a folder on Dropbox. I use Hazel to rename the files to my taxonomy and place the files in the appropriate Inbox in DevonThink for further processing. 

In meetings, I use only my iPad with the one side on the screen Drafts 5 opened (notes) and the other side DevonThink ticker file with the documents. If I have questions about a document, I have annotated these documents with the questions I want to ask or remarks I want to make.

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Meetings

The idea I get from David’s design is that this screen shows everything you want to know, do/ say in a specific meeting, and the ability to process the outcome in your enabling system.

David Allen's GTD killer app - Meetings
GTD killer app – Meetings
iPad meeting menu
iPad – Meeting menu

About 70% of my time, I am “on meetings.” I am always looking for ways to minimize this time, but this remains a struggle. My current working way helps me be more efficient and effective in meetings (most of the time, I am really prepared). I try to determine for every meeting what the goals are and the expected outcome. If I cannot formulate one or it is not applicable for now, I cancel the meeting.

I have extended David’s concept with a 1) preparation phase, 2) conducting phase, and 3) processing phase. Please find here the menu Meeting menu Shortcut and below every menu item with a short explanation, sometimes a video, and downloadable Shortcuts and Perspectives.

1) Preparation of meeting

Plan preparing for a meeting. Some meetings do not need a lot of preparation, but others could need “in-depth” preparation. I prefer to identify these meetings in the Reveille process. I have a Shortcut that creates preparation tasks in OmniFocus if required. After selecting the meeting, you want to prepare two things that will happen:

Prepare now a meeting works as above and collect meeting topics and create a concept meeting note directly. It is also used in Drafts 5 to generate concept meeting notes for a specific meeting as you need them immediately. The Shortcut can be found here.

Add or delete meeting topics. I have set up in OmniFocus periodically meetings and meetings per project. The tag “📅 Agenda” I use for collecting meeting topics I want to discuss and or hear about. This tag is used in the above “preparation of the meeting,” meeting notes to draft meeting notes before meetings automatically containing the topics I want to discuss. This Shortcut here opens OmniFocus and asking where to put a new meeting topic (project/ person (tag)/ specific meeting (tag).

Send 1 on 1 meeting topics. I have 1:1 meetings (Bila’s) with people in my team but also chairing Group meetings. Every periodical meeting has its tag within groups. The Meeting prep tag I use to add a meeting topic what I want to achieve with this topic. I need to do this because I cannot always recall what the intention was for a topic. See also OmniFocus setup guide here. 

The Shortcut, here, will ask for which person you want to send “meeting topics to discuss,” if you’re going to review the topics first, you can do this, in which language the mail should be drafted and then prepares the mail for you, which you can check/ change before sending. Please see the above video.

The menu item Send availability is useful if somebody wants to schedule a meeting and ask when available. Please see the short video on the left. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

Meeting cheat sheet – person. Before a meeting, I would like to have an overview of things related to a specific person.

Drafts 5 meeting sheet Person

Things like on which goals is he/ she working on, which agenda topics do I want to discuss, which results is he/she working on, which decisions did we take and what is the status of implementing/ getting these into effect, which meetings I have with this person the coming 14 days and which notes I have where he/ she is mentioned.

The output goes into Drafts 5, and I can use this as a cheatsheet. The Shortcut can be downloaded here and the output is on the right.

Meeting cheat sheet – project is working as above, but you view it not on person-level but on project level. You can download the Shortcut here

Do not disturb. It will ask you the period to switch off (until turned off, until events end, or until a specific time). If you chose the end of an event, it asks you for which calendar event and will set the end-time until the event. See below.

2) Conducting meetings

There is a lot of stuff written about how to conduct a meeting successfully. I will not go into this. Everybody has his way which will suit him/ her. I have three things that help me a lot with conducting meetings to share this with you.

  1. The menu option Activate “do not disturb” silences all my equipment for the meeting duration. I often forget this, or if I switched off my gear, I fail to switch them on again. This Shortcut here is helping me with this.
  1. Writing notes. In my style of working is an aspiration that I want “speed” for myself and others. Therefore I want to send meeting notes on the same day to the attendees. Sometimes the meeting notes are drawn up by the personal assistant (meetings with a larger group of people), but I will do it myself for the 1 on 1 meeting. (the personal assistant will do processing). I use my iPad or iPhone for this. On my iPad, I work with a split-screen. On one side the meeting note in Drafts 5, and on the other side of the screen, my reference folder with tickler for today containing all the presentations/ memo’s for this meeting.

My ideal way of working is:

  • Use of a standard template
  • It retrieves the meeting/ event information from the calendar event (the notes sections)
  • It gives me the possibility to select the meeting topic I have for this meeting (Person or Project)
  • It gets the attendees from the meeting/ event information (and the absentees)
  • I can put the actions and decisions in there and being able to transfer these automatically to OmniFocus.
  • All the meeting material is stored in one folder, which I can retrieve/ read easily.
  • Before the meeting, I can see in my calendar app if my assistant or I prepared the meeting note’s first concept.

I can achieve these “standards” by using Drafts 5, Shortcuts, Fantastical/ Calendar, and OmniFocus. Please find below the template and how it shows after processing. I use Markdown syntaxis, so it formats correctly in mail or Word or any other app.

Drafts 5 template for meetings
Template meeting minutes

 

Drafts 5 output meeting template
Formatted meeting note

 

  1. I have turned my iPad/ iPhone into an efficient capture device. I have generated a particular group of “Meeting keys” shown in Drafts 5 above the keyboard (see below). It holds the keys I often use to write notes, here to download, and by double-clicking, it will be installed in Drafts 5.
Meeting keys in Drafts 5
Meeting keys in Drafts 5

3) Processing meetings

The processing of meeting notes is done either by myself or my personal assistant. If your assistant works in the same (system) environment as you, it is easy. The processing process is straight forward:

  1. Format the concept note neatly and check spelling and grammar
  2. Tag the Drafts for searching and structuring
  3. Process action/ tasks into OmniFocus with a link back to this note
  4. Process decision as tasks into OmniFocus with a link back to this note
  5. Store in the reference file

or 6. Ask the personal assistant to do the actions 1 to 5.

Draft 5 is “the central hub” for conducting and processing meetings. It works on the iPad, iPhone, and MacBook. Below you can see the action group I use to process meetings. You can download the Action group here and import it in Drafts 5 by double-clicking on it.

Drafts5 meeting minutes workflow

If I have finished a meeting, I mostly end up with notes. These notes are being processed via a workflow and follow the principles of contextual computing.

Step 0a -> c are not intended for processing meeting notes but creating meeting notes with cheat sheets (being prepared) if you did not already do this in the Reveille process.

0a. Prepare meeting notes in Drafts – Also captured above, here.

0b. Meeting cheat sheet cheat person – Shows all the goals, result streams, projects, actions per selected person.

0c. Meeting cheat sheet project. Same as 0b. but per project.

  1. Check if a) the note is orderly formatted, b) the content okay, and c) tag the draft
  2. Mail the meeting notes
  3. All the sentences commencing with “@” copy to a) OmniFocus, b) MS Planner (Teams environment), c) sentences beginning with “🔨” decisions are being logged in Omnifocus in decision log/ register
  4. Store the Meeting notes in the corresponding reference folder in DevonThink
  5. If I do not have time to perform myself actions 1 -> 4 my Personal Assistant will be asked to process the meeting note (send mail and add waiting for task for PA)

Please find below the links to Actiongroups and Shortcuts I use:

  1. The action group for Drafts 5, here
  2. 0a. Prepare meeting notes in Drafts, Shortcut Notes in Drafts for today, here
  3. 0b. Meeting cheat Person, Shortcut, here
  4. 0c. Meeting cheat Project, Shortcut here
  5. 1a. Make Markdown Line Breaks, included in 1.
  6. 1b. Markdown Preview -Swiss, included in 1.
  7. 1c. Tag the Drafts, included in 1.
  8. 2. iPad – Mail meeting minutes, included in 1.
  9. 3a. OmniFocus tasks with link-back, included in 1.
  10. 3b. Planner (with link to notes), included in 1.
  11. 3c. Decision log tasks with link-back, included in 1.
  12. 4. Send to DevonThink, included in 1.
  13. 5. Mail to PA for processing, included in 1.

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Communications

I have interpreted David’s design as a list to whom to communicate and via which communication channel. It also indicates that you can add meeting topics to a scheduled event in your calendar.

David Allen's GTD killer app - Communications
GTD Killer app – Communications
iPad - Communication menu
iPad – Communication menu

The Shortcut which creates the Communication menu can be downloaded here. Please find below a short description of every menu item. Plus links to the downloads of the ShortCuts and some videos demonstrating the functionality.

Add to the communication list in OF is a straight forward entry of a communication action to OmniFocus’s communication list. It will ask for the person you want to communicate to, via which channel you can add to a specific project if this has to be done at a specific time. It will ask for the subject and add this to OmniFocus with the contact’s particular details. The Shortcut can be downloaded here

iPad - overview of communications to do

The menu item Overview of communication to do generates a comprehensive list of communication tasks on hand. It starts a Perspective in OmniFocus. The setup of this perspective can you view here. For confidentiality reasons, I have collapsed the list.

Add to the meeting topic list, as demonstrated on the right, ask for the topic title, whom you want to communicate, what you want (give information, get information, etc.). It will also request to add it to a specific project or not, is it time-specific communication, the duration of the topic, and this to OmniFocus. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

The menu item Send email starts up a dialogue for the mail and send a mail.

It has a preferred structure for the mail: background, goal/ question, approach/ steps, planning/ due date. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

The menu options Send Whatsapp will be based on the device it is running on sends a Whatsapp via either CardHop (iPad) or directly in Whatsapp (iPhone). This is already included in the Shortcut menu.

Call a Person will open CardHop and allow you to place a direct call after selecting the person you want to call. Likewise for FaceTime

MS Teams call and Zoom call will open the MS Teams app or Zoom app. Tweet will open Tweetbot app.

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Area of Focus

David Allen’s design indicates that you have an overview of Goals and objectives, the next actions within these Goals, and Someday maybe lists and Routines and reminders.

David Allen's GTD killer app - Area of focus
GTD killer app – Area of focus
iPad - Area of focus
iPad – Area of focus

I have designed this for myself differently. You can read here the conceptual thoughts about Goals -> Input -> Output -> Outcome and Impact. My way of working has an aspiration to create Value, not only achieve Goals. Goals are “only” a means to create an Outcome and Impact; if divided by costs for this effort, you have the Value. 

See the below picture. Because of confidentially reasons, I have collapsed my list. Still, with this “simple” OmniFocus Perspective, I create an overview of a specific goal, which outcome this goal must deliver, including all next actions to deliver this outcome. In my Perspective on Next Actions, I am also working Goal and Outcome directed. The Perspective can be found here.

Perspective in OmniFocus overview of Area of Focus

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Reference material

The design is mentioning a filing cabinet for project-related “stuff.”

David Allen's killer app - Reference list
GTD killer app – Reference lists
iPad DevonThink's reference material
iPad – Reference file

I am using the DevonThink tool for storing a Reference database. It also included the Tickler file. You can read here how I have set this up. The reference file structure is the same as in OmniFocus, and projects are linked with folders, so you can jump from project in OmniFocus directly to the project reference material in DevonThink and vice-versa.

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Weekly debrief

The design shows data dump, inbox processing, future commitment in the calendar, project reviews, waiting for, and routines for clearing/ getting actual.

David Killers app - weekly debrief
GTD killer app – weekly debfriefing
iPad - Weekly debrief
iPad – Weekly debrief as part of trusted system

As you can see above, the Weekly debrief is part of the middle screen, meaning the “keeping the system trusted” area. I have written a separate blog post about the Weekly debriefing process, which can be read here.

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Coaching messages

If I interpreted the design correctly, it means that the enabling and trusted system is giving you warning signs if it is not “sane” anymore. For example, you have put an action on the calendar where the activities themselves do not have a due date (commitment).

David Allen's GTD killer app - Coaching messages
GTD killer app – coaching messages

As the beating heart of the enabling system, OmniFocus has built-in its user interface all kinds of “coaching messages.” In the OmniFocus preferences, you can set a lot of “triggers” on coaching messages:

  • When the Inbox will be cleared, in my case, when a task has a Tag and a Project.
  • Which notification you want and when.
  • Settings to define “due soon” and other time notifications
  • With the Time in Flight perspective, I am also checking if a duration time has been set. (see Reveille process, here). The Weekly debrief has also some “check and balances” build in.
  • ………

Please find in above short video, the iPad settings and the way I have setup “the coaching messages”.

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Coaching models

In David’s design of the GTD killer app, it seems that he anticipated that the enabling system would support you with processing information through the system in a workflow. The example shows the Inbox processing process. It is close to the concept of using “checklists.”

David Allen's GTD killer app - coaching models
GTD killer app – coaching models

As the beating heart of my enabling system, OmniFocus does not have workflows build in, but your sequential tasks lists can be functioning as workflow items (but you do not have “if this, then that” steps). If you process 100’s of tasks per week through your system, I believe that all these questions/ coaching messages are annoying. You know the criteria and decisions you need to make already. I will show you three examples of “coaching models” in my enabling system.

  1. In the Reveille and Closure process (which are coaching models also), I use a checklist that is easily accessible and stored in Drafts. Please find below the link into the Inbox processing tasks with a link to a checklist if I can remember how to do this correctly.
Link to checklist
Link to coaching model Inbox processing
Checklist in Drafts5
The actual coaching question

 

  1. Preparing for a specific meeting is also a “coaching model” type of workflow where I process nine questions to be fully ready for a meeting. I have explained here how this is working.
  2. I have separate folders and projects with checklists, f.e. how to prepare for a conference call/ webinar.
Overview of checklists

Do you see the possibilities for creating your coaching messages? It can be significant. But if you do something often, coaching is not always needed.

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The end of the beginning of a beautiful day.

Dashboarding – how well are you doing?

Creating value for an organization and in my private life is my core business. Therefore, I have designed my “way of working” according to my value creation principles and build a trusted and enabling system to support my work. But one thing was still missing…

Are my goals still valid? Do I have the Outcome in line with my Goals? How many tasks are available? Am I on top of my commitments? Did I delegate enough to my team? Is my system still trusted etc.? All relevant questions. To get the answers, I have to open every app. My task lists (in OmniFocus), my notes (in Drafts 5), my commitments (in my Fantastical calendar), and my documents in the reference folder (In DevonThink) are in a “black box.”But now, no longer anymore…

Last year Apple introduced iOS 14 and iPadOs 14 widgets. You can enjoy customizing the look of your iPhone and or iPad. I like that this has let users feel a closer connection to their technology.

At the first release of the widgets’ concept, I wondered what I could do with this functionality. Is it too nerdy for me? At the same time, I embraced the concept of contextual computing, which made it possible to navigate my devices directly to the point where I want to do something without opening apps and any distraction within these apps. See my blog post here.

I have embraced the concept, and I am now using a couple of widgets. I am a huge fan of Scotty Jackson’s work, and I have altered some of his builds to my needs. So if I want to know how I am doing, I look on the Home Screen of my iPhone or iPad and see how it looks below.:

The iPhone

On the top with “+,” I can enter a journal entry or tasks directly. Write a note in Drafts, refresh “Get to it” or refresh the Rings.

I use the Rings to identify progress on “due tasks,” progress on “Waiting for and due” and how I am doing with keeping the system “trusted.” Get to It, contains my today’s next actions list (due, flagged, and available tasks).

When I swipe to the left, my second dashboard appears. I see how many tasks I have in the Inbox with Count and function. How many tasks for today, how many communication tasks still are pending, and how many notes in my Drafts Inbox to process. On the second row, I can open my calendar directly, enter a task or journal entry, open OmniFocus, or refresh Show up or refresh this widget.

Show up shows all pending calendar commitments for today. And below, you will find a widget stack where you can scroll graphs on how much processed this week, how I spend my time on tasks and meetings, how much time I have, to do the tasks which are planned for today, division of priorities, due vs. open, delegation ratio.

On the iPad, I use a similar concept, shown below:

iPad – dashboard

How it shows – stacked widgets

The available Shortcuts

I have 15 Shortcuts that are building up the widgets on the dashboards. Please find below the overview and links to the Shortcut for downloading. These Shortcuts are based on how I have set up my OmniFocus, which you can read here. If you want to reuse the Shortcuts, you need to adjust to your setup. So, I give you the links to the Shortcuts for inspiration only.

01. Day widgets

OmniDay quantity shows today’s tasks and can be downloaded here.

OmniDay time shows the same, but now in duration minutes, it can be downloaded here.

OmniDay NA shows the next actions per Total, First available, Available, and projects where no NA’s are identified (project are stalled). The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

Charty Omni Rings shows the tasks “due before tomorrow” as total and how much you have completed today so far. Same for “waiting for and due.” Trusted is about how many actions I have completed of the total tasks at hand for checking that the system remains trusted. See the blog post about the concept of a trusted enabling system. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

02. Week widgets

Omniweek Qty gives me an overview of the tasks (purple) and meetings (red) I have completed. The star is today and then goes back six days. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

OmniWeek Time does the same but now not reporting in quantity but in time (duration time of meeting and tasks in minutes). Here to download.

03. Dashboard widgets

Dashboard. I have a different dashboard setup on iPhone vs. iPad. So I am running a device depending on Shortcut first and then runs either the iPad or iPhone version. It shows (left to right) on row 1. number of Inbox items, Today’s next actions, Waiting for and due, number of notes in Drafts Inbox. 

  1. The second row, opening Calendar, Inbox, Today next actions, my Journal and refreshing this Dashboard.
  • Dashboard device dependence here
  • Dashboard iPhone here
  • Dashboard iPad here

The header widget is the widget on top of the iPhone. You can easily add a task, write a note in Draft 5, refresh this dashboard, and refresh Omni Rings. You can download the Shortcut here.

The get to it widget shows my “Today next action” list. You can download the Shortcut here.

04. Status widgets

Delegation ratio indicates how much of my total task on hand I have delegated to my team. It shows how I am leading. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

Due vs. Open indicates how many “burning” actions I have, compared with total tasks. The Shortcut can be downloaded here.

Tag division helps me assess, using the Eisenhower matrix, how the divisions are between f.e. “1. important and urgent”. If everything is Important and Urgent, I have to recalibrate my thinking (and doing). (OmniFocus setup – Tags). You can download the Shortcut here.

Before starting every day in the Reveille process, I determine if I have scheduled my tasks for today in a manner that fits in my available time. It shows the total amount of working minutes for this day and how much I will spend in meetings. So you can determine how much time is available. I summarize the duration time of tasks for today to see how much time is remaining in the day for “other stuff.” In this example, nothing and need to extend my day or take actions from my today’s next action list. The Shortcut can be downloaded here

How to achieve that information is actual?

All content in the widgets is being created by running a Shortcut. In the Shortcuts app, you can schedule specific Shortcuts in the Automation section of the Shortcut app.

Apple has added the option to run a Shortcut silently, which allows you to run automation even if the device is locked. “Ask Before Running should be switched on.”

To update all my widgets, I have created one Shortcut called Update widget routine. This routine is running all the 15 shortcuts at 00:00 and every two hours next. Please note that Automation scheduling is (for me) not synchronizing between iPhone and iPad, so you have to set this up twice. On the iPhone, I start at 01:00 and every two hours next. You can download the Shortcut here.

David Allen’s killer GTD app system brought into practice

  • Update of this post you can find: here

GTD’ers who attended the GTD Summit in Amsterdam know it . During the Summit @DavidAllen unveiled some of his sketches of the killer GTD app user interface and later he send it to the GTD community.

I was able to (copy) build the setup as indicated in the drawings of David Allen at the GTD summit and I do think it comes close to the concept of David Allen. It is working on iPhone, iPad and iMac (the first two with Shortcuts and the latter with Keyboard Maestro).

I am now working for a couple of weeks with this setup and I am very satisfied with the project because it brought me back “to the roots” and made my system and daily work process much more simple. One of the general ideas of a GTD system is to keep it simple but somewhere I lost this concept. However the view and use is simple, setting it up is more complex.

I am opening this threat in the hope that you users will share your setups so I can continuous improve my setup with your ideas and suggestions. The structure is that I start with the screen print of David Allen, then show how I implemented this and share some links and screen prints for “the building blocks”. With many thanks to David Sparks, Tim Stringer, Rosemary Orchard any many others for sharing their ideas. Yes, I used the concept of “copy, improve and paste” many times and I want to give tributes to those who helped and or inspired me.

The basic setup

Using standard apps, connected with each other by Shortcuts on iPad/ iPhone and on the iMac by Keyboard Maestro (check the excellent Field Guide of MacSparky) and using Omnifocus as the central system to hold everything together. I use the following apps (both in iOS and OSX):

  • Omnifocus 3 Pro (the heart of the system);
  • DevonThink Pro Office and DevonThink to go (reference files and Tickler file). DevonThink is connected/ linked with Omnfocus and vice versa via an enhanced script from Rob Trew by “unlocked2412
  • Drafts 5 for meeting processing;
  • Shortcuts on the iPad for automating workflows and screens on iOS;
  • Keyboard Maestro for automating workflows and start screen on OSX;
  • Fantastical for agenda and commitments;
  • Standard Apple mail app with Sanebox keeping me “sane” and SmallCube’s Mailtags and MailActon for “Waiting for” filing in Omnifocus or adding Invoices to “To Pay” tag. It is connected with the Omnifocus projects so the same “Project – Area of responsibilities” structure exists in my mail as in Omnifocus.
  • I also use TextExpander for some text snippets.

The master/ initial current view – screen of David Allen:

How it shows on the iPad:

How it shows on the iMac (Global macro pallet):

A quick overview how I did accomplish this

The main building block to create and maintain “a trusted” system is the use of 2 daily routines and one weekly routine, in Omnifocus

  1. Reveille to start the day with the daily trigger list of David Allen.
  2. Daily closure routine.
  3. I also build the Weekly debrief in Omnifocus with, amongst others, Rosemary Orchards’ weekly Triggerlist shortcuts.

The set up more detailed

  • Using iPadOS 13 beta but also build it om my iPhone running iOS 12.4
  • Using the widgets on home screen to see my calendar commitments and Today’s actions.
  • I hyper-schedule my today tasks on my calendar, inspired by MacSparky, where Keyboard Master script from Rosemary Orchard is updating my calendar with the task commitments every hour, so my Calendar is showing these commitments also.
  • Using Omnifocus perspectives for creating the views Projects/ Today next actions/ Waiting for/ Meeting preps/ Communications/ Focus areas and Goals, close to the design of DA drawings.
  • Using Shortcuts for creating icons, displaying the Omnifocus perspectives.
  • Using Drafts 5 for meetings, where with the help of shortcuts I create meetings from the calendar (with notes displaying the OF task and “waiting for” lists, with templates from TextExpander and “automatically” process the “next actions” and “waiting for” to the Omnifocus Inbox.
  • Using DevonThink (togo) for my reference and tickler file. I have used Rob Trew adjusted scripts to link projects to reference folder/ projects in OmniFocus with links.
  • I use Curt Clifton script for project templates on OSx and Rosemary shortcuts Project templates on iOS.

The Omnifocus setup is the core of the GTD system. Hence I will explain the outline of my OmniFocus setup. Any other setup will also work so, use it as you like. Please find below the Projects (Area of Responsibilities) and the Tags which are convenient for me:

Projects – areas of responsibilities

In the folder Assignments/ Work and Private I have for every commitment a project setup with at least one action to move it forward. Routines is keeping the system trusted and Checklist is what it is called and in Templates I have set up standard projects which I can copy with the help of Curt Clifton’s script “Populate template placeholders”

Tags – context driven actions

I will explain per group why and when I use which context/ tag.

  • Priority/ prioriteit: The most used is Priority (95% of the time) where I use the Eisenhower Matrix to be on top what really matters for me;
  • Communication: mostly I can do a communication action immediately so these lists do not contain many actions (apply the 2 minutes rule);
  • KanBan: I am testing the Kanboard from Jan-Yves Ruzick (it is great, you can also let OmniFocus create Kanban Boards for you);
  • Energy: I am not using this very often, I think I will drop these in the next review of my system;
  • Persons/ Personen is holding the names of the people or groups I work together. This is for making/ holding agenda items per person or groups. I also personalise “Waiting for” with an extra Person tags;
  • Plaats/ Place: not used often because I have always a device nearby to work on;
  • Administration is for holdings records for payments on due date, administrative things like submit taxes etc. Also a grocery list.
  • Routines: holding all the checklists items and daily/ weekly routines. Please note that the status is “paused” so not showing in available actions.
  • Agenda: holding per “standard” meeting the following items:
    • Purpose of this meeting
    • Info to give
    • Info to get
    • Options to explore
    • Choices to make
  • Waiting for: holding delegated tasks with or without an agreed deadline. Tag is also paused.
  • Horizon is showing the “horizon of focus”:
Horizon of focus
Horizon of focus
  • Someday maybe / misschien een keer: holding ideas and suggestions
  • With this basic setup I can work as intended in David Allen’s GTD killer app. If you are interested in the details of the set up, please keep reading and find below the details and links to the Shortcuts, Keyboard Maestro macro’s and Apple scripts.

    The detailed outline of the set up

    At the end of this article you will find a link to all Shortcuts and Keyboard Maestro’s macros and the Apple scripts I use to let these apps together and making it “one system”. Please tailor it to your needs and requirements. With many thanks to all the wonderful people who delivered these scripts to the community and the inspiration they gave.

    Before I dive deeper in the screens of David Allen I want to show you the two main daily routines which are “the glue” holding all the screens together, making it “one system”, making the system consistent and making/ keeping the system trusted. If I show you the steps you probably will think “that is very cumbersome to do every morning”, but actually the Reveille process is costing me around 15 minutes per day. A minor investment to be prepared for the day.

    The Reveille – every start of the day

    If your energy levels in the evening are better you can also do this at the end of the day. The list consist of 14 steps, high level the following steps:

    • Process Document Inboxes to zero
    • What is on your mind/ daily trigger list, put it in your system
    • Process OmniFocus Inbox to zero
    • Determine what to do today
    • Plan travel time in your agenda
    • See how much time is left and hyper schedule these tasks
    • Follow up on the people you are “Waiting on” so you can move forward

    The daily morning routine is as following:

    • 02.Check which meetings to prepare has a link to a very helpful Shortcut from Rosemary Orchard. You select which meetings needs to be prepared and is adding the tasks to the Omnifocus Inbox with due date 2 days prior to the start of the meeting. It shows as follows after processing the Shortcut:
    • 03.Plan travel time in agenda has also a link to a very helpful Shortcut from Rosemary Orchard. You select which meeting require travel time and if this is “to there” and or “back” and puts the time you entered prior and or after the meeting.
    • 04.5 Hyper schedule the task is very simple. On the iPad I open the perspective Today – next actions and on the right side Fantastical. I move the tasks from OF into the time slot in Fantastical. This gives a realistic view of what you really can accomplish.
    • 05.Prepare meeting reference materials for today and tomorrow is checking if I have all meetings materials (presentations, meeting minutes etc.) in the Tickler file for the meeting I have today (See below the setup of the Tickler file).

    The Daily closure – celebrating every day what you have accomplished

    It is an abbreviate morning routine and shows as following:

    David’s design of the Killer GTD app – screen for screen

    Please find below the detailed information of the screens of David Allen’s design and how I build this into my system, mostly OmniFocus.

    The Inbox

    The screen of David Allen:

    • The daily trigger list is build in the Daily morning routine “Reveille”

    How it shows on the iPad: The icon starts a Shortcut to show the Omnifocus Inbox perspective and shows the Inbox:

    How: It is very simple Shortcut:

    Projects

    Projects are the GTD concept “area of focus”. The screen of David Allen:

    For setting up a project I use in OmniFocus a project template using variables for the inputs and use Curt Clifton’s script “Populate template placeholders” to use the inputs David Allen is suggesting.

    Next Actions

    The inspiration screen from David Allen:

    How it shows on the iPad (equal on iMac). I have collapsed the list because I cannot share the work I need to do because it is containing client information.

    How I have set this up:

    I use a Clear list (perspective in Omnifocus) showing all “actionable items” I have. If I do not want to work on a task I defer the start date with a simple “push on the button” executing an Apple script. Due dates are for “external commitments” I have made to others (they cannot change unless I communicate/ agree about this).

    • Items that are becoming “due soon” are automatically shown in the “Today next Actions” view.
    • The items which I have decided to work on in my daily “Reveille-routine” are flagged and therefore also showing on the Today – next actions list.

    Please find below the perspective “Clear list”:

    • The “7 tags” are:
    • The 3 folders are Assignment, Work and Private (from Area of Focus / Projects)

    Please find below the perspective “Today – next actions”:

    • The “3 tags” are:
    • The 3 folders are Assignment, Work and Private (from Area of Focus / Projects)

    Persons

    The inspiration from David Allen:

    How I implemented this, using “Waiting for” list and Meeting Prep” list. I had to use two different OmniFocus perspectives to build this screen.

    • Waiting for persons/ team” How it shows on the iMac (equal on the iPad), collapsed view because of protecting the privacy of my clients:
    • Meeting prep” How it shows on the iMac (equal on the iPad)How it reads: From Fred I need to get info from the Tender board and need to receive a status from a delegated task to Fred

    Please find below the perspective “Waiting for due” perspective:

    Please find below the perspective “Meeting prep” perspective:

    • The 2 tags are:

    Someday / maybe

    The inspiration from David Allen:

    How I implemented this, using a Someday / maybe perspective in OmniFocus:

    Please find below the perspective “Someday maybe”

    Tickler

    The inspiration from David Allen:

    I am using DevonThink Pro Office on the iMac and DevonThink Togo on the iPad with great syncing functionality. If I setup an “area of responsibility” I create a new project in OmniFocus and use the script from Rob Trew/ enhanced by “unlocked2412”. In this way the Are of responsibilities match exactly the Folders in DevonThink.:

    The script, started in OmniFocus, creates a folder in DevonThink and generates a link to the DevonThink folder, put an OmniOutliner document in this folder for drafts and a link back to the OmniFocus project:

    In OmniFocus showing in the note section of the Project the following information, a link to folder or note of the reference folder in DevonThink:

    The Tickler file is a 43 folder set up in DevonThink and shows as follows:

    All the documents I need in a meeting or event are put in the folder on the day I need them. I have a script running in Keyboard Maestro to move every day the documents from yesterday day to the “ Inbox Tickler so in the morning “Reveille” routine I am cleaning up/ processing these documents.

    Meetings

    The inspiration of David Allen:

    This is how it shows in Drafts:

    I am using OmniFocus to hold/ capture the agenda for a meeting (Info to give, Info to get, Options to explore, Choices to make). In a preparation of a meeting (triggered in the Reveille routine in Omnifocus) I transfer these items to note section of the agenda item in Calendar app. The “meeting prep” perspective is used again for this. I am using the following TextExpander snippet for this:

    I have one snippet for team meetings and one for “one to one” meetings.

    The meeting process:
    1. Prior to the meeting I use 0. Prepare meeting notes. What is does it triggers a Shortcut called “Notitie maken” (prepare notes). After selection of the calendar item it pulls out the attendees, declines, meeting details and puts the notes of the Calendar item under Subjects (Meeting subjects).
    2. I make notes during the meeting or the PA does this
    3. Immediately after the meeting I process the notes (1a. Make line breaks and check the spelling, looks if it formats nicely 1b. Markdown Preview-Swiss)
    4. If I am satisfied with the notes I press 2. Mail meeting minutes with the participants of the Agenda item and the meeting notes in the mail
    5. The actions of the meeting needs to go into the OmniFocus Inbox (A line starting with an “@“) while pressing 3a. Omnifocus tasks with link back. Tasks are transferring to the OmniFocus Inbox and every task has a link back to the Draft , very handy if you are wondering what was the context of this action again?
    6. I also track a decision log. Same routine as above however putting every line with a “hammer symbol” into the inbox of OmniFocus.
    7. Often I use only 4. Mail to PA for processing, where I delegate above steps to the PA and creating only a “Waiting for PA” task in the Inbox.
    8. 5.Last meeting is a little fun button. It triggers a Shortcut sending a text message that I coming home to my wife and how many minutes this will last and is pre heating the car and sending the home address to the navigation and starting my favoriete playlist on Spotify and showing my communication list from OmniFocus on my screen in the car so I can finish my communications. Not very important but just for giggles, because it possible to do the craziest things with Shortcuts.

    Communications

    The inspiration of David Allen:

    This is how it shows in OmniFocus:

    The perspective in Omnifocus is as following:

    Tip: put the number or email address in the the task so your iPhone can dail this for you automatically or starting up drafting the mail.

    Area’s of focus

    This is the inspiration of David Allen:

    This is how it shows in OmniFocus (of course again collapsed view due to privacy reasons):

    The perspective in Omnifocus is as following:

    Weekly debrief

    This is the inspiration of David Allen:

    How I do it: I have 2 daily routines and 1 weekly routine to keep the system trusted. The weekly debrief is a list in Omnifocus with repeating tasks which start on Friday 15:00 and Due on Friday. High level it consists of the following items:

    • Process all Inboxes
    • Data dump
    • Become actual with the future
    • Check if the system still is trusted

    Please find below the detailed list:

    • Most of the task have or a link to a perspective or a shortcut, showing in the notes field of the task. See below the note field for Process Inbox to zero with links to open the correct folder within DevonThink and Drafts 5:
    • I use a Shortcut which starts a Trigger list “questionnaire” where the answers are added to the Inbox of Omnifocus. (with thanks to Rosemary Orchard). The questionnaire is the list you can found in GTD website of David Allen.
    • Step “03.3 Become actual with future/ Check: verify next actions for every project exists” consist of the following steps:
      1. Run script “Verify next actions” (in OF toolbar) – Script of Curt Clifton
      2. Push button “Reveal”
      3. Open tab “Projects
      4. Mark the items as completed, or add actions as needed and re-run this script to remove the “(missing next action)” suffix.
      5. Re-run script “Verify next actions” (in toolbar)
      6. Push button “Reveal”
      7. Open Tab projects and check if list is empty
    • Step “04.1 Check if system is still trusted” is opening a weekly repeating project:

    Coaching Models – messages

    This is the inspiration of David Allen:

    There are here 2 concepts mentioned:

    1. Sanity check on time and actions. I use the daily routines Reveille and Day Closure to keep my day “sane” and the weekly debrief to keep the system “sane”
    2. Have templates and checklist. The way I have translate this to my system is linking to Templates and sometimes to Checklists. At this way you are free to put any coaching model in your system and have it always “under the palm of your hand”. This is my current Coaching model:

    The links to Shortcuts, Keyboard Maestro macro’s and Applescripts

    All items are made for my system, please use it as you please and adjust it to your system/ needs.

    Keyboard Meastro set up consists of the following Macro Palets:

    The global macro pallet shows as following:

    And is build as following:

    • The macro’s can be downloaded here.

    While opening Omnifocus I use the following macro’s:

    • The macro’s can be downloaded here.

    In Mail I am using the following macro’s to put in my Inbox:

    • The macro’s can be downloaded here.

    In DevonThink I am using the following macro’s to put in my Inbox:

    • The macro’s can be downloaded here.

    Shortcuts consist of the following:

    Use your iPad or iPhone to download these.

    • The Review Calendar Events for tomorrow, used in the Reveille process can be downloaded here.
    • The Plan travel time, used in the Reveille process can be downloaded here.
    • The Data dump: clear your head/ Process the triggerlist, used in the weekly debrief process can be downloaded here.
    • The making of Icons on your springboard, linking to OmniFocus Perspective is fairly simple. I have attached one example so you can copy / paste for the other views you want to create. Please find here. In Shortcuts click on “Add to Home Screen”, choose your icon and you are done.

    Set of Drafts 5 Actions

    Drafts 5 on the iPad and iPhone is fully functional. The actions do not yet work on the OSX versions of Drafts. So I recommend to use the iPad / iPhone.

    • The meeting minutes workflow can be downloaded here.
    • The meeting workflow keyboard extension can be downloaded here.

    The Applescripts I use in OmniFocus

    In the Toolbar of Omnifocus I have added links to my most used Applescripts. It shows as follows (unfortunately I can not show the names of the scripts below the icon anymore)

    • Send Task per mail can be downloaded here.
    • Defer task until tomorrow can be downloaded here.
    • Defer task for a chosen number of days can be downloaded here.
    • Create DevonThink folder with link to OmniFocus project can be downloaded here.
    • The script for Reply, Complete and Waiting for can be downloaded here.
    • The script Verify if next action exists can be downloaded here.
    • The script Populate template placeholders can be downloaded here.
    • The script Today tagging, needed for Keyboard Maestro Macro 21) Auto Update Today-next actions with Today tag can be downloaded here.