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Book Summary - Getting Things Done
Book Summary - Getting Things Done
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Table of Contents
Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 3
Part 1: The Art Of Getting Things Done ............................................................................................ 4
Chapter 1: A New Practice For A New Reality ..................................................................................................... 4
Chapter 2: Getting Control of Your Life: The Five Stages Of Mastering Workflow .............................................. 5
Chapter 3: Getting Projects Creatively Under Way: The Five Phases Of Project Planning .................................. 5
Part 2: Practicing Stress-Free Productivity ....................................................................................... 6
Chapter 4: Getting Started: Set Up The Time, Space, And Tools ......................................................................... 6
Chapter 5: Capturing: Corralling Your “Stuff” ...................................................................................................... 6
Chapter 6: Clarifying: Getting “In” To Empty ....................................................................................................... 7
Chapter 7: Organizing: Setting Up The Right Buckets .......................................................................................... 8
Chapter 8: Reflecting: Keeping It All Fresh and Functional .................................................................................. 9
Chapter 9: Engaging: Make The Best Action Choices ........................................................................................ 10
Chapter 10: Getting Projects Under Control...................................................................................................... 11
Part 3: The Power Of Key Principles ................................................................................................12
Chapter 11: The Power of the Capturing Habit ................................................................................................. 12
Chapter 12: The Power of the Next-Action Decision ......................................................................................... 12
Chapter 13: The Power of the Outcome Focusing ............................................................................................. 12
Chapter 14: GTD and Cognitive Science............................................................................................................. 12
Chapter 15: The Path Of GTD Mastery .............................................................................................................. 12
Next Steps ......................................................................................................................................13
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Introduction
When it comes to productivity and efficiency, David Allen is one of the top five executive
coaches in the world, and his work is renowned worldwide. His #1 New York Times best-selling
book, Getting Things Done, has been heralded by professionals as an effective system for
achieving stress-free productivity, managing life, and improving workflow.
In this Getting Things Done summary, we’ll look at the core principles behind Getting Things
Done so you, too, can learn how to bring more organization into your daily activities, deepening
your understanding of workplace optimization.
In the book, Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity, David Allen presents his
personal productivity methodology that transforms the way you approach your personal and
professional life. The Getting Things Done (GTD) method helps you organize your calendar,
tasks, and priorities such that your work is manageable.
As a bottom-up method, the advantage of the Getting Things Done system is that you know
what you are currently working on and what you plan on doing next. The GTD system helps you
move the same thought or negative feelings out of your head and into your system to channel
your mental energy into your work.
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Open Loops
The “open loops” must be adequately controlled:
Open Loop – anything that does not belong where it is, the way it is, will pull on your attention
if it’s not appropriately managed;
• Horizontally – maintains control across all the activities in which you are involved; on
the order of the day-to-day activities
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Chapter 2: Getting Control of Your Life: The Five Stages Of Mastering Workflow
There is a horizontal five-step method for managing your workflow:
1. Capture what has your attention. Write, record, or gather these things into your
collection buckets.
2. Clarify what each item means and put it where it belongs. Decide if the thing is
actionable to determine the next action or not actionable to delete, defer, or store it.
3. Organize the results to focus on higher-level thinking. Place reminders of your
categorized content in appropriate locations.
4. Reflect on keeping your system operational. Regularly review all of your system
components to regain relaxed control and focus.
5. Engage in deciding what to get done. Make action decisions with clarity and confidence
in your system.
Chapter 3: Getting Projects Creatively Under Way: The Five Phases Of Project Planning
The natural planning model consists of the following vertical five-step method. You utilize
natural planning for your projects based on how your brain works:
Time
In Getting Things Done, David Allen suggests that you schedule non-negotiable time for this
process of about two whole days, preferably on a weekend or holiday in the next few weeks.
This time should be deep work being uninterrupted and focused.
Space
Choose a physical workspace that is dedicated, individual, and self-contained at home, work,
and even in transit. You should have enough space for a writing surface and tools.
Tools
Implement the method using the following:
• Basic Processing Tools include at least three paper trays, letter paper, writing utensils,
sticky notes, paper clips, stapler, tape, rubber bands, automatic labelers, and trash bin.
• Organizers could be used to help you create and manage lists.
• Filing Systems provide an excellent way to manage your reference files that are fast,
functional, and fun to capture. You should organize the system alphanumerically to
make it easy to add files and folders, label appropriately, and store all your stuff. Also,
you should regularly go through and trash irrelevant or outdated items or files.
1. Contain your open loops in your capture system and out of your head.
2. Have as few capturing buckets as required.
3. Empty your capturing buckets regularly.
We want to gather these things in one location or “in” bucket. There are two basic components
to the collection process:
Physical Gathering
Physical Gathering – the action of collecting all the physical things into your physical “in” basket
that is out of place in your environment:
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Mental Gathering
Mental Gathering – the action of clearing your mind of what has your attention
• Capture each thought, idea, project, or thing that has your attention separately on
paper or in a digital application.
• Trigger List: David Allen includes a list to help you remember something that you forgot.
Processing Guidelines
• Process the top item first. Everything gets processed equally as “process” does not
mean “spend time on.”
• Process one item at a time. The focus on one thing forces the attention required to
decide on the action steps.
• Never put anything back into “in.” Decide what to do with an item so you do not use
the processing station as a storage bin.
o Do It if the action takes less than two minutes. The two-minute rule is an
extremely efficient hack, as it would take longer to store and track the item in a
tracking system vice taking immediate action.
o Delegate It if you’re not the most appropriate person to take action. As a leader,
you can email, send notes, text, or discuss the item with the appropriate person.
o Defer It into your organization system as an option for work to do it later. Write
down these actions and add these to the “Pending” file to be organized later.
Projects
Project – any outcome you are committed to achieving that will take more than one action step
to complete:
• Track on a “Projects” List to ensure that there are placeholders for all the open loops.
• Start Finishing: Check out our summary of Start Finishing to tackle pending projects.
• Lists – keep track of the total inventory of active commitments, including active tasks,
active projects, someday/maybes, and next actions.
• Folders – list reference material and support up-to-date information for an active
project.
There are seven categories of organization that should be kept distinct from one another to
promote clarity.
Actionable Organization
• Calendar Actions and Information: Contains actions that must be done on a specific
day, at a particular time, and/or as soon as possible. The calendar, especially when
color-coded, shows your committed time blocks around which you can do the rest of
your actions.
• Next Actions List: Tracks those actions that must be done as soon as possible. This list
should be organized by the context required for the action, such as tools, locations, or
situations. You can use the original item, like a paper or email, as its own action
reminder.
• Waiting For List: Tracks actions or deliverables for other people to remind you what you
are waiting for and from whom. This list is helpful when meeting with anyone that
needs to provide you with deliverables.
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Project Organization
• Projects List: Indexes your open loops to provide you with a complete review to ensure
that all action steps have been defined for all of your projects. This list will help you gain
control and focus, relieve pressure, conduct your weekly review, and manage
relationships.
• Project Support Material: Supports your actions and ideas about your projects but does
not remind you what to do. You can handle them either digitally in note, email, or
database applications or physically in files or notebooks.
Non-Actionable Organization
• Reference Material: Systematizes into a simple library of reference files that are easily
retrievable. You must decide how much to keep given your needs or preferences and
organize by general reference, broad category, contacts manager, or library.
• Someday/Maybe List: Contains the projects, skills, experiences, and ideas that you want
to do in the near future that is not urgent enough to do right away. This category
unleashes your creativity to imagine cool ideas without committing to them.
Checklists
Checklists – the recipe for projects, work processes and procedures, events, and areas of value,
interest, and responsibility; provide the items to check or review to make sure that you are not
missing something
“Bigger Picture” Reviews – the process of clarifying the vision, values, and broader objectives
that influence, challenge, and prioritize your decisions
• Ground: The Current Actions are listed on your action lists to understand your
immediate priorities.
• Horizon 1: The Current Projects are listed on your Projects list, each with objective
outcomes and next actions.
• Horizon 2: The Areas of Focus and Accountability are your responsibilities both
professionally at work and personally with your family, community, and yourself.
• Horizon 3: The One- to Two-year Goals are the short-term goals for your job.
• Horizon 4: The Long-term Visions are the mid-term vision for your career and personal
net worth.
• Horizon 5: Life is your life-long purpose and how to maximize your expression and
impact.
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Planning Projects
There are two types of projects that need some planning activity:
1. Those that still have your attention even after figuring out the next actions. These
projects require the natural planning steps of brainstorming and organizing, setting up
meetings, and gathering information.
2. Those that may have unexpected practical ideas and supportive detail. These projects
need a place for the ideas to be captured and processed later.
• Don’t Make the Agreement: Say no, as you should only take on commitments you need
or want to do.
• Complete the Agreement: Do it, as getting things done will make you feel accomplished.
• Renegotiate the Agreement: Change it, as you are not breaking agreements by changing
the original terms.
• Clarity: Provides what will get done, who will do it, and when it will be done.
• Accountability: Assigns who is responsible for the progress of the action.
• Productivity: Increases output when the next actions are known and done immediately.
• Empowerment: Improves self-confidence and self-esteem when you feel accomplished.
1. Employ the fundamentals of managing using the Getting Things Done workflow;
2. Implement a high-level and more integrated system to manage life holistically;
3. Leverage skills to make space and get things done to express yourself, find meaning, and
produce value for the world.
Getting Things Done by David Allen | Book Summary The Process Hacker
Next Steps
When you use the power of one of the best productivity systems, you can achieve maximum
efficiency. With Getting Things Done, you can create a stress-free productivity system that will
help you get a hold of the work in your personal and professional life.
Also, I hope you enjoyed the Getting Things Done summary in this post and are inspired to get
your own copy of the book. If you have any further questions or need additional help, feel free
to send me an email. Also, if you want more Process Hacker content, check out our blog posts
on Productivity, Habits, and Resources.