My Hybrid Productivity Method: How I Combine Analog and Digital for Task Management
This one of the videos from my popular productivity course, All the Things
There is a sort of inefficiency that comes with using both digital and analog tools for managing your tasks and your day. And that inefficiency is a feature, not a bug.
I have a “hybrid” productivity system that I’ve been using for about five years now, and it works very well for me.
I call it the Hybrid Method because it combines digital and analog. I use Things (digital) and a Baron Fig notebook (analog).
Every day, my most important tasks for the day are written down in my Baron Fig notebook, along with a general schedule for when I’ll be doing those tasks. Then, I use my notebook for helping me stay focused during the day.
Things is where I keep everything else. Anything with a due date, as well as all the other administrative miscellany of my job all get tossed into Things.
Like many of you, I suspect, I am at my Mac or my iPad for the bulk of my working hours. And my iPhone is always within arm’s reach. And virtually all of the incoming tasks I need to capture are of the digital kind: they deal with emails, websites, files, etc. Things is great for capturing all of this, keeping it organized, and presenting it to me when I need to see it.
And but so, yes, I could easily (perhaps even more easily) keep everything in Things. But I prefer the hybrid approach for two reasons:
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There is something calm and concrete to the act of using a pen to write down my most important tasks onto a piece of paper. And, frankly, it’s nice to have a break from the screen.
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Secondly, it’s less distracting to have my task list written down on a notebook rather than in a digital app. As clean and simple as Things is, it still has buttons and options and other lists off to the side that I just don’t need to be thinking about right now.
And that, dear readers, is the roots of it — the why of my Hybrid Productivity Method.
My Analog Templates
Something else that I love about this Hybrid approach is that I’m able to use my physical notebook to write down my monthly goals, map out my week, schedule my day, and more.
Over the years I’ve developed a handful of templates that I use within my physical notebook:
- Monthly Habit Tracker
- Monthly Planner
- Weekly Review
- Weekly Planner
- Daily Planner
The most recent addition to those templates is the first one: the monthly habit tracker. I have quickly fallen in love with page layout as it works as a combination between a one-line daily journal plus daily habit tracker.
As I write this, a few of the habits I am tracking daily include: exercise; phone off between 5–7:30pm; daily writing time; and reading non-fiction.
All of the above templates are included as part of my productivity course, All the Things. In that course I also have several videos that go into detail about how these tools interact, how I use each of the above templates, and how you can also improve your time and task management.
Moving Beyond Task Management
In addition to my Hybrid Productivity Method, I also wanted to share with you a bit about the main “components” of my system, if you will.
As I’ve written about on many other occasions, actual productivity is about spending our time on the things that matter. And so, while having a nerdy approach for keeping track of tasks can be fun, there is a bigger picture to what I’m doing here.
My overall mindset toward productivity is one that covers each area of my life and helps me stay healthy and productive day in and day out.
The components of it, in no particular order, are:
- Plan: Identify what matters. I do this daily, weekly, monthly, and annually.
- Act: Focus on and do what matters.
- Rest: Sleeping, relaxing, relationships, entertainment.
- Think: Let my brain wonder, noodle, etc.
- Review: Check in with where I’m at and what I’ve been doing. I do this daily, weekly, monthly, annually.
- Move: Get out of my head and into my body. (Moving and exercising is about more than physical health, it is also a huge booster for thinking and creativity.)
Each of these activities are important. And it’s helpful to see them all listed out next to one another. I can, at times, overemphasize a few while neglecting others. And when I do, it often ends up causing stress and having a negative impact on my productivity.
For example, I have learned that when a particular project at work becomes a bit more demanding, it is all the more important for me to get a good night’s rest and to keep my daily exercise routine.
That’s why, in All the Things, there are several videos which go in-depth on Planning, Acting, and Reviewing.
There is literally an entire section of the course that focuses only on systems for a more calm approach to productivity and easier task management.
That’s why our course is also for those who use OmniFocus, Todoist, or any other app — because I teach you things that can be used no matter what productivity app you use (even no productivity app at all).
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