Forget About Strategic Planning
How many people do you know that spend more time planning than doing? Status reports, benchmarks and meetings can get in the way of old-fashioned doing.
I'm not really advocating that we abandon effective strategic planning, but sometimes a next-action step is all that is needed. Case in point- I gave a talk last night to a group of students and their families on the value of Catholic education. Having given hundreds of talks, I normally prepare a rough outline and then let it happen, relying on instincts and experience. On this particular night though, I prepared an overly detailed spec of the evening's topic.
Too detailed.
I was overly concerned with not forgetting an item on my overly detailed outline and therefore delivered an A-minus talk instead of a homerun. I would imagine that the audience knew nothing of my consternation but I went home and evaluated my preparation and follow through.
What's a GTD take on strategic planning? It's not a matter of take-it-or-leave-it. Rather, it's about integrating next actions with the benchmarks and stages of a good plan.


Agreed. I had a hard time implementing a lot of GTD. For instance, I still struggle with parsing all of my e-mails.
On the note of next actions, however, this was one thing that I implemented and it is wonderful.
I fit David's article to a tee, but I have been able to short circuit some of it by looking for always looking for next actions. The times I falter are the times I let myself not set a next action.
Posted by:Ken Stewart | May 14, 2008 at 04:41 PM
For a GTD system that integrates Next Actions with planning, you might try out this web-based application:
Gtdagenda.com
You can use it to manage your goals, projects and tasks, set next actions and contexts, use checklists, schedules and a calendar.
A mobile version is available too.
As with the last update, now Gtdagenda has full Someday/Maybe functionality, you can easily move your tasks and projects between "Active", "Someday/Maybe" and "Archive". This will clear your mind, and will boost your productivity.
Hope you like it.
Posted by:Dan | May 20, 2008 at 08:59 AM