Aaron: I still do a lot of post it note taking and it's like how my brain works. It makes me feel good. So there are some tasks hiding on my desk in notes, but but mostly it's it's notes and reflections on interactions that I sort of like ideas that I want to come back to later. And what I would love to do to your point is like consolidate even more and have just like a really tight feedback loop between the two or three things that we use. That'd be cool. Let's get specific. Aaron: Did I ever tell you about like ads post it? No addiction. Ed started to give a shit that he like lives with a really
Where do our systems for organization and prioritization come from? How do we build discipline around new workflows? When and how do we learn how to work? And what happens when our systems have to gel with others’?
Answers to these questions vary from person to person—and they should. Because when it comes to managing our time and tasks, it’s worth challenging “best” practices.
In this episode of Brave New Work, Aaron Dignan and Rodney Evans unpack their own relationships to productivity and productivity culture, exploring:
- What people-positive and complexity-conscious workflows can look like
- The difference between work that’s important and work that’s urgent
- Why tools should fit the shape of your work and not the other way around
- The connection between the techniques you use and the tensions you feel
- The big costs that come with having too much work in progress
- Why thinking about what you do and how you do it is a critical use of your time