I strongly recommend this book if you read the first and have been working at applying GTD for a year or more. I first tried to read this about a year after I had read the first GTD book, and put it down in disappointment. I was caught up in the fussiness of realising GTD through software (Org-M...
Organizational zen. Allen wrote a magnificent book "Getting Things Done" which dives into the process of tying up loose ends, and getting your life free of mental clutter. It's such a great book, even Allen alludes to it's success. It's the place to start with Allen, but "Winning at the Game of W...
Now I've read Getting Things Done and implemented the GTD process. I though this book would help explain some things I may have not focused entirely on and help me reach the mind like water stage. Not only did it explain those areas, it helped me focus on every area I was weak in but didn't rea...
This book is hard to describe. After a cursory glance, it seemed mostly like a less-helpful retread of "Getting Things Done". There's a lot of useful additional content in here, however, particularly the examples of what implementing GTD really looks like and much more fleshing-out of Allen's "...
That’s the horizontal level—what needs your attention and action across the horizontal landscape of your life. The last piece of the puzzle is the vertical level—the digging deep and pie-in-the-sky thinking that can leverage your creative brainpower. That gets us back to refining and energizing o...