The Simplicity Habit: Episode 1
Posted by Jered | Filed under Featured, Podcast
Michael and Jered start the first Simplicity Habits Podcast talking about the purpose of the show and site as well as their backgrounds. Be warned, there is some heavy breathing due to Jered’s poor mic placement, that should be corrected in Episode 2.
The Simplicity Habit: Episode 1
GTD + 4HWW = Productivity Perfection
Posted by Jered | Filed under 4HWW, Featured, GTD
Michael and I had a funny conversation about a David Allen / Timothy Ferriss Celebrity Productivity Deathmatch. Allen has the wisdom and years of martial arts training, while Ferriss has the youthful stamina and the secrets to putting on massive amounts of muscle quickly, but I wouldn’t care to wager on the physical fight. I want to talk about their systems duke-ing it out.
I have read both David Allen’s Getting Things Done and Timothy Ferriss’ 4 Hour Work Week
and while the two systems seem diametrically opposed, I think that they compliment each other and perfectly round out the rough spots of each.
Getting Things Done (GTD) Overview
By keeping lists of the next physical actions for each project, one is able to have a complete picture of what needs to be done. By sorting these actions into contexts, one can always find an action to do in the appropriate settings.
Getting items from an inbox to these lists and projects is broken down into whether the action can be done immediately, deferred to a “tickler file”, or added to a project. This process is developed into a quick and efficient one, allowing data to be quickly added to the lists.
Regular review and renegotiation of commitments are critical to the Getting Things Done system and should be done weekly.
Synopsis: Writing things down, keeps them off your mind.
4 Hour Work Week (4HWW) Overview
Retirement, in the traditional sense, is a lie and life should be spent in a series of “mini retirements,” using self employment and outsourcing to reduce the amount of time and energy expended in generating wealth to support the “mini retirements.”
A low information diet and ruthless application of the Pareto principle (the 80/20 principle) are required to reduce the inputs in one’s life, because with their application it is easier to get more work done when one has to.
Synopsis: The application of the Pareto principle and outsourcing to everything will free up time, letting you take mini retirements.
The Challenge
Getting these two seemingly disparate systems to play well together.
Thoughts
I think that GTD and 4HWW are completely compatible. Getting Things Done is the strategic and tactical while the 4 Hour Work Week is the undercurrent or theming of the process.
Creating a stress free life is attainable by the application of getting thoughts out of your head an on to paper, into a trusted system, which can include outsourcing, and then relaxing on a “mini-retirement.” This flies in the face of most management principles that go along the lines: “When someone is able to relax, give them more work, they can obviously handle it.”
The catch is, you aren’t working less, you are working more efficiently and why shouldn’t you benefit from that?
Tim Ferriss’ goal is have the reader be self employed and while that is a tempting idea, it is not always possible, that doesn’t mean that one shouldn’t take a “mini-retirement” every once in a while. Save up the leave, work out teleworking with your boss, it is possible to attaint the 4 Hour Work Week ethos without having to be self-employed (thusly responsible for your own health insurance, etc.).
Being stress free on your “mini-retirements” is going to be important, no one wants to be stressed when they are supposed to be relaxing, sailing around the world, etc. That is where the “Someday / Maybe” list comes in handy, writing down future “mini-retirements” or keeping a list of postcards that need to be sent.
Ferriss’ reducing input in one’s life is very similar to David Allen’s reducing the inboxes and in-buckets. Going on a media diet for a week or two can be very liberating, reducing one more source of stress. Everyone has stressed out a little bit out the TiVo getting full or missing your most favorite TV show. The way that the two methods are very intertwined is the concept of “mind like water”. A David Allen catchphrase which is the 4HWW realization. Take all of the things that normally make your day rocky, like dealing with angry clients, or fulfilling orders, and outsource them. This allows you to deal with the real issues through the application of the Pareto principle, which should make your life much easier over all.
Why shouldn’t people who are “Getting Things Done” also be able to enjoy a “4 Hour Work Week”? Followers of GTD generally know where all of their projects are, what they have to do next and where the rest of their commitments lie. If a knowledge worker is using GTD (that is the prime category for people who use GTD), most their work will focus around a computer and a phone. Both of those devices are portable and as long as there is a solid cellular network in your “mini-retirement” destination, it would be possible to do work should the need arise. And while I don’t advocate taking work on a vacation, much less a “mini-retirement”, the idea is not to let the fact that some of us can not escape the 9 to 5 from letting us experience Ferriss’ vision.
With keeping “mini-retirements” as a goal, application of the Pareto principle and reducing the number of inputs one has, Ferriss creates a great set of frameworks for the average person to work in. Allen’s Getting Things Done provides a tactical approach with strategic thinking to keep those frameworks in mind. All in all, I would say Getting Things Done and the 4 Hour Work Week are two compatible philosophies / systems.
Tags: 4 Hour Work Week, 4HWW, David Allen, Getting Things Done, GTD, Tim Ferriss
Hello World
Posted by Jered | Filed under Featured
Danny O’Brian’s coinage of “life hack” is the word that launched a thousand sites. The phrase that started in 2004 at E-tech has spawned into hundreds, thousands, of sites with more 8 item lists or alternative uses for avocados and while I and everyone I know should learn how to cure warts with wet noodles, or “25 things to make your comebacks snappier”, are they really life hacks?
The term life hack refers to productivity tricks that programmers devise and employ to cut through information overload and organize their data. - wikipedia
This site and accompanying podcast will not give you “14 secrets to make sure the maitre de isn’t a douche”, or another way to file your manila folders, but instead be a “meta life hack”. A frank discussion of what some of the more popular posts on the current “life hacking” blogs are peddling, hard questions that, with any luck, will make you think about adding another Windows task tray manager, or signing up for another Web 2.0 task manager.This is the simplicity habit.



