jaguarondi wrote:
Here's an example:
Project: Repair the bicycle
A1: Buy a new chain
A2: Clean the bicylce
A3: Place the chain
I know all 3 actions so I would prefer to enter them all immediately. A1 and A2
can be done ASAP but A3 depends on A1 so I don't want to see it right now.
If dealing with the very first action only, should I add only one of A1 or A2,
or both? Then add A3 only when A1 is done?
If adding all actions immediately, should I set it A3 as inactive and mark it
ASAP during a project review? Ideally there should be a way to add dependencies
so A3 would go from inactive to ASAP when I click 'Done' on A1.
How to you deal with such (yet simple) cases?
Thanks,
David
Hi David,
Your instinct is right -- since you have two actions that can be done right now (A1 and A2), make them both ASAP. Leave A3 inactive. When you have checked off both A1 and A2, A3 will become ASAP automatically. (This assumes that A1, A2, and A3 are the only actions in your project, and that you have project sequencing turned on.) No need to wait for your weekly review unless you want to.
GTD emphasizes that the next physical action is the only thing you need to keep a project moving forward. However, it also encourages natural planning and figuring out as many steps ahead of time as makes sense. It's perfectly fine to have two next actions for a project -- but you only *need* one.