海角大神

Getting things done 101: The power of the next-action decision

If there鈥檚 some vague thing you need to do, you usually just need to think about it for a moment to figure out what the next action step is.

A Mercedes team mechanic checks the pressure of a set of tires in front of his team garage in pit lane at the A British Formula One Grand Prix in Silverstone, England, Thursday, July 8. You may not be a Formula One racer, but it's likely you've found yourself with vague notes, like "tires," reminding you to do things like get the tires replaced on your car. Taking the time to think about what the next appropriate step is for notes like this is crucial to moving forward with a plan of action.

Mark Baker/AP

July 13, 2010

This is the twelfth entry in a fourteen part series discussing the time management classic by David Allen. New entries in this series will appear on Tuesday afternoons and Friday mornings through July 16.

One key theme in this book is the importance of coming up with a 鈥渘ext-action鈥 list, which is essentially a 鈥渢o-do鈥 list. What makes the idea stand out in this book is that there鈥檚 a clear process needed to assemble that list out of the large clump of things floating around in your head and sitting on your desk that you need to do.

One big effect of this is that you often wind up with a pretty big pile of stuff, particularly right after you do a 鈥渂rain dump鈥 and get all of the stuff you鈥檙e supposed to do out of your head. Some of that stuff is a straightforward 鈥渘ext action,鈥 but some of it isn鈥檛.

What do you do with the stuff that isn鈥檛 obviously a 鈥渘ext action鈥? You analyze it and figure out what the next action is in that idea that you have. I really like the example of this that Allen lays out on page 238:

What鈥檚 ironic is that it would likely require only about ten seconds of thinking to figure out what the next action would be for almost everything on your list. But it鈥檚 ten seconds of thinking that most people haven鈥檛 done about most things on their list.

For example, a client will have something like 鈥渢ires鈥 on a list.

I then ask, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 that about?鈥

He responds, 鈥淲ell, I need new tires on my car.鈥

鈥淪o what鈥檚 the next action?鈥

At that point the client usually wrinkles up his forehead, ponders for a few moments, and expresses his conclusion: 鈥淲ell, I need to call a tire store and get some prices.鈥

In other words, if there鈥檚 some vague thing you need to do, you usually just need to think about it for a moment to figure out what the next action step is. Then, add that next action step to your list.

Quite often (in fact, almost always), that next action step leads you down a sequence of actions that leads you to complete that vague thing you鈥檝e been putting off.

For example, in that tire scenario, after calling a few tire stores, the fellow has a list of options in front of him for tires. He can drop that in his inbox if he wants, or he can keep going and set up an appointment to get new tires at the shop he prefers, adding that appointment to his calendar. Once he goes to that appointment, the vague 鈥渢ires鈥 element on his list 鈥 something vague enough that he kept avoiding it 鈥 is now completed and it鈥檚 one less thing on his mind (and on his 鈥渘ext actions鈥 list).

I do this all the time. Quite often, my initial collection of some idea or some task 鈥 usually jotted down in a pocket notebook 鈥 is really vague. It鈥檒l be something like 鈥渢ires鈥 or 鈥渃hicken alfredo鈥 or 鈥Rudy Jimenez.鈥 When I retrieve that note later on when I鈥檓 processing my inbox, I鈥檝e learned that when I see such a vague note, I should spend a bit of time thinking about it and figuring out what comes next. After that thought, I can add real actions to my next action list, like 鈥淪et an appointment to get new tires on the Pilot鈥 or 鈥淏uy the ingredients for that bookmarked chicken alfredo recipe鈥 or 鈥淐all Rudy Jimenez about the youth baseball league meeting.鈥

If I didn鈥檛 do that extra second or two of thinking to turn something vague into a clear next action, I would be a much less efficient and less reliable person. That extra second or two turns things that seem vague and difficult into very clear and specific actions that I can do.

Of course, if you keep carrying this thought process further, you begin to see a different problem. What if you have a vague and amorphous task that seems to get more difficult the more you think about it? Income taxes come to mind 鈥 it seems like a simple thing, but if you sit down and start piecing through it, it starts to seem bigger and bigger and bigger.

Quickly, you reach a point where the task seems overwhelming 鈥 and that鈥檚 the point at which procrastination often begins. On page 241, Allen touches on this:

And so a lot of people [fall into this trap]. Because they鈥檙e so smart, sensitive, and creative. In my many years of coaching individuals, this pattern has been borne out more times than I can count 鈥 usually it鈥檚 the brightest and most sophisticated folks who have the most stuck piles, in their offices, homes, and heads.

In other words, smart, sensitive, and creative people tend to be very good at seeing all of the intricacies of a large problem 鈥 and it overwhelms them. Rather than dealing with all of these little elements and details, we put it off.

This is absolutely the wrong approach. If you have one of these fairly large and seemingly complex tasks in your inbox, your best bet is to spend some time figuring out nothing more than what your next action is to move it forward, then add that to your next action list.

In other words, just break it down. Don鈥檛 get scared by all of the details you see further down the road. Focus on nothing more than the very next thing that you need to actually do to move this thing forward. When that鈥檚 complete, move on to the next step. And the next.

Allen talks about it on page 242:

There is another solution: intelligently dumbing down your brain by figuring out the next action. You鈥檒l invariably feel a relieving of pressure about anything you have a commitment to change or do, when you decide on the very next physical action required to move it forward. Nothing, essentially, will change in the world. But shifting your focus to something your mind perceives as a doable, completeable task will create a real increase in positive energy, direction, and motivation.

That鈥檚 why getting in the routine of just identifying the next thing you need to do to move something forward and simply doing it is so powerful. It makes your objectives clear. It gives you something specific to actually do instead of procrastinating. It lifts your mood and your attitude.

To put it simply, it gets things done.

On Tuesday, we鈥檒l talk about the power of outcome focusing.

------------------------------

海角大神 has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link above.