Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

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David Allen reads an all-new edition of his popular self-help classic for managing work-life balance in the 21st century – now updated for the new challenges facing individuals and organizations in today’s rapidly changing world.

Since it was first published more than 15 years ago, David Allen’s Getting Things Done has become one of the most influential business books of its era and the ultimate book on personal organization. “GTD” is now shorthand for an entire way of approaching professional and personal tasks and has spawned an entire culture of websites, organizational tools, seminars, and offshoots.

Allen has rewritten the book from start to finish, tweaking his classic text with important perspectives on the new workplace and adding material that will make the book fresh and relevant for years to come. This new edition of Getting Things Done will be welcomed not only by its hundreds of thousands of existing fans but also by a whole new generation eager to adopt its proven principles.

Customers say

Customers find the organization simple yet profound. They say it’s well worth the effort and practice. Readers mention it’s a great system for improving productivity and stress relief. They also describe the book as a nice update of the classic personal productivity bible. However, some customers find the book hard to read at times and wordy.

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11 reviews for Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

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    Jeffrey Thompson

    This Book can Change Your Life
    Great read. Easy to follow and understand. Great benefits when applied according to his instructions.You will accomplish a whole lot more with this daily and weekly strategy. I suggest you take this knowledge and combine it with the 12 Week Year 12weekyear.com which is a top down (from vision down to daily tactical actions) way to get things done and this book is a bottom up way (from all the details upwards to vision). They are a beautiful combo to time management and organizing your life with the most important things to focus on and accomplish daily, weekly, and 12 week year (quarterly).

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    Canadian eReader

    This is the go-to book for the GTD methodology
    Self help is not a genre of books I read very often, but I made an exception for David Allen’s Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity. One of my goals for 2017 was to become better organised and to be more productive. I first learned about the GTD methodology through Carl Pullein’s YouTube channel that I follow. I’ve been working on this for around six weeks now, so it’s too early to tell, but I’m happy with what I’ve learned so far.Getting Things Done, or GTD, is a productivity methodology based on a few deceptively simple concepts. Now, I’m still very new to GTD, but this is how I see it. One of the fundamental ideas behind GTD is that the human brain is excellent at processing ideas and being creative, but not a great storage facility. A key part of GTD is getting all ideas, projects and commitments out of your brain and into a trusted system or external brain.There are five activities to GDT: Capture, Clarify, Organise, Reflect and Engage. If I can take from the GTD website, this translates to:Capture: Collect what has your attention. For me, this means adding all my ideas, commitments and to-dos in my list manager application of choice, Todoist. I really love this application and regret that I don’t have it at work. I try to capture everything from my doctor’s appointments, to buying cat food for Lushka to a reminder to ask my husband if we have picture hooks. I’m planning a trip to Europe this summer, so any time I think of something like oh, I must remember to get Swiss francs, into Todoist it goes.Clarify: Process what it means. Here I can’t be any more concise than or as clear as the workflow diagram on the GTD website:GtdHonestly, if I take away nothing more from my experience with GTD than the two minute rule (if you can do it in two minutes, do it now, otherwise delegate it or defer it) and the discipline to define the next physical action to move a task along it will have been worth it.Organise: Put it where it belongs. This is probably the area of GTD that’s least intuitive for me – I’m not very organised! At the very least, I try to put any appointments on my calendar, any tasks in the appropriate section of Todoist, and potentially relevant non-actionable information in Evernote. One interesting aspect of GTD is the use of contexts. This means organising your tasks not by priority but by the tools, location, and/or person you need to be able to complete them successfully. So, for example, in my Taxes 2016 list I have an item; pick up tax receipt from pharmacy. I tagged that as “pharmacy” along with other items like pick up Polysporin and drop off new prescription. So when I go to the pharmacy I just check that tag to be reminded of all the things I have to accomplish while I’m there. Similarly, while planning my trip to Europe I have a context of Susanne, the friend I’m visiting. Any time I think of something I need to ask her, I add it to that list of things to discuss next time I call or email her.Reflect: Review your to do list and calendar frequently. The idea here is to keep your “external brain” current with everything that you need to accomplish. If you don’t add to it or clear our stale items, your real brain will no longer trust your system and it will break down. Most GTDers do a review at least once a week.Engage: Simply do. Pick the tasks that are available to you based on your contexts and get cracking!The book itself is very well written and the edition I have was updated in 2015 to include discussion of new technology (not specific applications) and how it impacts the GTD workflow.if you are interested in improving your productivity and generally getting things done you could do a whole lot worse than to check out this book.I gave Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress Free productivity five stars out of five.

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    Brody mccarthy

    Personal growth book!
    Got this book for personal growth and really have enjoyed it. Helps to get the clutter out of your head to move forward on the things that matter most!

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    Yosi

    Great book
    Good book

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    Simple Citizen

    No Book I have ever read led me to MAKE as many changes as this book.
    I have read a lot of books on how to organize your life:Love People, Use ThingsEssentialism7 Habits of Highly Effective PeopleOne Minute managerThe Fifth DisciplineI have also read books on leadership, self-help, therapy, productivity, working through failure, and on and on.NOTHING ELSE HAS COME CLOSE.Now, this may be because of where I am in my life. It may be that this book isn’t any better than the others, it’s just WHAT I NEEDED at this moment.I have 5 teenagers, 3 jobs, my own clinic, I’m writing a book, speaking publicly often, and I’m also auditioning for a play next week. Oh, and I love free time, relaxing on weekends and evenings, spending time with friends, going to plays, and reading books.I also WANT TO BE DEPENDABLE. I want to do what I have said I will do. I want to make less agreements, and have less obligations, so that I can NAIL the ones I have made.That’s where this book was so very helpful. Yes the author eventually asks you to think about long term goals and life values and those things, but he really starts at the day to day level.“HOW DO YOU GET DONE, THE THINGS YOU SAID YOU WOULD?” How do you meet your current obligations? How do you finish each day with a feeling of satisfaction.How do you better handle the things you have already agreed to do, and manage the barrage of things coming at you all day every day that are unexpected?DOING what he suggests has made me feel RELIABLE. I know what I can do, and what I can’t. I know when I can say yes, and when I have to say no. I know when I have to adjust, or change a previous agreement because it just AIN’T GONNA HAPPEN the way I had hoped.It is an amazing feeling of peace to know that I can reliably say yes or no to things, and I will honestly get back to them, finish them, remember them.My first attempts weren’t perfect. My first organizational attempt from early January has already been discarded. As have my second and third attempts. But each time was BETTER than what I was doing before, and each time I like the new system more and more, and it’s easier and faster to use and more reliable.My wife and kids know exactly when I am free, and we can do ALL SORTS of fun things, and movie marathons, and visiting family in other cities, and on and on.GETTING THINGS DONE has changed my life in just two months.If your life feels out of control, your mind feels scattered, and you constantly miss things you agreed to… READ THIS BOOK.

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    Barry Klimuszka

    Very interesting topic!
    My wife and I heard this author and the topic on a pod cast and it’s ver interesting!

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    Customer

    My first book at my 30th age. Felt something and bought this one to start. It’s something easy to start and enjoying reading it

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    alok pole

    Excellent read for every professional

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    Praveen K.

    Excellent Book to develop a working system to help support your mind. Like everything good if the system is implemented religiously and consistently, it may greatly help once productivity. Buy the book if you are either very hazy in the mind or are extremely busy and being overwhelmed.

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    Alison

    I wish I’d read this book earlier. I see so much of myself in Allen’s words and GTD methodology from the intensity/passion of his explanations to seeking spiritual flow.For so long I felt guilty for not sticking to rigid time management systems and schedules but as it turns out, I’ve already largely implemented the GTD method and am in fact, more productive than I gave myself credit for. That in essence, there is nothing wrong with me and to get over the thought that I’m spending my days wastefully.This book is for anybody who cringes at the idea of becoming a productively machine and instead desires to create meaningful work efficiently and on your own terms. Getting Things Done is without a doubt a book that touched my soul. i can’t thank David Allen enough for his work.

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    Rodrigo Delgado

    Es un excelente libro. Está muy actualizado sigue cubriendo los puntos esenciales, con ahora con más ejemplos de la época digital. Aunque tiene bastante información, está muy bien estructurado y me ha servido. Todavía ayuda a organizarse mitad en papel mitad en forma digital. Leí el libro hace 10 años, y ahora que lo releo me doy cuenta de algunas prácticas que deje de hacer.El libro tiene gran contenido y requiere de un buen grado de concentración para poderlo absorver, sin embargo una vez digerido, ayuda a gestionar en buena forma el trabajo.

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