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Thoughts

How I use GTD

September 13, 2010 by Keith Seabourn 3 Comments

Getting things done

A new staff member of Campus Crusade for Christ recently asked me if he could learn more about how I’m using David Allen’s Getting Things Done process. He sent me some questions. How would you answer? I look forward to your comments.

1. How do you do GTD on the road? Conferences, retreats, summer projects, etc.

GTD works well on the road. I’m out of the office about 60% of the time. There are a few keys to GTD that I’ve found work well. I’m not sure this list is complete, but here are the things I think of right now:

  • Everything stored in a trusted place. All emails containing actions. All telephone commitments. All verbal commitments. All thoughts while driving to an appointment (practice safe-driving!!! I keep a notebook on the seat and jot ideas while at stop lights then transfer into my trusted system later!)
  • Review frequently. Formally, the weekly review is where I plan my week. Daily, I do mini-reviews to adjust priorities. Work from the lists daily. Don’t work from non-lists. If it’s not written down and cannot be done in 2 minutes, it’s not to be worked on unless I renegotiate my commitments with myself.
  • Schedule into my calendar appropriate appointments with myself to work through lists. In an office environment, or probably in a field environment, these appointments are the times I give myself to work through the commitments I’ve made and documented in my lists. Life can fill up with meetings, but meetings are rarely the places where I “do” the things on my lists. Rather, my lists contain the commitments I’ve made in meetings. I must give myself time and permission in my calendar to do the things I’ve committed to doing.
  • Break multi-step projects down into “next actions”, line them up in sequence, then start doing them. The feeling of progress is great!

To answer your specific question, at conferences and retreats, I write down my commitments in my lists. I set aside time to work on “getting things done” every day during the conference. Much of my life is travel and participation in conferences, retreats, meetings, so I must do this in order to continue to fulfill my commitments.

2. Do you know of any field staff using it? How successful have they been with it?
This is a very good question? Please use the Comments below to help me answer this question!

3. If you were in the field, rather than in the Global Technology Office, how would you change your implementation of GTD, if at all?
That is an interesting question. Looking back over my 34 years with CCCI, including field ministry, I’ve always had some type of system to write stuff down so I wouldn’t forget it. I’ve always worked from lists. Over the years, I started with a paper 3×5 card in my pocket. I’ve used the 7-star classic pocket diary system, the Covey Organizer, now called Franklin-Covey, various electronic things beginning with the original Palm Pilot.

In my early staff career, I found that I was forgetting commitments I had made, sometimes writing things down on scraps of paper, then was unable to find them or remember. I finally learned to a) write every commitment down and b) write all things in one place where I could find it again (a “trusted system” before I knew to call it that).

Because field work often involves verbal commitments, like someone asking “Can you send me the link to the retreat registration site?”, I turn these requests into something in my inbox by saying “Can you send me an email asking me for the retreat registration site link?”, or a Facebook message, or whatever. I keep the responsibility on the person asking, and I turn it into a written request so I can remember it, or can easily get it into my trusted system of lists.

What I find most helpful about GTD is the focus on getting it written down, getting it into a trusted system, and a weekly review of next actions in which my schedule is filled with times to work on my commitments. This is the essence of getting things done in my life.

4. Do you see any disadvantages to using it in the field?
No, I see huge advantages. You become a person who can be trusted to do what you say you will do. You become a trusted team member who gets things done. You become a model to students of a person that they respect because you respect the commitments you have made with them. You teach them, by your life model, to become people who keep the commitments they are making. You show up with a prepared bible study because you made a commitment with yourself to prepare, you put time into your schedule to prepare, and you show up ready for the study. When you agree to get the brochures designed and printed by next Thursday, you deliver and you are not stressed about it because you are on top of your commitments and you schedule to succeed.

5. Do you see the seminars being necessary to learning GTD well? I’d love to attend, but $495 for a weekend seems more like a luxury at this point than a need.
I never did a seminar. Someone gave me David Allen’s audio book. I listened to it. I found 2-3 others who were learning GTD. We shared ideas like you and I are doing. I’ve experimented.

I have found that personality type has a big effect on how you do with the GTD approach. I think all personality types can be successful at GTD, but you cannot simply emulate someone else’s approach. You might benefit from this article, Is there a Myers-Briggs Connection to GTD? . I encourage you to find a way that works and not get locked into an ideal that you cannot live with. Understand the Jim Collins’ “flywheel” concept. He talks about it related to an organization, but it is very true of any good habit in your personal life.

Success at GTD is very similar to learning to walk in the Holy Spirit, or learning to powerfully live a life of taking opportunities to share Christ with others. It’s about pushing and pushing and pushing, feeling overwhelmed but making small steps forward. Then it gets easier and goes faster. Eventually, it’s hard to remember how hard it was at the beginning, how consciously you had to remind yourself exhale/inhale, how to just start asking questions as a curious co-journer in life and see where the conversation goes and how you can talk about Jesus,

write it down – identify the single next action – review it regularly – get time into my schedule – do what is on the lists.

These are my thoughts.

What got you interested in GTD? How have you had success?

Filed Under: ccc, gto, Thoughts Tagged With: gtd, Leadership

Highlighted Bibles on the Kindle eReader

September 9, 2010 by Keith Seabourn 1 Comment

The Bible (New International Version) takes the #1 spot on the Amazon Kindle’s Most Highlighted Books of All Time. And the #9 spot (New Living Translation). And the #10 spot (English Standard Version). And the #14 spot (New American Standard Version). And the #15 spot (another New Living Translation). And #23. And #25.

Amazing. Exciting. 7 of the top 25 “most highlighted books of all time” are Bibles. People are reading. People are highlighting.

People are engaging with Scripture. My highlights must be somewhere in the #10 ESV Study Bible, which I’m currently using to read through the Bible this year. I’ve been highlighting away. I didn’t know I was adding to the rankings!

I do find Amazon’s title a bit over the top, since the Kindle has only been around 3 years. It was first released November 19, 2007, according to Wikipedia. So to be the “most highlighted books of all time” really means “of the last 3 years on our eReader.”

But if all the paper Bibles were added into the mix, I’m sure more top spots would be filled with Bibles.

Are you reading a Bible on the Kindle? Which one do you prefer?

Filed Under: gto, Thoughts, What I'm reading Tagged With: kindle

Thoughts from Room 405A

August 27, 2010 by Keith Seabourn 2 Comments

It’s been a different 3 weeks. Kay and I have been in Mesquite, Texas helping with my dad’s recovery from knee replacement surgery. He was released from the hospital and has completed 2 weeks of a 3 week stay in the rehab facility.

I stay with him at nights. My mother stays with him during the days. Kay keeps the house going, the food flowing, and the encouragement growing.

You see, the combination of anesthesia and the confusing environment of hospital sights and sounds and a multitude of medical personnel coming through every little while causes my dad to experience extreme confusion and disorientation. He becomes unable to comprehend and respond quickly. He doesn’t know where he is or why he’s there.

Hey, it happens to me sometimes when I wake up in a hotel room in some country with different sounds and strange smells coming in the window. I’m disoriented. Where am I? Why am I here? What time is it? And my mind is 20 years younger and not affected by Alzheimer’s and aphasia.

It has also been a rich time of solitude. Time to think. Time to pray. Time to ponder. Time to appreciate my mom and my dad, their lifestyles which profoundly affected mine. Their love for my wife, my kids, my grandkids. Their willingness to see their firstborn, college-educated son invest his life in fulltime service of Christ. Their selfless giving to their church, their friends, the cause of Christ, even to strangers we met on summer vacations.

My dad is the essence of the law of sowing and reaping:

You shall reap.
You shall reap what you sow.
You shall reap more than you sow.

My dad is the essence of Luke 6:38:

Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.

Giving. Giving generously. Giving with a big heart and a big bucket.

And he is reaping. He wins the hearts of physical therapists and medical professionals wherever he goes. He’s winsome. Uncomplaining. Positive. Quietly and graciously content. As a result, medical professionals go overboard in helping him. They want to check up on him, to provide assistance to him.

A spirit of service and gratitude and thankfulness, of caring for others, lived out for a lifetime. Now he is reaping. He is reaping multitudes of people checking on him, calling him, visiting him in the rehab. Church members. Family members. People who live down the street and across the fence next door. He’s reaping winsome attitudes from medical professionals.

And he’s reaping admiration from a son whose life is forever impacted by his model of faithfulness over a lifetime, love that has no limits, service that does not count the cost. When I grow up, I want to be like my daddy.

Filed Under: Thoughts

Online meetings not a church

August 20, 2010 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

I read an interesting blog post today over at ChurchCrunch. Based on a federal court ruling, online worship is not a church.

Very interesting. I wonder if candidate websites are not politics, hence do not qualify for use of campaign funds to operate? If Amazon.com is not business, hence the discussion about collecting sales tax should cease to be an issue?

If activities are defined by traditional trappings, then where do we draw the line?

Update: Reading the full journal article here, which is written in a very readable style, is helpful and enlightening. A critical issue in the court’s opinion is that the worshipers were not associating together in some form. So if worshipers are interacting through messages, tweets, etc., then perhaps the legal definition is different. The article makes a very good note that legally-required board meetings of for-profits and non-profits are often conducted by virtual technologies.

Filed Under: ccc, Ministry, Thoughts Tagged With: social media

Mutuality is important

August 4, 2010 by Keith Seabourn Leave a Comment

The Meeting of the WatersI’m currently reading The Meeting of the Waters: 7 Global Currents that will Propel the Future Church. It’s a good book for those engaged in missions. It’s particularly a good book for those of us who have been in missions for many years and can benefit from seeing with another’s eyes.

I’ve read the chapters on mercy, mutuality and migration. I strongly agree with the author that mutuality is crucial to the meeting of the waters of traditional and current, of the north and the south, of what the Lord has done and what he is doing today. Read the author’s explanation of mutuality below…

Q: What are the seven trends that are having an impact on Christianity?

A: Mercy. Mutuality. Migration. Monoculture. Machines. Mediation. Memory.

Q: What is the single biggest shift in ministry that today’s churches are facing?

A: I’m not comfortable choosing just one, because various ones or others loom prominent in different countries or cities at different times. That is, after all, one of the most important lessons of The Meeting of the Waters-that Christians in all countries should become adept at recognizing how their country’s Body, and its witness, is being differently affected by global trends. But, since you asked, I will say that the most important Global Current is Mutuality, because it is the necessary foundation for all global ministry work. Mutuality means that believers from traditionally powerful countries (that means Americans and Europeans, for starters) must include and look to Christians from traditionally weaker countries. People from less-developed countries (think India and China) increasingly have education, technology, ability to travel, trained and plentiful workforces…and confidence. Those brothers and sisters also have spiritual experiences and depth that come from generations of suffering and wanting, and as an American I know I need to learn about that. Not only is Mutuality the right choice for Christians, it is increasingly the only choice in our flattening world. And the great news is that it is also fun, for I have found Mutuality to be one of the most thrilling and expanding journeys in my Christian life.

The blending of those who can offer the power of organization, funding, program management, a we-can-make-a-difference-perspective and the power of deep spiritual experience and lifestyle flowing from want and need and suffering and having little materially. Exciting stuff!

Filed Under: ccc, Thoughts Tagged With: missions

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