Getting work done without getting lost in the digital sea
Everyone has their own work style, but the most important thing is to find systems that enable you to work freely and confidently.
Author
By Luke Johnson
Date
Apr 9, 2018
Reading Time
7 minute read
Quick Summary ~ Everyone has their own work style, but the most important thing is to find systems that enable you to work freely and confidently.
Table of Contents
In the last decade, there’s been an explosion of productivity tools
as work teams in all industries have explored what “digital” might do
for them. The result is a real mixed bag of niche products and
all-in-one platforms. It can be overwhelming to wade through the ocean
of software to find what you need, especially since most productivity
companies make similar claims about how much time you’ll save and how
much more you’ll love your work by using their products.
As a digital professional myself, I’m always on the hunt for a
single, mythical product that will achieve those claims for me. Over the
past few weeks, I’ve delved as deeply as I’ve dared into the ocean of
software, trying over 50 productivity platforms, and have returned to
shore dissatisfied. Task management, project boards, client
relationships, time-tracking, flexible invoicing, online payment, work
scheduling, income and time-expenditure reporting — all with an
intuitive web UI and well-devised mobile apps… It seems the digital
needs of a small web agency are too broad for any one platform to serve.
Everyone’s situation is different. So, instead of running through an
expository litany of 50 tools I decided against, I thought I’d share
what currently works for me in case it aids you in your own
consideration.
Business management
Podio
Plotting and tracking work
Harvest
Forecast
Storage and file care
Google Suite
MEGA
Amazon Drive
MultCloud
Completing work
Trello
A lot of productivity apps include Kanban boards
nowadays. Trello was the first to popularize them. Some others, like
Asana, have improved on Trello’s implementation in some ways, like
allowing you to assign due dates to checklist items, and even create
sub-tasks for those checklist items. While that would be pretty handy at
times, I’ve stuck with Trello because all Trello seeks to handle is
cards and boards, and does it well. Over the years, Trello has perfected
the ease of creating lists and cards and dragging them wherever you
need. When I’m in “deep dive” mode, working intensely on some
complicated piece of programming, I need simplicity, and Trello keeps it
simple.
Things
How about you?
So there you go. I’m a really categorical thinker, so having special
roles for different clouds gives me a sense of order as I serve my
clients. Everyone has their own work style, but the most important thing
is to find systems that enable you to work freely and confidently.
I’d be interested to hear what kind of setup has been helpful to you!
Or if you feel like you’re drowning in murky waters of digital
ambiguity, get in touch because I’d love to help you get your feet on
solid ground again.
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