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You are here: Home / Archives for 1 - Productivity / d Productivity Systems (Architect)

Using Jott and Evernote Together

February 16, 2010 by Matt Perman

Lifehacker has a good post on how you can use Jott and Evernote together.

Jott is a transcription service. So using the iPhone app, you can use your voice to leave yourself a note, and Jott automatically transcribes it.

These notes need to be processed just like your in box — they are really another in box, in fact. When processing them, the less than two-minute actions should be done right away. Longer than two-minute actions should be put on a list.

But what about the non-actionable stuff you just want to remember? For example, there are a few key things after a meeting that you want to write down for reference, but they aren’t necessarily actionable. That’s where Evernote can be useful. Evernote is basically an electronic notebook, which allows you to group your notes into notebooks, tag them, and sort them by title, date, etc.

The way to use Jott and Evernote together is to email those “reference”-type jotts to your Evernote account. Jott will have already transcribed it, so it saves you that work. Then, once in Evernote, you can title the note, tag it, and put it into the notebook you want. The article shows you how to do this.

Filed Under: Filing

MindTools on Effective Scheduling

January 29, 2010 by Matt Perman

MindTools is a helpful site in general. Here’s their article on effective scheduling.

Filed Under: Scheduling

What Do You Think of This?

January 22, 2010 by Matt Perman

What do you think of this statement — do you agree or disagree?

“One should always set the objective twice as high as one hopes to accomplish because one will always fall 50 percent short.”

Filed Under: Goals

How Sound Affects Us

January 5, 2010 by Matt Perman

Julian Treasure has an excellent 5-minute TED talk on “4 Ways Sounds Affect Us.” Here’s one shocking fact that he gives: open plan offices decrease productivity by 66%. (He does give a simple solution to this, however.)

(HT: Jeff Paterson)

Filed Under: Organizing Space

Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell

November 11, 2009 by Matt Perman

Lifehacker has a workspace Flickr group where you can post a picture of your workspace and look at what other people have done. It’s a great place to see what other people do.

If you post your own photo, they also add: “Include some details about your setup and why it works for you, and you just might see it featured on the front page of Lifehacker.”

Filed Under: Desk Setup

The Rest of the Room: How to Set Up Your Office

October 22, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 8 in the series: How to Set Up Your Desk

Having discussed how to set up your desk, now it is time to close this series by looking at the rest of the room.

(FYI: Originally this was the third post in the series because I thought it would be helpful to see the whole context of the room in general before discussing the desk in particular. But that seemed to interrupt the flow of the posts. So this post is now at the end to close out the series.)

The Components of An Office/Workspace
There are six components of your broader work area:

  1. The desk, of course
  2. Reference area
  3. Storage area
  4. Project shelf
  5. Meeting area
  6. Brainstorming area
  7. Lounge area (maybe)

In other words, you need to have a place to actually do your work (the desk), a place to keep reference materials, a place to keep extra supplies and equipment, a place to meet with visitors and, perhaps, a place to take a break.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Desk Setup

What to Put in Your Desk Drawers and How to Use Them

October 22, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 7 in the series: How to Set Up Your Desk

For your desk drawers, I recommend having two of the three-drawer units. These three-drawer units have two normal drawers on top and then a larger file drawer on bottom. Here’s an example:

You can get by with just one if you need to, but I recommend two. One goes on your right and the other goes on your left.

Here’s how to set them up.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Desk Setup

What to Put on Your Desktop and How to Use It

October 21, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 6 in the series: How to Set Up Your Desk

When it comes to your desktop, there are three things to know: what items to have on your desktop, how to arrange them, and how to use your desktop.

What Goes on Your Desktop
As I’ve mentioned before, the main principle here is to minimize the number of items you keep on your desk. Simplicity rules the day here. This will make your desk feel less cluttered and create a smoother workflow. It also just plain looks better.

The best way to keep things on your desktop to a minimum is to only give something a permanent place on your desktop if you use it more than once a day. Even then, if it is easy to access that item via a drawer, it should probably go in a drawer.

This would mean, for example, that unless you really love your stapler, it should go in a drawer. Likewise, no desk organizer-things. And pen and pencil cups are unnecessary. If you really like them they can work fine, but really it works great to have just one pen and one (mechanical) pencil on your desk, laying flat, and the rest in drawers.

The main things you need to have on your desktop are:

  1. External monitor (if you connect your laptop to it to provide a second screen)
  2. Mouse and keyboard
  3. Laptop stand (so that it will be at the height of your external monitor)
  4. Pad of paper
  5. Pen and pencil (lying flat, rather than in a pencil cup)
  6. Inbox (this kind works well)

You might also find it useful to have:

  1. Docking unit for your iPhone or iPod (if you have one)
  2. Desk lamp (if needed)
  3. Telephone (land line; this would be a must at work, but at home I see it as optional if you primarily use your cell)
  4. Printer (if you have room for one without cluttering your desk)
  5. Decorations (just don’t overdo it; if you have an actual office, pictures can also go on shelves instead of the desk)
  6. Any other items necessary to your specific situation (but keep it to a minimum!). For example, I have my wireless router and modem behind my monitor, as they don’t get in the way back there and this also gives me easy access to them when I have a problem. (However, one of these days I will probably move them to another room to get them out of here and simplify a bit more.)

Beyond that, be careful. It’s easy to justify adding things, but the end result can easily be a cluttered desk that saps your energy.

Here are a few more details on some of the items mentioned above.

First, I recommend hooking up your laptop to an external monitor because it allows you to work on a bigger screen. Your laptop screen will also become a second monitor, thus resulting in a good increase in screen real estate. This is important because the best way to increase white collar productivity is to increase screen size. (So get the biggest possible monitor that you can.)

Second, it also makes sense to have a laptop stand so that your laptop will be elevated to the height of your screen. Many of these also provide additional USB ports.

Third, a docking unit for your iPhone makes sense because it saves time by preventing you from having to pull out a pull out the cord each time you want to sync your iPhone.

Fourth, it can save a lot of time to have a basic printer right at your desk so you don’t have to walk to one of the main printers at your work every time that you print something. On the other hand, it takes up space at your desk and you might not print enough to make it worthwhile.

How to Arrange Things on Your Desktop
I find that it works best to place my monitor in front of me (obviously) and then everything else on the left side. This stems from a few factors.

First, the inbox goes on the left side because of the “left to right” workflow pattern. (New stuff goes on the left, you deal with it in front of you, and outgoing stuff goes on the right.)

Second, the phone belongs on the opposite of your preferred side (the left side, if you are right handed) because that leaves your preferred hand available to dial or jott down any notes. You also don’t have the cord going across your desk when you use it. (If you are left-handed, then the left side won’t provide these benefits, but it will still sync with the fact that everything else is on that side.)

Third, having the inbox on the left side implies that the paper pad would also be on the left side, since any notes you create would be new input and thus would go into your inbox if you don’t handle them right away. And since the paper pads are on the left side, it makes sense to put the pen and (mechanical) pencil right beside them.

And as long as those items are on the left side, it makes sense to put everything else on the left side. This also leaves your right side free, which is important because it is the area you would look over when meeting with people.

So, to summarize, everything goes on the left side and the right side remains open. As a corollary to this, then, position your desk to make the visitor area across the right side of your desk (outlined in the previous post).

The sequence of my items goes like this: My monitor is right in front of me. Right beneath it is my iPhone dock, and right in front of it are my keyboard and mouse. Behind the monitor are my router and modem. To the left of my monitor is my laptop stand and laptop. To the left of that is my pad of paper, pen, and pencil (when not in use). At work, to the left of that is my phone. At home I don’t keep a phone at my desk, so to the left of the paper pad is my inbox (at work the inbox then goes just to the left of the phone).

At work, to the left of my inbox at work are some pictures of my family. Then, far to the left of that across that portion of the U is my printer.

At home to the left of my inbox is a desk lamp and to the left of that is my printer. Here’s my home setup (which you’ve seen a lot by now):

And here’s my work setup (which you’ve also seen a lot by now):

How to Use Your Desktop

I mentioned in the second post in this series that everything at your desk falls into two categories: permanent stuff and transient stuff. Permanent stuff includes four things: equipment, supplies, decoration, and reference (which actually goes in drawers and on shelves, rather than on the desktop). Transient stuff includes three things: input to be processed, action reminders, and support material.

The thing to notice is that all work falls into the transient category.

In other words, you don’t store work on your desk. Your desktop is for doing your work, not for storing your work.

What goes on your desktop permanently is the equipment used for doing your work. Any work items flow across your desk, but should not stay long. Things that you need to keep around go into files, not piles on the desktop.

With this in mind, here’s a rundown on the process I recommend for how to use your desk.

The workflow goes from left to right. When new input comes, it goes into your inbox on the left. When it’s time to process those items, handle the items in the middle, right in front of you. Any piles that need to be taken somewhere else go on the right side.

If you have an L-shaped or U-shaped desk, you can use the “L” part of the desktop for these out piles. If you have a rectangular setup, you can still do things this way by just using the floor. If you have a parallel arrangement you can put them on the desktop behind you.

If you need to group things into piles so that you can work on them in batches (things to read, notes to enter onto your action lists, etc.), it tends to work best to create those piles on the left side. As I’ve discussed before, it can be efficient to create piles. You just need to work to the end of those piles right away, rather than keeping them around.

Processing your inbox, of course, is just one type of work and hopefully it doesn’t take up too much time. When you’re doing other work the left and right sides work well for spreading out reference material and other support items.

There isn’t any specific system to give with that — you just put things wherever they are most helpful to you at the moment. The system is that you kept your desk clear so that it is available in this way when you are working on things. And so when you are done or at a point where you won’t be able to get back to the project for a while, but the reference materials away and the support items back into files, so that the desktop remains clear for whatever is next.

Posts in This Series

  1. How to Set Up Your Desk: An Introduction
  2. How to Set Up Your Desk: Basic Principles
  3. Excursus: Against Desk Hotels
  4. The Four Ways to Configure a Desk
  5. Where to Put Your Desk
  6. What to Put on Your Desktop and How to Use It
  7. What to Put in Your Desk Drawers and How to Use Them
  8. The Rest of the Room: How to Set Up Your Office

Filed Under: Desk Setup

Where to Put Your Desk

October 20, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 5 in the series: How to Set Up Your Desk

The place where you put your desk depends upon the type of desk configuration you have and the structure of the room/work area. The nature of your work area can place significant limitations on you that can’t fully be worked around. But I’ll present the ideal, and then suggest some work arounds.

The Principles

There are three main principles here.

1. Don’t Make Your Desk Face the Wall
This will likely make you feel boxed in.

2. Don’t Have Your Back to the Door/Entrance
Having your back to the door is also to be avoided, because as Organizing for Dummies points out so well, “many a worker can vouch that this placement … makes you susceptible to scares when people walk up behind you” (190). This is called “cubicle paranoia.”

This being susceptible to scares is also called “cubicle paranoia.”

Also, having your back to the door is less welcoming.

3. If Possible, Make Your Desk Face Perpendicular to the Door/Entrance
This gives the right combination of concentration and control. You can see the door and aren’t walled up, but aren’t directly facing the door or entrance so as to be distracted every time someone walks by.

This isn’t always possible, however. Facing the entrance directly, then, is a close second. Some people might prefer this most of all. The most important thing is not to face the wall or away from the door.

Applying the Principles

Now, with an L-shaped or U-shaped desk, obviously part of the desk is going to have to be against the wall. The point is that the place where you sit should not face the wall or away from the entrance.

I’ve found that the best way to make this work is to place my monitor in the corner of the “L” shape of my desk. This maximize the use of space, since typically that is the deepest part of the desk and thus accommodates the monitor best, and allows me to face the entrance as much as possible. Here’s an example from my office at home:

Now, I mentioned in my previous post the “left to right” workflow pattern. This affects your placement very much if you use the L-shaped or U-shaped configurations. For your inbox and all of your equipment goes on your left side. The right side is kept open so that you can greet visitors and so that if they sit down there isn’t stuff in the way across the desktop.

For example, if you have a room like the following and an L-shaped configuration, do this:

desk 1

But not this:

desk 2

Exceptions
Sometimes, the layout of the room makes it impossible to implement the above principles completely.

In those cases, do the best you can. If you have a cubicle, for example, you may just have to put up with having your back to the entrance of your work area because that’s simply how most cubicles are designed. If that’s the way it has to be, that’s fine.

If you are in an office, doors and windows can often be in weird places that limit your options.

But the point is, don’t face the wall or away from the entrance if you don’t have to. Be intentional about your office layout. Don’t have your back to the door just because it seemed initially like the easiest way to set things up.

Posts in This Series

  1. How to Set Up Your Desk: An Introduction
  2. How to Set Up Your Desk: Basic Principles
  3. Excursus: Against Desk Hotels
  4. The Four Ways to Configure a Desk
  5. Where to Put Your Desk
  6. What to Put on Your Desktop and How to Use It
  7. What to Put in Your Desk Drawers and How to Use Them
  8. The Rest of the Room: How to Set Up Your Office

Filed Under: Desk Setup

The Four Ways to Configure a Desk

October 19, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 4 in the series: How to Set Up Your Desk

There are four different ways to configure a desk: rectangular, parallel, L-shaped, and U-shaped. The size of the room and other factors may not leave all of these options open to you, but understanding these possibilities helps you know how to make the best use of your space.

Rectangular
The rectangular configuration consists of just a standard desk. It’s just a rectangle with no other components, like this:

A rectangular configuration gives you less workspace, but is fine if you have a small area to work with or prefer to keep your desk area to a minimum.

A rectangular desk is a good option. But I used to fall into the error of thinking it was the only option. So even though I found it a bit cramped, I used this kind of desk at home for the longest time simply because whenever I needed to buy a desk, this is what I automatically thought of. It was helpful to realize eventually that, for those who would like a bit more workspace, there are some other ways to do things.

Parallel

With the parallel configuration, you add another rectangular unit behind you to provide additional workspace. Here is an example:

L-Shaped
An L-shaped configuration also adds another desktop unit, but to the side rather than the back. My desk at home is L-shaped:

You can create this configuration by putting together two rectangular desk unit or a rectangular unit and a bookshelf or credenza-type-thing. Or you can purchase an L-shaped unit at IKEA or another such place. I prefer the latter option, because then your desk is a single unit.

A lot of cubicles provide people with L-shaped desks. So there’s at least one thing that cubicles have going for them.

U-Shaped
The U-shaped configuration is really an L-shaped configuration with another component added on to the other side of the L:

You can also create a U-shape by putting together independent units or by purchasing a U-shaped desk.

I find the L-shaped provides the best workflow pattern, which I’ll describe in the post on how to use your desktop. The U-shaped configuration lets you do everything that the L-shaped does, and then adds on a few bonuses. You can still do the same workflow pattern with the rectangular and parallel configurations, but you have to make a few modifications. I’ll cover this in the post on how to use your desktop.

Integrating the Drawer Units
No matter what your configuration, there are actually two components that you need to have: the desk itself, and the drawer unit(s).

Many desk units come with the drawers built in. I don’t regard that as an advantage, typically, because it seems that a lot of desks are not made with an understanding of how to use a desk effectively. Therefore, you often end up stuck with the wrong kind of drawers or the drawers are not in the most effective locations.

So whenever possible, I recommend getting a desk without built-in drawers and then buying a separate drawer unit (or two) that you put under the desk. This provides you with the most flexibility, especially if you change your mind later on about where you want the drawers to be.

For the drawer unit, I recommend getting a three-drawer unit. These units have two regular drawers on top and then a file drawer beneath.

There are variations on this. For example, my drawer unit at home is a bit odd. There is only one regular drawer at the top, but the file drawer actually contains within it two additional regular drawers, with space for files beneath:

This requires the extra step of having to open two drawers every time that I want to access one of the lower regular drawers (the main file drawer and then the regular drawer within), but on the positive side it gives me three regular drawers plus the file drawer.

I will talk more about how to use the drawer units in the upcoming post on that. Some general guidelines are that if you only have one drawer unit, I would put it on your preferred-hand side under the desk. So if you have a rectangle or parallel desk and are right-handed, it would go right under the right side of the desk. With an L-shaped or U-shaped unit, the unit would go under the L on the right side. The second unit would then go on the other side. Here’s an example that shows this two-unit setup:

One Last Thing
As I mentioned in the first post, it is hard to find anything in the productivity literature on how to set up your desk. Among those discussions that do exist, many make a distinction between the desk and computer workstation.

I do not make that distinction. I find it kind of funny, actually.

A lot of those discussions seem to have been from a long time ago, perhaps when using a computer during your workday was rare. But it still persists in some forms, because if you go to IKEA’s website even today, they make a distinction between “desks” and “computer workstations.”

This is a misguided distinction, in my opinion. These days, there is not one part of your desk where you do “paperwork” and a different place where you do “computer work.” There is still some actual stuff to do with paper, but I find this almost always involves the simultaneous use of the computer. If you try to process “paperwork” away from your computer, you’ll find yourself always going over to your computer in the midst of it.

Likewise, when using your computer, you often use some real paper at the same time — maybe because you printed an article that was easier to refer to in print or because you find it easiest to capture a few action points in a capture journal rather than electronically.

So I have my monitor right in front of me, and deal with both paper and electronic stuff together, right there (sometimes creating temporary piles to my left or right, as I’ve mentioned before and will describe later).

Everyone knows this. But the discussions of desk setup that do exist need to be updated to reflect this, and some desk manufacturers and stores need to integrate this more fully into their thinking as well.

Beyond that, the interesting observation here, in my opinion, is this: It’s not that we’ve seen the end of paper, although it has decreased. It’s that now when we do handle paper, there is usually an electronic component to it as well, whether that means checking out a website or adding something to a to-do list because of what you came across in the (physical) mail.

So we don’t have the end of paper, but we do have the end of dealing with paper alone. The most effective desk setup recognizes this, and is designed for the integrated utilization of paper-based and electronic-based workflow.

Posts in This Series

  1. How to Set Up Your Desk: An Introduction
  2. How to Set Up Your Desk: Basic Principles
  3. Excursus: Against Desk Hotels
  4. The Four Ways to Configure a Desk
  5. Where to Put Your Desk
  6. What to Put on Your Desktop and How to Use It
  7. What to Put in Your Desk Drawers and How to Use Them
  8. The Rest of the Room: How to Set Up Your Office

Filed Under: Desk Setup

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What’s Best Next exists to help you achieve greater impact with your time and energy — and in a gospel-centered way.

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About Matt Perman

Matt Perman started What’s Best Next in 2008 as a blog on God-centered productivity. It has now become an organization dedicated to helping you do work that matters.

Matt is the author of What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Done and a frequent speaker on leadership and productivity from a gospel-driven perspective. He has led the website teams at Desiring God and Made to Flourish, and is now director of career development at The King’s College NYC. He lives in Manhattan.

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