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Agile Results and Evernote

Agile Results and Evernote

In this much-requested follow-up article to our introductory series to Agile Results, I want to show you how to deploy your Agile Results system inside Evernote.

It is assumed you have read both JD Meier’s book Getting Agile Results, and our introductory series, otherwise this guide may not make that much sense. Some of the things may overlap what the introductory series and some things will be a little different – that’s because systems evolve over time with use.

It should also be noted that what is described here does not strictly conform to the Agile Results system as it is originally taught, but because the system itself is so flexible and provides a robust framework, it still works very effectively.

Quick Summary

  1. What Goes Where.
  2. The Setup.
  3. First Run-Through.
  4. Using the System.
  5. Customizing the System For You.

1. What Goes Where

Let’s start with a list of the big concepts and ideas in Agile Results. We have:

So which parts of this do we recommend go into Evernote?

Everything else goes elsewhere:

You task manager will hold your hot spots (areas of life), your queues (lists of things to do) and your actions (before they are copied into Evernote).

Your wiki or database – we recommend DevonThink on Mac – stores all your references.

Your calendar holds your schedule.

The Setup

Setting this up is pretty straightforward.

The first thing you want to do is create some notebooks in Evernote:

You then want to drag-and-drop them into one notebook stack and call it “Personal Journal” or “Agile Journal” or something similar.

You then want to create your own journal templates as individual notes inside the Journal Templates notebook.

Daily Template

Here’s what the different sections mean:

Weekly Template

Here’s what each section means:

Monthly Template

Here’s what each section means:

Annual Template

This one is a little different:

First Run-Through

The first time you deploy this system it will be a little unfamiliar. And a little repetitive. Here is how you do it step-by-step.

1. Copy the Annual Template note from the Journal Templates notebook into your Annual Journal and rename it Annual Journal Entry 2013 (or 2014 etc). As such:

2. Fill it in. Then select all your annual outcomes, and copy them into the Monthly Template note under the List of Annual Outcomes for Reference.

(click to enlarge)

3. Copy the Monthly Template note from the Journal Templates notebook into your Monthly Journal and rename it Monthly Journal Entry 2013 November or the relevant month.

4. Fill it in. Then select all your monthly outcomes, and copy them into the Weekly Template note under the List of Monthly Outcomes for Reference.

5. Copy the Weekly Template note from the Journal Templates notebook into your Weekly Journal and rename it Weekly Journal Entry 2013 Week 48 or the relevant week.

6. Fill it in. Then select all your weekly outcomes, and copy them into the Daily Template note under the List of Weekly Outcomes for Reference.

7. Copy the Daily Template note from the Journal Templates notebook into your Daily Journal and rename it Daily Journal Entry 20131129 or the relevant date.

8. Fill it in.

I hope that from the above you can see the hierarchy of how this system works, and how each chronological level is very closely linked to the level above it.

There are a couple of things to note about what to fill in.

Every outcome must have a title, process and result. I strongly recommend writing an actionable title that is easy to understand right away. If you have any doubts, see this article on setting better outcomes. Every outcome should also have a rough process assigned to it. This could simply be a list of tasks related to the outcome, or it could be an actual description of how you’re going to go about achieving the outcome. Finally, every outcome must also have a defined result, or what it’s going to look like when it’s done. This is so you can very clearly tell exactly when the outcome has been achieved.

Tasks differ from outcomes in that many tasks usually form one outcome. For example, you may have an outcome of “close sales deal” but then have 3 related tasks – 1) call client, 2) email contract, 3) file before close of business. Having a task list at a daily level also lists tasks you have that are related to your daily work responsibilities but not related to your outcomes – this lets you be flexible with what you’re doing without affecting your hierarchy of outcomes too much.

Using the System

Using this Evernote setup is simply a matter of doing a modified version of the above run-through process at the start of every timeframe (or at the end of the previous timeframe).

For example, at the end of the year/start of the new year, you want to:

At end/start of every month, you want to:

At the end/start of every week, you want to:

Every day, you want to:

During the day, you want to refer to your daily journal entry and check off tasks as they are complete and note beside each outcome as it is completed.

Customizing the System For You

The great thing about Agile Results is that it provides a solid framework for customization. It’s strength lies in its outcome hierarchy which let you direct your days, weeks, months and years. On top of that though, you can build and implement custom ideas that you’ve learned here on Asian Efficiency or elsewhere, with relative little effort. Here are some examples that I personally use.

Focus and Maintenance Outcomes

I wrote a premium newsletter earlier this year on the difference between focus and maintenance outcomes. At the weekly and monthly level, I like to split my outcomes into 3 focus outcomes (Agile’s Rule of 3) and 2 maintenance outcomes. I regard focus outcomes at the things I am developing and that will take up most of my time. Maintenance outcomes are things that tick away in the background without me really thinking about it – for example, the hour of reading/learning I do every day, or my workouts 3 times a week, or the pre-planned meals I eat every day.

All this takes is listing in my weekly and monthly journal 2 extra maintenance outcomes.

Pain and Pleasure Motivators

I like to make my outcomes really compelling and give them that extra kick of motivation. So, for every outcome at a monthly or annual level, I’ll add in a painful scenario if I don’t hit the outcome and a pleasurable scenario if I do.

This sits right alongside the outcome title, process and result.

Questions

I read a lot of Tony Robbins this year and he says that the questions we ask ourselves help us make new distinctions about what we’re doing.

So, I added in 3 questions to my daily journal entries to ask myself:

  1. What have I given today?
  2. What did I learn today?
  3. How has today added to the quality of my life or how can I use today as an investment in my future?

Quarterly Sprint System

Agile Results has a built-in sprints system where JD Meier recommends picking 1 fun thing every month and running with it to learn about it.

I personally don’t really do this anymore but instead make my sprints longer, and divide up my year by quarters.

So in my annual journal entry I’ll have something that looks like this:

Basically, I break down my year into quarters and list 3 “mini-outcomes” or areas of focus for each quarter. These then feed into my monthly outcomes and become “steps along the way” to hitting my annual outcomes.

Wrap Up

And… that’s it.

Setting up Agile Results in Evernote is very straightforward, just a little repetitive. If anything is unclear, please ask in the comments and I’ll try to answer the best I can.

If you want more articles and tips like these, let us know where we can send them to:

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