![]() If the ETP shows me that I have additional space in the day, I choose my “three big rocks” (or however many rocks seem reasonable) from my task manager, and I schedule them all into my day before forging ahead. I crack open my digital task manager and pull out any tasks with a hard deadline. Next I open up Fantastical (my calendar app of choice) and pull in the day’s appointments onto the ETP’s schedule. ![]() Every morning I sit down and transfer any notes from the previous day’s ETP. For years that planning has taken place on one of David Seah’s Emergent Task Planners (or the ETP to those of us in the know). That said, there is one major exception to my paper-free existence despite being an OmniFocus-using, plain-text-file-wielding junky, every day of my life is lovingly planned on a piece of paper. Paper and I have always had a complicated relationship and even when I use the stuff, I count on a combination of my scanner and Evernote to help me live as close to a paperless existence as possible. ![]() Now before jumping into my thoughts on the product, there’s something I should make clear: for someone writing on a site that’s all about pen and paper products, I’m not a huge fan of pen and paper products. I, along with 1,046 other Kickstarter backers, have recently become the proud owner of The Week Dominator, a new weekly planner from the team behind the NeuYear Calendar.
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