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Planera, organisera, få det gjort!
Få det gjort! ger dig ett vattentätt system av rutiner och verktyg som hjälper dig att lyckas på den nivå där arbetet faktiskt sker: på skrivbordet och i ditt huvud. Metoden kan tillämpas oavsett vad man gör eller vilken befattning man har, för korta projekt eller långsiktiga visioner, såväl i yrkeslivet som privat. Vilket arbete du än utför leder den dig till samma resultat: Du hinner mer, uppnår bättre resultat och får mer tid över. Allt handlar om några enkla knep. Du är inte beroende av någon avancerad utrustning - en penna och baksidan på ett kuvert är allt du behöver för att kunna sätta igång.
David Allen är en mycket erfaren föredragshållare som vägleder både företag och privatpersoner till höjd effektivitet. Metoden i denna bok har han utvecklat under tjugo års arbete med att utbilda tusentals höga chefer och ledare.
272 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2001
1. Collect
2. Process
3. Organise
4. Review.
This book is not so much concerned with getting things done as it is championing appropriate engagement with your world—guiding you to make the best choice of what to do in each moment, and to eliminate distraction and stress about what you're not doing.A New Practice for a New Reality

Having a complete picture of one's commitments in work and life can help individuals make better decisions about what to pay attention to in any given moment, which, in turn, will allow them to engage more fully in the task at hand, making flow a more likely outcome.Recognize anything that has your attention (concerns, worries, problems, issues, tensions) and turn them into achievable outcomes (projects) to be executed with concrete next actions.
“Your mind is for having ideas, not holding them.”The GTD system helps you identify every single thing on your mind that keeps you from being fully present, and offers a way to offload them into a trusted system until you’re ready to tend to them. Since I started putting it into practice, I don’t spend as much time in my own head planning and stressing. If I do find myself there, I know that’s a sign I need to get back to my system.
“The idea is to get comfortable enough with your system that you can completely rely on it not to let things slip through the cracks unintentionally. So that at any given moment you have the reassurance and confidence that whatever you’re choosing to do is what you ought to be doing.” (paraphrased)What’s more, it makes you more at peace with what you’re NOT doing. I have so many things going on that I often feel swamped and overwhelmed. Being able to emphatically declare that I’m ignoring certain things for the day is liberating. Applying this correctly also means I’ll drop the ball less often.