With the new year comes the desire to break-in a new notebook with the fanciest of pens! Well, maybe that’s just me, but here’s three interesting systems that help you be more productive.

I came across Ryder Carrol’s Bullet Journal note-taking system today, and am very impressed by its process design. Using a notebook with numbered pages for later indexing, each day’s page is a list of tasks, notes, events that are optionally tagged by “signifiers” to indicate their context. The “rapid logging” approach uses a visual code to distinguish between line items. This makes it very fast to scan the list for certain types of information, and it also means that data entry can be very fast without compromising clarity. Page numbers are used to create indexes of related content on master pages; they are constructed as the days accumulate. It’s well-worth checking out…minimum data entry that supports daily review and references over time! The instructional website is also exceptionally well-done: Bullet Journal.

today, and am very impressed by its process design. Using a notebook with numbered pages for later indexing, each day’s page is a list of tasks, notes, events that are optionally tagged by “signifiers” to indicate their context. The “rapid logging” approach uses a visual code to distinguish between line items. This makes it very fast to scan the list for certain types of information, and it also means that data entry can be very fast without compromising clarity. Page numbers are used to create indexes of related content on master pages; they are constructed as the days accumulate. It’s well-worth checking out…minimum data entry that supports daily review and references over time! The instructional website is also exceptionally well-done: Another notebook-driven approach that comes to mind is Mark Forster’s AutoFocus Time Management System , which also uses a fast logging approach to note-taking. Like Ryder, Mark has been refining his systems for years. The gist of AutoFocus is bulk-adding all your task items, one item per line, to a page of your notebook, in chunks. After you’re done entering a chunk of tasks, you draw a divider line at the end, which visually indicates the boundary between your just-entered “backlog” tasks and future “active list” tasks. When it comes to determine what to do next, you scan through the backlog and do as many as possible before even looking at the active list, which encourages you to handle first-things first and keep you focused. What I like about the idea of this “backlog” and “active” list demarcation is that it captures to-do items as they occur to you in a space-efficient use of paper. Essentially, you are always looking at the last entries, maintaining an up-to-date task list without having to jump around.

, which also uses a fast logging approach to note-taking. Like Ryder, Mark has been refining his systems for years. The gist of AutoFocus is bulk-adding all your task items, one item per line, to a page of your notebook, in chunks. After you’re done entering a chunk of tasks, you draw a divider line at the end, which visually indicates the boundary between your just-entered “backlog” tasks and future “active list” tasks. When it comes to determine what to do next, you scan through the backlog and do as many as possible before even looking at the active list, which encourages you to handle first-things first and keep you focused. What I like about the idea of this “backlog” and “active” list demarcation is that it captures to-do items as they occur to you in a space-efficient use of paper. Essentially, you are always looking at the last entries, maintaining an up-to-date task list without having to jump around. Not a task system, Sketchnotes is an approach to visual note-taking. It is probably the antithesis of the two text-based systems mentioned above, but I mention it because designer Mike Rohde wrote an excellent reference called The Sketchnote Handbook to describe the juicy details with a remarkably accessible presentation. It’s a clear treatise on how to capture and organize your thoughts effectively using visual design concepts. I particularly like how it emphasizes that you don’t need to be an artist to take lovely visual notes. It’s one of my favorite information design books (here’s my review). If you are not averse to mixing multiple systems in a single notebook, sketchnoting is a nice change of pace.

I like the implementation of Bullet Journal because it uses the linear notebook medium efficiently without compromising ease of organization; the computer nerd in me can’t help but compare it to an efficient tape-based archive file format. AutoFocus, by comparison, reminds me of an efficient batch processing program that handles real-world complications using a Scrum-like approach, but it isn’t designed for information collation. They are high-throughput, high-efficiency approaches to productivity.

For myself, I am more interested in slower processes and fewer to-do items because I like to focus on one thing at a time. Thus, my emphasis is on culling and simplifying my task inputs before I do anything, and I use paper to restrict the scope of what I worry about on any given day. This requires compartmentalization of the task backlog away from the execution of tasks. Currently, I’m storing all of my tasks in the cloud using Trello, using an approach I describe in this blog post. When I use paper, I write down my task list on an index card if it’s small enough, or I bust out a sheet of Emergent Task Planner if I have to be more time-aware from day-to-day. My tool design tends to focus on cross-relating information than efficient processing, because that is the primary bugaboo I face as a freelance work-at-home designer/content creator.