My introduction to productivity systems
It all started a few years ago when I read The Ultimate Commonplace System, a book by Ludvig Sunström. That was the first time I’ve heard of the word Commonplace. Turns out throughout history many famous people kept a Commonplace book. A book for their ideas, projects and experiments. Now Ludvig was bringing that knowledge to the digital world of the 21st century. I learned about the theory and the benefits of having this type of system. Being a programmer, this modern commonplace had to be kept in some application. There are a few solid options on the market today but none of them are designed to be a complete productivity system. Most of them are just representations of simple notebooks on our screens. Some of them offer synchronizations and others do not and that’s about it. Long story short I tried all of them and didn’t like most of them.
Building it myself
Being the naive engineer I decided to build one myself. Shouldn’t be too hard I thought. Well, this has led me through a journey of reading tens of books on productivity, user experience, system design and self improvement. Experimenting with around 20 different systems and applications (and stealing the best ideas from all of them). After 2 years and a few unsuccessful prototypes that even I didn’t want to use, LifeHQ is weeks away from launching.
During my ultimate productivity quest I discovered 4 functionalities that any productivity system worth its salt absolutely must provide:
- Organize your knowledge
- Take control of your habits
- Manage your projects and finish them on time
- Automate your self improvement
These 4 areas are tackled in LifeHQ with the following 5 modules.
The components of a complete productivity system
Projects module
Project is everything that requires more than one step to get done.
Projects can and should have deadlines.
Projects can have many resources: results of research, brainstorming, inspirational ideas, plans etc..
The LifeHQ Projects module provides these 3 functionalities for managing your projects: Lists of tasks (Todo lists), Schedule (Calendar) and Resources module.
TODO Today i.e. Daily action plan
We all have multiple projects running at the same time. The LifeHQ Daily action plan was designed to help you organize and prioritize your daily tasks.
Every evening you go through your projects and choose which tasks to add to your Daily todo lists for the following day.
All tasks are separated into 3 lists:
- Important – tasks for progress on long term goals
- Urgent – things that have to be done today that you can’t delegate
- Other – everything else, for bonus points
My suggestion is to have no more than 3 Important and 3 Urgent things. However you can not always plan for the Urgent ones.
Habits module
Habits are the things we do with ease, by going with the grain, by automation and that’s why they are so difficult to change. But not anymore.
The LifeHQ Habits module will help you acquire and get consistent with new positive habits and eliminate old ones.
This is achieved by two things working together:
- Consistency chain – Visual representation of your consistency with the habits during the week
- Success Chart – Bar chart that represents your daily success rate among all habits.
Quick tip: The goal is to maintain around 70% success rate. Once you get close to 100% it is time to introduce new habits. If you are bellow 50% you have too much on your plate, remove some habits for later.
Journaling
Napoleon Bonaparte, Leonardo Da Vinci and Benjamin Franklin all kept detailed journals. The most avid of them was Benjamin Franklin who didn’t use the journal as merely a recording device, but as a tool to better himself. The journal was an indispensable tool in his self improvement arsenal. He used it as a way to reflect on all his activities and moral values at the end of the day. His daily journal always began with: What good shall I do today? and ended with: What good did I do today?
Self reflection is the main reason for creating the Journal module. You have the ability to view the journal in writing mode on full screen and reflect mode where you can read the daily entries from the week and write your reflection in the week entry.
Automatically the software will generate for you daily, weekly, monthly and yearly journal entries so you can always keep track of your long term goals.
Knowledge base
As a driven individual you are constantly reading books, learning new things, having new experiences and coming up with your own ideas about how your life should be.
Just by living your life, you are producing large volumes of knowledge that needs to be organized. Here is a list of documents that we all keep in one form of another:
- Traveling often? Create a checklist of all the things you need to pack.
- Read a book? Create a book summary with the most important lessons.
- Learning new language? Keep a document with all the new words you keep forgetting.
- Writing a blog? Create a brainstorm document with future ideas for article.
- Building a company? Record your mistakes and success. That would make a great book.
We have identified few of these common documents and will provide you with templates for them to get you started. You also have the ability to create unlimited personal templates in the application.
Ready?
Check out LifeHQ in action. While there you can join our mailing list and get notified of all updates and upcoming releases.
Hey Darko - I'm working on a project in the same space (www.tribefive.me for reference). It's cool to see you've put so much thought into it! We should chat more offline and find ways to help each other out.
How close are you to launch? The reason I ask is because I think you should launch ASAP and start getting real world feedback.
I bet you'll be surprised about what your customers care about, and what they are confused by, etc.
(I say that as someone going through the same phase of the entrepreneurial journey.)
For instance, I thought Tribe of Five would be a very utilitarian app where you go in each day, check in really quickly, and get out. That's how I intended to use it.
But OVERWHELMINGLY, when early beta testers shared feedback, they wanted ways to engage with the people in their "tribe".
Right away, this helped me shift my roadmap so that I built out a light-weight comment system to see if that increases engagement in the app.
Good luck with LifeHQ, and email me if you ever want to shoot the shit on productivity stuff!
-Jonathan ([email protected])
Yes definitely. Email is on its way :)
Tribefive looks great btw
That seems like an absolutely massive amount of functionality. Like... the scope is huge.
How much customer development have you done during the development process over the last (2 years was it)?
Well so far I've been using Evernote to accomplish these things more or less. And I think many others have done the same. So now I'm building a system that has modules specific for these sections.
I am building this with myself as the ideal customer, then I'll just have to find people similar to me for customers. :)
I'm building a habit tracker (habit.fm) and so I was looking at the habits section. I pretty much started building for me personal use cases but have been engaging people along the way to find out how they do things. I've been pretty surprised at times at what people do and don't care about. Even though habit.fm is still a long way off what a mass-appeal habit tracker needs it's been really good talking to people about now they do things because it's helping me figure out what to focus on as I iterate and keep testing.
It's pretty challenging to get even one product right to the point where it's not only broadly appealing, but actually useful and even sticky. You definitely need to do a lot of customer development to build an accurate picture if reality.
I share the same feelings. I am also using evernote but it doesn't feel that handy at times. Dropped a note on your email do discuss further on this.
Are you building it all alone or have you setup a team for it ?