GTD & OneNote This is a community contribution by Ryan Oakley. For me, GTD has always worked extremely well for those small (er) tasks and projects. You know – those little things that used to fall through the cracks but, with the help of GTD, are now easily tracked and moved on until completed. Use short one-line entries with the recommended notation (the OneNote tags) to keep notes, events, and tasks effectively sorted. If you add general entries, don't use the date as a title because OneNote does that automatically. There's tons of apps to help you work this way, from the popular OmniFocus to simpler tools like Wunderlist, but Microsoft's free-form notebook app OneNote can also be a great GTD tool.
Getting Things Done Onenote
Using Outlook And Onenote For Gtd
I've been an observer/reader of GTD for a little while, and I finally bought the book. I'm also a fan of OneNote, and finally bought it for work and home (used it religulously at my last job.) This brings up a few threads of thought: 1. Anyone use GTD for a group, rather than individually? For my specific case, I work in an enterprise application operations team, pretty much sysadmin/engineering work. As opposed to coders, etc. 2. Anyone using OneNote for GTD? All the flags and the Outlook integration look pretty sweet, fro my POV.