For over a decade, busy people have used their time better, thanks to this practical, successful book, now updated for the lifestyles, work styles, and new technologies of the '90s.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Advice on Saving Time!,
By Michael Taylor "Michael Taylor" (Indian Trail NC) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: How to Organize Your Work and Your Life (Paperback)
Moskowitz has written an excellent title on different ways to eliminate the unnecessary clutter and techniques that rob us of precious time.Now to save you some time, I will briefly mention some the topics covered in the book: 1. How to best use your garbage can (didn't they tell us the computer age was suppose to eliminate paperwork?!). Now that I've saved you time by writing a short review, go get the book and read to find out how you can save more time! Highly recommended!
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Valuable,
By
This review is from: How to Organize Your Work and Your Life (Paperback)
This book has the expected material on organizing yourself, your home, and your office, that you'd find in any number of books. But it also has an extremely valuable and specific chapter on how to set goals for yourself. It does not define WHAT goals you should set, but describes a useful process for setting up goals and breaking them into steps to help you make a plan for reaching them. The goals chapter alone is worth the price of the book
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent at both illustrating large concepts and giving practical tips,
By Ketchkemet (urbana, il) - See all my reviews
This review is from: How to Organize Your Work and Your Life (Paperback)
I suspect this book isn't as popular as David Allen's GTD for a few reasons.
1) this author hasn't ever been on Oprah, at least that I'm aware of. 2) there's no 'personality' associated with it ("Dave says..."). The word 'I' appears much less in this book. There's no color photo of this author anywhere, much less on the cover. Put another way, this author is less of a self-promoter. (I mean, who cares what the author looks like?) 3) there's no TLA (three-letter acronym) to describe this book's ideas, suggestions, and activities--whereas GTD is often called a 'system'. People like to give things names, and nicknames. 4) There aren't a myriad of software-widgets that people have built using this book's suggested activities. To draw a comparison with making paintings: people first like to focus on buying supplies. Why? It's easy and fun and tangible. After finding that supplies don't make you a great painter, they focus on 'secrets' and technique. Maybe a better painter, but still not great. Then they realize that design is what makes paintings great. Design is much harder and elusive than supplies and technique. Books are the paints, GTD-plugins are tips/technique, and figuring out what you really want to do is design. This book focuses 70% on design and 30% on tips. 5) The book is much older -- 1993. It has fewer computer-focused tips, and more tips on figuring out how to get from Your Big Dream to tomorrow's to-do list. 6) It's not in stores anymore so you can't tell without holding both books, but this book is simply larger: the type is larger (i.e. easier to read) and the margins are larger so you don't have to keep angling it to see what the inside gutter words are. This book was sized and typeset to be legible, and GTD was designed to look small-therefore-easy. For all these reasons, I enjoyed this book much more. The primary difference of course is the focus: "How to Organize Your Work and Your Life" clearly accepts that without enjoying what you do (or some other strong motivation) everything's a chore. So, the first chapter gets going right away with clever ways of asking you to search for answers to Difficult Questions about what you really want to do in life. Then the author takes you through activities to determine the steps needed to make Big Dreams become Happy Accomplishments. You will really feel energized after reading this book, and more calm. Calm because you have more knowledge about yourself, and calm because you will have more acceptance of uncomfortable truths about productivity and priorities and how time is finite. The other big difference is the tone. This author talks about his own experiences much less, and less author-ego shows through the text. An over simplification might be "Time is finite" vs. "Let me tell you that after working with thousands of overwrought clients, I've discovered that time is finite." GTD has some useful information, and fun discussion and quotes. Many concepts (keep your desk uncluttered, re-evaluate your activities to see if they lead to your goals, learn how to delegate) are covered in both books. But I preferred the focus, approach, style, and printing of this book much more.
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