And that's one of the key lessons I've learned as my use of OmniFocus has evolved. I could have kept them under my "Freelance" folder since they technically are a side-project, but that felt wrong as writing is such a different beast than software development. It's a large enough task that I needed to break it down into multiple projects. The first one, "Photo Book", is for the book I'm writing. What's different, however, are the three additional folders I've added to the bottom. Other than the different job, that's pretty much how things were four years ago. Similar to what I described four years ago, the majority of my projects are sorted into three folders which represent the three primary areas of responsibility in my life: I'm going to break this post down into three sections: I figure it's time to show how my workflow with OmniFocus has evolved to take on the added responsibility in my life. I've had my first child, taken on a more demanding full-time job, and watched my side business grow into it's own full-time operation. Those areas have all grown rapidly since then. Perhaps the best compliment I can give the app, is that it's always managed to be exactly what I needed it to be at any given moment.įour years ago, I wrote a long post about how I used OmniFocus to manage the three areas of responsibility in my life: personal, work, and freelance. Over those many years, my life has changed in countless ways, and with it, so has the way I use OmniFocus. I've been using OmniFocus since the Kinkless days.
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