Elevator Pitch

Click the little arrow to listen.

Welcome new readers!

Stephen Smith Productivity Workflow consulting

Register for SOBCon 2009

Click here to Register for SOBCon 2009

Please visit our Sponsors




Fresh Focus on Productivity Consulting Blog for Profit
Wrike.com

Utterli


Business Development in Context


  • Recent Comments

    • Steelacrirtuard: Tired of a competitor's site? Hinder the enemy? Fed pioneers...
    • ksamuel: Funny, as I released a free app G1 mobile that is called In...
    • Productivity Affirmations: Look like you manage to keep many stuff in such a small plac...
    • kigualge: hmm... strange...
    • Zoobpres: mm. thank you ))...
    • sam: askmrlee, that's real easy for you to say if you have the cr...
    • Perlen: Vibi...


  • Lijit Search


    Visit the Productivity Lens for more information about Getting Things Done and other resources.


    PRODUCTIVITYZEN.COM



    del.icio.us RSS



    Technorati HQ

    Add to Technorati Favorites










    The Book of Days DIY Project

    December 28th, 2007 by Stephen

    Posted in Books, How To -, The Examined Life |

    If you're new here, Welcome! To learn more about what this site is all about click here [link].

    Connect with Stephen at LinkedIn - Click hereProductivity Tools and DIY Calendars - Click hereI am a small business Conversation Consultant and public speaker that uses the power of the internet to leverage your success. Productivity in Context is a web magazine focused on Productivity and tools for organizing. Make this your headquarters for improving your life and work through increased mindfulness, education, and workflow practices.

    Subscribe by E-mail for updates on: Productivity methods, Lifestyle innovation, and the collaborative design of the next-generation personal knowledge management system.

    Click Here for an overview of the content. Please take a look at our sponsors. (Hosting isn't free...)
    Please contact me via e-mail: stephen @ hdbizblog dot com

    Thanks for visiting!

    I have just completed a project that I have been working on for a couple of days, which I call the Book of Days. Click on the pics to go to Flickr for the full-sized images.

    The Book of Days is a five-year journal. There is one page for each day of the year, with room for five entries - one per year from 2008 to 2012.

    I made this set of three books from blank 5″ x 7″ journals from Barnes & Noble. The customized covers were created by printing a “perpetual calendar” image I found online onto parchment paper. This paper was glued to a 5″ x 7″ piece of cardboard, this cardboard backing was in turn glued to the kraft cover of the journal.

    That was actually the easy part of this project, luckily I am pretty “crafty”. The time-consuming part was laying out the pages and creating the table of contents.

    Each Month is in Three Sections

    This is the Table of Contents for Volume I:

    Introduction
    Table of Contents

    January Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    February Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    March Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    Quarterly Reviews
    2008
    2009
    2010
    2011
    2012

    April Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    May Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    June Goals
    Daily Entries
    Monthly Review

    Goal Setting

    Each section begins with a page set aside for writing down my Goals for the month.

    These goals will include both personal and professional subjects. I believe that it will be interesting and instructive to be able to look at what my goals for each month were as the years go by.

    In fact that feature is, for me, the greatest appeal of this type of journal. I do keep a journal that I write in most days, mainly a collection of ideas, free-associations and rambling thoughts, not so much a record of anything. This journal is also difficult to use as a reference due to its free-form nature.

    Daily Entries

    In contrast, this journal is designed to become an ongoing record of my personal development, with tags and pointers to other resources. Each day gets 4 lines per year, where I will record brief notes on the weather, work projects, current events, and a general impression of the day.

    For example I may make a note of an interesting blog post or book that I read, with a “link” to a quotation in the Commonplace Book, or a website, or a notation that identifies a file in the archive where I put the printed article.

    The Monthly Review

    The third part of each monthly section is a spot for a summary of the Monthly Review. One full page is set aside for each year. Over the course of the past year, as my GTD practice has grown and evolved, I have found that a summary of this kind would come in handy for the Quarterly Review.

    Likewise, at the end of March, there is a section set aside for a Quarterly Summary. This summary will focus on progress made toward long-term goals and larger-scale projects.

    As the journals only have 240 pages, I had to break the Book of Days into three volumes. The second contains the entries from July out to November, and the Quarterly Reviews for June and September.

    Volume III will be the record for the December daily entries, the final set of Quarterly Reviews, and the Annual Review Summary. I will be including an Annual summary for 2007, as there is plenty of room and I am eager to get started.

    Fresh Focus on Productivity has an interesting take on a similar idea, the Completion Journal. Check it out. (And if making your own is too much of a hassle, you can get a spiral-bound version here - the Book of Days on lulu)

    If you found this post useful, please share it with your friends on Twitter using the tinylink http://tinyurl.com/5k7wc6. Thanks, I appreciate it! Feel free to comment below, I enjoy discussing these ideas. ~@Stephen


    Leave a Comment:


    Subscribe to Productivity in Context by Email.
    Get involved with the Work.Life.Creativity forum.

    4 Responses

    1. Kate Davis Says:

      This is a great idea Stephen. It will be interesting to see how similar your entries on an annual basis and will hopefully provide a great motivation tool as you see how far you have progressed.

    2. MimiPedia » Blog Archive » The Book Of Days Says:

      […] you’re new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!Stephen Smith vom HDBizBlog ist ein GTD-Junkie. Er entwirft und vertreibt Planer und Vorlagen, die auf der Basis von Getting […]

    3. Burger's King Says:

      Oh! Wonderful job!
      Very interesting and helpful post.
      I add your interesting blog in my iGoogle page!
      We’ll expect many new interesting posts from you ;)

    4. Productivity in Context » Blog Archive » The Completion Journal Says:

      […] is an approach similar to that of the Book of Days that I posted on back in December. I will be modifying my own use of this tool, adding weekly […]

    Leave a Comment

    XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

    Please note: Comments with links are moderated. I get a lot of crazy spam. Scroll to the bottom for subscribing to the comment and submitting your Comment.

    Subscribe without commenting

    Creative Commons License
    This work by Stephen Smith is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.