MacStories strives to be a low-volume publication with a focus on quality stories, reviews, and links I’m not assigning dozens of posts per day anymore, and I think we’re better served by an integrated communication service than a sparsely used collaborative task manager. Plus, I might have overestimated the amount of “task management for teams” we needed. When I saw how everyone was happier and faster by just collecting everything in Slack instead of having to use a separate app, it was clear to me that one of the core selling points of Todoist was no longer a must-have for us. Slack hasn’t become a better task manager than Todoist for us – it’s something else entirely. Slack packs all the features we want in a basic yet effective form: it may not be a dedicated task manager for teams, but it lets us communicate and search for old messages, we can forward emails to it easily, use Slackbot as a personal scratchpad, and, more importantly, we love using it. In my experience, convincing other team members to use a task manager they’re not fully on board for their personal tasks as well never works in practice at MacStories, we were either forgetting to check our shared tasks in Todoist, or we’d only enter new ones every once in a while without any consistency. That’s the upside of adopting Slack: because it blends communication and collaboration features for files, reminders, and good search, we all check the app every day but everyone can use the todo app they prefer. After becoming a paid Slack team this summer, I’ve started redirecting email messages I want to share with team members into individual channels 2, where it’s easier to keep track of what a person said or chose to assign to themselves ( adding “hey remind me to do this in X days” has become quite common for us). ![]() Over the past year, we’ve moved all of our communications to Slack, creating dedicated channels and groups to keep track of different topics – such as WWDC or Fall coverage – and leveraging integrations to feed updates and news alerts directly to our Slack. The catalyst for my decision to explore iOS task managers after WWDC was accepting how we’ve changed the way we work at MacStories and trying to imagine what would happen with Club MacStories.Īn increased reliance on Slack has been the key change for our team. If you spot a typo or any other issue in the eBook, feel free to get in touch at Changes I’d love for you to try out Club MacStories for at least a month, though.) ( Note: If you only care about the eBook, you can subscribe and immediately turn off auto-renewal in your member profile. A Club MacStories membership costs $5/month or $50/year and it contains some great additional perks. ![]() I had no idea it would become the task manager I’ve felt the most comfortable with since getting an iPhone eight years ago.Īn eBook version of this story is available to Club MacStories members for free as part of their subscription. Primarily out of curiosity but also with a hint of app boredom, I installed 2Do on my iPhone and iPad while I was in Positano 1. Life is ever-changing, and there’s no point in thinking that our approach to manage it should perpetually stay the same. On the verge of major alterations to my workflow and personal schedule, I always want to reassess and optimize how I get work done so that I don’t end up fighting a system that’s supposed to help me. If you’re looking for a task manager that does more than Wunderlist and is built for teams and external integrations, Todoist still is my top recommendation.Īround early July this year, I realized that my daily work routine wasn’t the same as the Fall of 2014 and that it was also about to change again with the launch of Club MacStories and my iOS 9 review. Todoist served me well for months, and I was happy to see that others were also rediscovering a service that had been around for quite some time and built a profitable business. I liked Todoist for reasons that made sense at the time: I was preparing our multi-article coverage of iOS 8 I wanted a task manager that lived in the cloud and could be used to collaborate with other people and I was intrigued by the idea of filters. Since 2013, I’ve only replaced my task management app of choice once – when I moved from Reminders to Todoist upon realizing that my life got too busy for Apple’s basic app. In reality, while I have been guilty of periodically changing the way I organize my tasks in the past – going as far as trying a different app each month – I’ve made an effort to stick with a system, learn it, and use it as much as possible over the past three years. On the surface, it surely seems like I’ve been doing a lot of both in the past year. ![]() There’s only one thing I like more than switching todo apps: writing about it.
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