Getting Things Done

GETTING THINGS DONE: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

By David Allen

Getting Things Done (GTD) is a detailed workflow that allows you to have your cake and eat it – to be more relaxed, energized, yet accomplish more with less effort. It helps you to get “in the zone” and operate with a “mind like water”, so you can handle an overwhelming number of tasks with relaxed control.

In this summary, you’ll learn:
• How to set up your workflow to clear your head, process and organize your work most effectively;
• Strategies to review and prioritize your work at different levels; and
Powerful decision-making frameworks to make effective moment-to-moment, day-to-day and strategic decisions.

Who should read this:
• Leaders, managers, and busy executives;
• Anyone feeling overwhelmed or wish to improve personal effectiveness and productivity.

See More
3 customer reviews

From $9.97

Graphic Summary

Text Summary

Audio Summary

3 reviews for Getting Things Done

  1. Chad Warner

    This is my go-to productivity book. Since reading it a few years ago, I’ve followed GTD in much of my professional and personal life. I highly recommended it to those who want to regain control of their time and become efficiently productive. It teaches how to be “maximally efficient and relaxed” by avoiding “the so-called urgent and crisis demands of any given workday.” [Review from Goodreads]

  2. KatieMc

    This is a good system for dealing with all the minutiae that make up all that we need to do just to manage our careers and lives. As for the book, it was a bit dated. His systems were very paper centric… this guy still loves his paper folders and label makers. [Review extracted from Goodreads]

  3. Josh

    The essence of Allen’s strategy is this: Develop a method for capturing everything you have to do in your life on an ongoing basis, periodically break it all down into actionable steps, arrange those actions in order, and then go to town on them… It was a transformative experience to sit down with all the clutter in my life and break it down into next actions… For the first time I can remember, the miscellaneous open loops in my life are not tugging at my attention. I’ve closed the ones I can close, and I’m okay with the ones I haven’t closed yet. I’ll get to them when it’s time. [Review extracted from Goodreads]

Add a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like…