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I'm a founder of TaskBeat - the productivity application for connected enterprise. Personally I'm trying to reconcile entrepreneur, manager and engineer in one bio.

Make a Not-Right-Now List

In today’s digital age, it’s hard to focus. But the Not-Right-Now list can help you get things done.

Most people operate with To-Do lists. If you’re like me, it seems as though that To-Do list never ends and you never check everything off of it. It’s so easy to add new things to the To-Do list. For those who use their email box as a To-Do list, it can be even worse. Our email inboxes have become an “open” list in which anyone in the world can add something to it at any time.

In today’s digital age, I have found that a Not-Right-Now list is just as important as a To-Do list. In fact, I’d say you should not have a To-Do list without a Not-Right-Now list. What’s a Not-Right-Now list? It’s a list on which you put things that you don’t have time to work on right now, but you don’t want to take off your To-Do list. As the adage says, “out of sight, out of mind.” If you unclutter your mind, you’ll be more effective in getting things done.

With emails, voicemails, text messages, Tweets, Facebook messages, and the occasional old-fashioned phone call bombarding us every day, it’s getting harder and harder to focus. If you can’t think, you can’t work. You can use your Not-Right-Now list to help you compartmentalize. Personally I recommend TaskBeat.com as a storage point for all the things to be done later on. Try it: forward all e-mail to do later to a special e-mail account that connects the system with your e-mail client.

I’ve also found that the Not-Right-Now list can be effective in meetings and brainstorming sessions to keep focus. Instead of saying “No, we can’t do that,” you can simply say, “That’s a great idea, we have other priorities we need to focus on at the moment, let’s put that on the Not-Right-Now list.” It’s a polite response and it’s a way of acknowledging a person’s idea, and ensuring it won’t be forgotten.

Typically, I go through my To-Do list every day. I’ve made it a habit to go through my Not-Right-Now list every week, typically on Fridays. If I’m falling behind, I put more things on my Not-Right-Now list. If something is added to my To-Do list during the week, I check to see what I can put on my Not-Right-Now list to balance it.

Even though you may experience some anxiety about the Not-Right-Now list at first, it’s far easier than it seems. The bottom line is you can only do so much, so why fool yourself with longer lists? Don’t worry, if you finish your To-Do list, I assure you that you can always move things from the Not-Right-Now list back on to your To-Do list. Though these days that seems to be a rarity for me.

The following article has been contributed by Frank Addante is founder and CEO of the Rubicon Project, the world’s leading real-time trading platform for online ads. A five-time entrepreneur, he sold two companies and took a third public. Parts have been contributed and extended by Maciej Zagozda, founder of TaskBeat.com – online task management application based on copyrighted task management concept.

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