GTD Workflow in Mindwtr
This guide shows how to implement the GTD methodology using Mindwtr's features.
Overview
Mindwtr maps directly to GTD concepts:
| GTD Concept | Mindwtr Feature |
|---|---|
| Inbox | Inbox view |
| Clarify | Processing wizard |
| Next Actions | Focus view for available actions; Contexts/Projects/Search for full inventory |
| Projects | Projects view |
| Waiting For | Waiting For view (status: waiting) |
| Someday/Maybe | Someday/Maybe view (status: someday) |
| Calendar | Calendar view (tasks with due dates) |
| Weekly Review | Review wizard |
Patterns
Use these patterns to keep the system light:
- Write next actions as visible physical steps: "Call insurance" beats "Handle insurance."
- Keep project support material in project notes. Do not flood Focus with future actions that cannot be done yet.
- Break large tasks into chunks or time boxes, such as "Spend 30 minutes sorting photos."
- Use contexts for tools, places, energy, and people:
@phone,@errands,#focused,@Alex. - Put delegated work in Waiting For with a follow-up date or person context.
- Keep the calendar for hard landscape: appointments, deadlines, and time-specific commitments.
- During Weekly Review, promote future project notes into real next actions when they become available.
- Choose one next action per project for a lean system, or multiple only when they are truly parallel.
1. Capture (Inbox)
Quick Capture
- Desktop: Type in the bottom input field or use keyboard shortcut
o - Mobile: Tap the input field on the Inbox tab
- Mind Sweep: Use guided prompts when you need to collect open loops across work, home, people, errands, and someday ideas.
Quick-Add Syntax
Capture with context immediately:
Call plumber @phone @home
Buy groceries @errands /due:saturday
Research topic #focused +WorkProjectThe Rule
Capture everything. Don't filter, judge, or organize—just get it out of your head.
2. Clarify (Processing Wizard)
Starting the Process
- Desktop: Click "Process Inbox" button
- Mobile: Tap "Process Inbox" button
The Workflow
flowchart TD
A[Item from Inbox] --> B{Is it actionable?}
B -->|No| C{What is it?}
C -->|Trash| D[Delete]
C -->|Future idea| E[Someday/Maybe]
C -->|Reference| F[Add to notes]
B -->|Yes| G{Less than 2 min?}
G -->|Yes| H[Do it now → Done]
G -->|No| I{Who should do it?}
I -->|I'll do it| J[Add contexts → Next Actions]
I -->|Delegate| K[Add note → Waiting For]Decision Points
Is it actionable?
- No → Delete, move to Someday/Maybe, or add as reference
- Yes → Continue
Will it take less than 2 minutes?
- Yes → Do it immediately, mark Done
- No → Continue
Who should do it?
- I'll do it → Select contexts, move to Next Actions
- Delegate → Add waiting note, move to Waiting For
Assign a project? (Optional)
- Link related tasks to a project
3. Organize
Task Statuses
| Status | Meaning | View |
|---|---|---|
inbox | Not yet processed | Inbox |
next | Ready to do next | Focus |
waiting | Delegated/blocked | Waiting For |
someday | Future/maybe | Someday/Maybe |
done | Recently completed | Done |
archived | Completed and filed away | Archived |
Done and Archived are both closed states, but they serve different jobs:
- Done is the recent completion log. Use it for tasks you may want to see during daily or weekly review.
- Archived is filed history. Archived tasks are hidden from normal task lists, but stay available in the Archived view for search, restore, or permanent deletion.
- Auto-Archive can move Done tasks to Archived after a set number of days. Set it to Never if you want Done to keep all completed tasks indefinitely.
Contexts and Tags
Add contexts to filter by where you can do tasks:
Location contexts (@):
@home,@work,@errands,@anywhere@computer,@phone,@agendas
Tags (#):
#focused— Deep work#lowenergy— Simple tasks#creative— Brainstorming#routine— Repetitive tasks
People
Use People for delegated or person-centered work. A task's assignee powers Waiting For lists, suggestions, and assigned: search; the People manager lets you keep reusable names, notes, and reference links without turning every person into a context tag. Deleting a person keeps their tasks and clears the assignee instead of deleting the work.
Projects
Create projects for multi-step outcomes:
- Go to Projects view
- Add a new project with name and color
- Add tasks to the project
- (Optional) Create Sections to group tasks by phase or sub‑outcome
- Toggle Sequential/Parallel mode:
- Sequential: Only first task shows in Focus view
- Parallel: All tasks show in Focus view
Deleting a project or area keeps its tasks. Mindwtr detaches that work to unassigned instead of cascading deletion.
Project Sections
Project Sections are subdivisions inside a single project. Use them when a project has natural phases, milestones, or workstreams and a flat task list would be hard to scan.
Example: Launch website can have sections such as Design, Development, and Content. These are not separate projects and not subtasks. They are organizational headings inside one project outcome.
The Project Section field on a task assigns that task to one of its project's sections. It is useful only after the task belongs to a project that has sections. For unassigned tasks, or projects without sections, leave the field blank.
Sequential projects can use a project-wide scope or a section scope. Use section scope when a project has independent phases or workstreams: Mindwtr shows the first available task in each section instead of blocking the whole project behind one task.
Due Dates and Reminders
- Set due date for deadlines
- Set start date for when to begin
- Set review date (tickler) for periodic check-ins
Dates vs. Status
Mindwtr keeps task status and task dates separate. Status is the GTD state you choose, such as inbox, next, waiting, or someday. Dates control when and why a task appears; they do not automatically promote a task to next.
- Start date is a defer/availability gate. A future start hides the task from Focus by default. When the date arrives, the task appears again with whatever status it already had; it is not promoted.
- Review date is a tickler. When the date arrives, Mindwtr surfaces the task where that view supports review-due items so you can reconsider it; nothing changes until you decide.
- Due date is a deadline. As it approaches or passes, Mindwtr gives the task deadline emphasis through display, reminders, and sorting pressure; status stays unchanged.
Some processing actions set status and dates together. For example, choosing Later while processing the Inbox moves the item to next and sets a start date. That action changes the status; the start date does not promote the task later on its own.
4. Reflect (Weekly Review)
Starting the Review
- Desktop: Go to Weekly Review in sidebar
- Mobile: Tap the Review tab in the bottom bar
The Steps
Process Inbox
- Clear all inbox items
- Goal: Inbox Zero
- Use the review's Process Inbox action to run the normal clarify workflow from inside Weekly Review
Review Calendar
- Look back 2 weeks for missed follow-ups
- Look ahead 2 weeks for preparation needs
Waiting For
- Review delegated items
- Send reminders if needed
Review Projects
- Ensure each project has a next action
- Mark completed projects as done
Someday/Maybe
- Review incubated ideas
- Activate or delete items
Best Practice
Schedule 30-90 minutes weekly, same time, same place.
Engage
Choosing What to Work On
Use the Focus view to see:
- Today's focused tasks (starred items)
- Next Actions (context-filtered or general)
- Overdue items
- Due today
Focus is not a full inventory view. It hides future-start tasks and later tasks in sequential projects so the list reflects actions that are available now. Use Contexts, Projects, or Search when you need to inspect all next actions, including deferred or blocked items.
How Focus sorts available actions
Focus first decides whether a task is available, then sorts the visible actions:
- Today's Focus shows tasks you explicitly focused for today.
- Today / Schedule shows available
nexttasks that are overdue, due today, or start today. These are ordered by the earliest due/start time, then priority when priorities are enabled, then oldest creation date. - Next Actions shows the remaining available
nexttasks. The default order is:- due soon first, earliest due date first (currently due within the next 30 days)
- undated actions next
- far-future due actions last, earliest due date first
- within the same bucket: priority when enabled, then start time, oldest creation date, title, and id
- Review Due shows tasks whose review date is due.
Start date is Mindwtr's defer/planned-date field. Future-start tasks are hidden from Focus by default unless you enable future-start visibility. Sequential projects also limit Focus to the first available action for that project or section, so later actions stay out of Focus until the previous step is no longer blocking them.
Time estimate and energy are Focus filters and grouping options, not default sort keys. Grouping by context, project, area, energy, or priority changes the visual groups; tasks inside those groups keep the same availability and next-action ordering.
Context Filtering
- Go to Focus or Contexts view
- Select a context chip (e.g., @home)
- See only tasks for that context
Today's Focus
Star tasks as today's priorities up to your configured Focus limit:
- Desktop: Click the star icon
- Mobile: Tap the star badge
Daily Workflow
Morning
- Open Focus view to see today's priorities
- Set focus tasks for the day up to your configured Focus limit
- Start working on the first one (mark as Focus)
Throughout the Day
- Capture new items to Inbox
- Check context-filtered lists when switching locations
- Mark completed tasks as Done
End of Day
- Quick scan of Inbox (process if time)
- Review tomorrow's calendar
- Update any in-progress tasks
Recurring Tasks
Set up recurring tasks for habits and repeating responsibilities:
- Edit a task
- Set recurrence (daily, weekly, monthly, yearly)
- Choose strategy:
- Strict for fixed schedules, such as a monthly review that should stay on the planned day
- Repeat after completion for habits based on when you actually finish
- When completed, a new instance is created automatically
Mindwtr keeps one active instance of a recurring task. Future occurrences are not pre-populated in the Calendar; the next instance appears only after you complete the current one. This keeps overdue work visible instead of quietly creating a chain of future copies.
Example recurring tasks:
- Weekly: "Review project status"
- Daily: "Check email @computer"
- Monthly: "Review subscriptions"
Tips for Success
Trust Your System
- Capture everything immediately
- Process regularly
- Don't skip weekly reviews
Keep It Simple
- Don't over-organize
- Use contexts sparingly at first
- Add complexity only when needed
Build Habits
- Same time for weekly review
- Regular inbox processing
- Consistent capture method