View Single Post
Two excellent blogs with amazing products are here:

http://www.usingomnifocus.com

A lot of free OmniFocus articles to sharpen your blade. There is a link to purchase the eBook "Creating Flow with OmniFocus". Well worth the price of admission.



http://www.asianefficiency.com/omnifocus/

Many free OmniFocus articles are collected here as well. There is an excellent OmniFocus theme for you to download and try out as a different skin for your OmniFocus setup.

You'll have the opportunity to get their new eBook for OmniFocus on January 15th. Here's the announcement.

http://www.asianefficiency.com/annou...focus-product/






I'm going to say right now that it is well worth the price of the eBooks. If you want to master OmniFocus, these are the two resources to look at. The free articles on both web sites are great but the eBooks flow smoothly. You can see how every chapter flows together. You'll see every piece of puzzle fitting into the overall picture. You'll get a chance to try out some real world workflows and develop your own GTD setup.

No two GTD setups are alike. My workflow and demands will be much different from yours and will require different philosophies. I've spent years searching for different blog posts and OmniFocus forums for tips and tricks to help me with OmniFocus. I wished I could have all that time back because everything was located in these two books alone.

I know you hesitant about parting with some coin for the books but it is well worth it. I'll give you an example. If you are learning to ride a bike, you'll want to start off slowly (possibly with training wheels). You're not the good. You wobble a little bit but you're slowly getting the hang of it. Then you'll take off the training wheels and learn to bike on your own. Eventually, you get hooked on bicycling. You'll want to learn more. So you start visiting forums on bicycling and soaking up everything about bicycling. You'll learn about brakes, frames, pedals, gears, and all that good old biker porn. You start visiting your local cycling club and hang out with experienced riders and learn about how to advance your game. Then you actually start spending a little bit more money buying cycling magazines or membership fees to get better and better.

That's the same effect you'll get with these books. I've gotten my money's worth out of the books. If you spend $30 to help you make $300, I'd say it's worth the price of admission. HTH.