Ep 207: How to Sort and Stack Your Ideas and Tasks to Transform as a Writer and Person




Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach show

Summary: [Ep 207]<br> <br> <a href="http://annkroeker.com/2019/07/16/ep-207-how-to-sort-and-stack-your-ideas-and-tasks-to-transform-as-a-writer-and-person/sort-and-stack-ideas-and-tasks-transform-as-a-writer-and-person/" rel="attachment wp-att-27528"></a><br> <br> On my drive to Minneapolis to serve on the faculty of Northwestern Christian Writers Conference, I listened to podcasts: one after another, back-to-back.<br> <br> I welcomed that stream of input filling my mind with ideas, strategies, and solutions that I can apply to my writing life.<br> <br> But it’s easy to listen and then forget what I heard. What a waste if I devote hours to listening but never remember or apply what the experts recommend!<br> <br> Life is short. I want to learn and grow and transform—I want to become wiser and more discerning. I’m committed to implementing those ideas!<br> Sort and Stack<br> So first I capture the information. Later, you know what I do?<br> <br> I sort and stack it.<br> <br> I’ve done this for years without having a name or phrase to put with it, but author Robin Jones Gunn said it in her keynote address: we must learn to sort and stack.<br> <br> Sort and stack.<br> Sort and Stack Conference Notes<br> Sometimes conference attendees report that by the end of the weekend they feel like they’ve been drinking from a fire hose. They’re blasted with so much new information in session after session, they feel hit with input and ideas and vocabulary and concepts they've never heard before.<br> <br> It’s overwhelming.<br> <br> It would be easy to set aside the notes from those sessions and return to status quo when they arrive home.<br> <br> But life is short. Those attendees came to learn and grow and transform, so I hope they’re committed to implementing those ideas.<br> Avoid the Overwhelm<br> Hopefully they scribbled down copious notes, captured them someplace—to sort and then stack them into logical, usable groups.<br> <br> My breakout session offered probably 30 ideas, maybe more, of ways people can put some heart, soul, and a little laughter into social media. Another session may have offered 20 or 50 more ideas. Soon, the writers will have filled a notebook.<br> <br> It’s easy to get overwhelmed. We don’t have to do it all, and we don’t have to do it all right away.<br> <br> But we don't want to lose those ideas.<br> <br> The conference attendees don’t have to implement every idea the day they get home from the conference, and I don’t have to implement every idea I heard on the drive home in those podcasts I listened to.<br> <br> We want to sort out what to do when so we try things out in an order that makes sense.<br> Create a Master Stack<br> If we successfully capture the information, we can create a master list and continue to work through it, sorting and stacking over time.<br> <br> We can convert our notes from the master list or “stack” into more lists, labeled however we wish:<br> <br> * Research<br> * Try next month<br> * Archive<br> <br> As you sort notes from your master list into these sub-stacks, you can label them in many ways. Use the nomenclature from the organization, time-management, or productivity systems that make sense to you.<br> <br> Again, think of each new list as another stack. Move notes to one stack or another, sorting as you go.<br> Sort and Stack Based on ROI<br> <a href="http://annkroeker.com/tag/a-writers-guide-to-roi/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Writer's Guide to ROI series</a> helps with sorting and stacking. By thinking through return on investment of any given idea, I can comb through the stack of ideas I collected from my podcast marathon and sort them based on values and goals and efficient use of time.<br> <br> Then I can sort them into new stacks or categories to figure out how and when to implement them.