

I walked away with a number of great ideas. If you are interested in the GTD system and Evernote, I would recommend taking a look at this book. Can be useful to provide follow-up reminders for performance support feedback. You can send a message for a one-time reminder or recurring reminders. is a program where you send messages to be returned to you at a later date as a reminder. Gold also recommends a number of programs and hardware such as the Fujitsu ScanSnap S1100 and a very useful program. By doing this, you can leverage the GTD system to check off tasks as you complete them. Another idea was to create separate notes for each task. By doing this you can have a master agenda, and link detailed notes to it. One of the most clever ideas was to link notes together. While reading this book, I learned about some features I was not aware of to include linking notes together, creating Master Meeting Agenda using note linking, dedicating a single note to a single task, stacking notebooks, and improved saved searches. I have just finished reorganizing my Evernote system to a system similar to what Gold describes.

Basically, Gold describes in roughly 63 pages how he implements the GTD system using Evernote.

Gold managed to add clarity to the subject. I personally found the book to be a great combination and had previously tried to make the connection based on articles I had read. 2nd Edition, has managed to write a book that ties Evernote and Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity together. Daniel Gold, the author of Evernote: The unofficial guide to capturing everything and getting things done.
