creating a subsequent or follow-on task
hodders says:
does anyone know if there's an easy way to create a follow-on or subsequent task to a task that I've already put in ?
A simple scenario would be:
Task: prepare costings to prepare to janet. I enter the task with a reminder etc.
when I get the reminder, I open it, do the task, sne the costings to janet.
Task is now complete but I immediately want to create a related task such as
phone Janet to see what she thought of the costings.
ALL ideas gratefully received !
THANKS
mark
A simple scenario would be:
Task: prepare costings to prepare to janet. I enter the task with a reminder etc.
when I get the reminder, I open it, do the task, sne the costings to janet.
Task is now complete but I immediately want to create a related task such as
phone Janet to see what she thought of the costings.
ALL ideas gratefully received !
THANKS
mark
mmorowitz says:
I'm not sure what you mean. You want the system to know what you're supposed to do next and create a task for you?
Just type in the task, "Follow up with Janet". Task created.
What exactly do you want the system to do for you?
Just type in the task, "Follow up with Janet". Task created.
What exactly do you want the system to do for you?
jsuomi says:
Duplicate and edit the reminder task before completing the parent task of prepare costings.
amosglenn says:
how about setting up a task that says:
prepare costings / send costings to Janet / call Janet re: costings
When you have the costing prepared, edit the task to delete the first step and update the due date, etc.
delete the "send costings to Janet" section what that's complete, and mark the whole task complete when you've made the followup call.
combining steps is not usually considered "good practice" and you'll lose some features, but you won't lose track of the steps.
prepare costings / send costings to Janet / call Janet re: costings
When you have the costing prepared, edit the task to delete the first step and update the due date, etc.
delete the "send costings to Janet" section what that's complete, and mark the whole task complete when you've made the followup call.
combining steps is not usually considered "good practice" and you'll lose some features, but you won't lose track of the steps.
erinlynnyoung says:
one reco I've seen is to set dependent tasks as a tag such as #depend and set them due to an interval you can tolerate (i.e. on Friday). then hide the #depend tag in your smart lists and trust that your dependent tasks will pop up on the due dates you've set. If you're ready for them, you can then scrap the #depend tag and they'll appear on your smart lists.
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