Setting Up And Organizing Your Outline/Hierarchy
A common question is how to best setup and organize your outline, particularly when using Result Areas to represent life dimensions or roles. This article gives you some general ideas and guidelines based on years of experience and feedback from hundreds of users.
Use Fewer, Broader Result Areas At First
When setting up your result areas, I recommend starting with a smaller number (4-8) of broader areas, instead of creating a larger number of focused areas, particularly when you are first getting started.
The reason is that having too many result areas can feel overwhelming and it becomes counterproductive.
So it’s better to start with a smaller number of areas and add more if needed than to start with too many and feel overwhelmed.
The default Outline in a new data file has the following result areas…
- Career – Represents your career path and growth
- Health & Fitness – Represents your physical health, self-care, recreation and wellbeing
- Personal Development – Personal growth including mental, emotional & spiritual wellbeing
- Financial – Your personal finances and wealth building
- Relationships – All the important relationships in your life
- Work – Your work-related projects and activities
These cover the life areas and roles that most of us play in life and are a good starting point for most users.
From here, you can create more result areas if you want to add extra emphasis to certain areas or parts of your life.
For example, if you want to emphasize your relationship with your spouse and children above all your other relationships, you could add Marriage and Children as separate result areas. If you want to emphasize self care above general health & fitness, you can add a Self Care result area to show that emphasis.
Just remember that in general, it’s better to keep your result areas manageable by limiting them to 4-8 areas. Don’t go overboard.
Don’t Use Child Result Areas For Organization
While AP supports creating child result areas, I recommend you avoid using them because it makes some of the other tabs harder to work with, particularly the Projects tab.
If you feel the need to better organize, categorize or separate projects/goals under one of your existing result areas, I recommend you use dreams, goals or projects to do that instead of child result areas.
This type of grouping dream, goal or project serves like a folder in your file system. It helps you organize your lower-level goals and projects.
Use Result Areas At the Top Of The Hierarchy
While you CAN create projects that don’t have a result area, Achieve Planner will work much better if you place all your dreams, goals and projects under a result area. Just trust me on this one.
If you don’t want to use AP for life planning and you only want to track work-related projects, I still recommend you use the Work result area for your projects. This article shows you how to customize AP for this setup (coming soon.)
Use Categories For Distinguishing Between Personal And Work-Related Areas
Categories help you distinguish between personal and work-related result areas. You can use categories to group result areas in the Outline & Projects tab, and they are used by some advanced features like the Task Chooser and Automatic Scheduling.
You can set the category for new result areas using the Result Area Information Form (double-click on a result area to open.) Just pick the category you want to assign from the dropdown.
If you need to, you can also customize the existing categories (change the name) and create your own. Use the Tools -> Options menu item and click on the Result Area Categories… button.
This tutorial should be reorganized to flow hierarchically. The best way is to start the tutorial off with CATEGORIES, and then go into how each should be organized down to Results Areas and their projects, dreams, etc. I had to read this tutorial 5 times to understand when you say “broader areas” you weren’t talking about categories, but were talking about “results areas”. So as another point, when referring to starting off with 4-8 broader areas, reword that to stick with the correct terminology (“results areas”). Hope this helps. Thanks!
I COMPLETELY agree with Catherine. Thanks to her I did not have to read 5 times to figure out what u meant…