Yes 3 bullet points sounds about right :)

There's something we need to get across that speaks to people who are perhaps usually allergic to the idea of a task manager or project manager.

As in, Chandler is the anti-task manager, task manager. In the same way GTD is the anti-time management, time management system.

+ Don't spend a lot of time organizing yourself. Just dump what you're working on into Chandler. + Chandler helps you make progress and keep track of your work with Triage Status, custom alarms and the Calendar. + Work together as a group and manage group and personal work from a single place.

Mimi

On Dec 18, 2007, at 8:35 PM, Andre Mueninghoff wrote:

My first late-night thoughts...the Chandler suite would benefit from a
summary "so-what", a simply stated "raison d'etre" in three bullet
points...a first shot at leveraging Mimi's pony/horse in the product
thoughts:

The "So-What" of Chandler
-Capture and triage information into a flexible, adaptable system
-Focus on what is important Now
-Integrate your personal and collaborative (team) work-flows

Andre

Mimi Yin wrote:
Last week I wrote to the design list that we needed an articulation of
'the pony in the
product': http://lists.osafoundation.org/pipermail/design/2007- December/008115.html


Basically, it's back to the good ole elevator pitch. What's the
problem we're trying to solve and how are we solving it and why do we
think it's better than the competition.

We had some good guesses when we launched Preview, but it's taken
really using the app for the last few months for some of us to really
'get it'.

Here's a first pass at trying to articulate the pony. My hope is that
this will help us formulate a crisp pitch that is compelling to our
target audience. As I said in a past last email, I think part of the
problem is that as product-builders, we have a clinical understanding
of the problem that emphasizes how we *solve* the problem, rather than
the symptoms of the problem itself. Users on the other hand,
understand the symptoms. "Items in multiple collections" isn't
compelling unless it is presented as a solution to a problem people
can relate to. So here is an attempt to present Chandler and what it
does in the context of problems people can relate to.

CAVEAT: This is not intended to be landing page copy. This is simply
an articulation of what Chandler is, so that we're all on the same
page about what needs to be expressed in demos and other marketing
material. Unfortunately, my pony turned into a horse, so suggestions
about how to make this more succinct would be helpful.

NOTE: A number of the concepts discussed below are our interpretation
of "the spirit of GTD". I think it'd be worth identifying what they
are so that we can talk about it clearly and consistently. (e.g. Don't
over-organize. Don't over-plan. Make sure you allow yourself to do a
free-form dump so you get everything out of your head.)

Mimi

=====

THE PROBLEM
You get bits of information from emails, more emails, IM chats,
hallway conversations, post-it notes left on your desk, more email. At
the end of the day, where's the source of truth? Where exactly are we
having dinner? at what time? What are we supposed to bring? What's the
agenda for the meeting exactly? Where's the final packing list? Not
only do you need a 'source of truth' for yourself, you need it for all the different groups of people you coordinate, work, live, need to get
through life with.

*So you need a *trusted* system that can be your personal *source of
truth*. The groups you work with need a *trusted* system that can be
their *shared source of truth*. There are lots out there...why can't
people seem to stick to any?*

*I - THE PROBLEM WITH TASK MANAGERS TODAY: STRUCTURE GETS IN THE WAY*

To wrap their head around what they have to do, people always start
out by making a list/outline of all their projects and all their
tasks. This 'structure it in order to get a grip on it' approach to
task management has its deficits:

1. The structure itself locks out possibilities that don't fit into
that structure. Have something random you need to follow up on that
doesn't fit into your structure? Doesn't get written down. That's
trivial, petty, you think to yourself. Besides, I don't know where I'd
put it in this outline. I'll just keep track of it in my head.

2. As soon as new information comes to light, your outline gets out of date as you struggle to fit today's information into yesterday's list.

3. Lists and outlines don't allow you to focus on *just the stuff you
need to attend to NOW*. Instead you see everything that's not-done,
and a lot of it is stuff you're only hypothesizing you'll need to do.

4. Lists and outlines don't scale to hold and keep track of the
disconnected ideas and thoughts you have that eventually coalesce into
the 'work' you need to do. So even if you have a way to manage your
*tasks* (aka *list of stuff you need to do*), you still have nowhere
to store and manage all the stuff that constitutes the *substance* of
those tasks. In that sense, task management seems like a lot of
'meta-work', busywork that doesn't actually help you manage the work
you're actually doing.

5. Lists and outlines presume that you do things in a given order.
First I will do this, then I will do that. In reality, we noodle on
lots of things, all the time, at the *same* time. Coming up with ideas
and questions, remembering one more thing to add to that list,
spouting fully formed introductory paragraphs to the dreaded year-end
summary, scheduling a meeting, coming up with an agenda for that
meeting, writing meeting notes for last week's meeting...

*CHANDLER'S SOLUTION*

*1. Chandler doesn't start with a project outline. Chandler starts out
with a dumping ground for *stuff*.*
Dump everything out of your head into Chandler no matter how poorly
thought through, trivial or seemingly irrelevant. Don't worry about
what it is, when it needs to get done by, or what project it pertains
to. Don't worry about where it belongs. It doesn't need to be a task
or a meeting. Random thoughts are welcome. Anything that's taking up
space in your head is welcome. Chandler isn't so much a task manager
or a calendar as a mental *stuff* manager that helps you turn *stuff*
into concrete, actionable, useful things like tasks, events, lists and
messages.

*2. Chandler takes a don't over-organize, iterative approach to
organization.*
Once you've gotten past the 'dumping' stage, Chandler helps you work
your way through the pile with some out-of the box organizational
affordances that help you process and make progress on the things you
need to do bit-by-bit.

Chandler's organizational affordances are lightweight: (*)
+ Decide whether you want to deal with something NOW or LATER.
+ Create collections of items
+ Add items to Task lists and Calendars
+ Assign alarms

Also, don't worry about regretting tomorrow how you chose to organize
stuff today. Organization in Chandler is flexible so it never grows
stale. Structure is 'additive' in Chandler so that there's never any
'opportunity cost' to organizing your data in a particular way.
- Creating an event on my 'Family' calendar shouldn't preclude me from
seeing it in my 'Personal' calendar.
- Tracking milestones on your calendar shouldn't preclude you from
tracking them on your Task list as well.

(*) Eventually, we would like to support more sophisticated
organizational tools because sometimes, you just need to be that
organized:
+ Clusters: A way to thread items together
+ Tags and user-defined attributes
+ Smart, user-defined views

However, this functionality will be added in a way that is in keeping
with Chandler's minimalist and flexible approach.

*3. Chandler distinguishes between Not-Done and Needs to be Done so
that you can focus on what you need to deal with NOW without losing
track of the stuff you eventually need to deal with LATER.* You can
assign alarms and/or add items to the calendar and they will
automatically pop back into NOW. It's kind of like being able to time
when you receive a reminder email from yourself.

*4. Chandler isn't just for keeping track of what you need to do. It's for *doing* what you need to do. In this way, Chandler isn't so much a
'task manager' as a 'work manager'. *Unlike lists and outlines, each
task you enter into Chandler is a discrete information item with it's
own notes field. So your task item to 'Collect quotes for the
presentation' **becomes** the list of quotes itself as you collect
them in the Notes field over time. (This idea isn't easily discernible
today. Adding support for a Document or Resource Kind would help
highlight this aspect of Chandler.)

*5. Chandler presumes that you're working on multiple things *at the
same time, all of the time*.* Chandler isn't about listing out the
order in which you're going to do things and then automatically
telling you what you need to do next because the reality is, even the
best laid plans are laid to waste by the constant stream of 'new
information' we receive. Instead, you pick at-will what you want /
need / can't help but focus on right NOW and work on them simultaneously.

*II - THE PROBLEM WITH COLLABORATION TOOLS TODAY: WHETHER IT'S A WIKI
OR SHAREPOINT, COLLABORATION TOOLS ARE NEVER INTEGRATED WITH PERSONAL
TASK MANAGEMENT TOOLS. (WHICH IS WHY EMAIL IS STILL THE INFORMATION
MANAGER OF CHOICE, IT'S THE ONE SOLUTION THAT INTEGRATES THE TWO)*

*Now Chandler integrates personal and shared information manager too! *
+ You have equal access to personal *and* shared information in a
single application.
+ The same notes, tasks and events can appear in both shared and
personal collections so your personal 'source of truth' stays in sync
with the 'group's source of truth'.

*III - THE PROBLEM WITH A LOT OF SOFTWARE TOOLS IS THAT THEY'RE NOT
AVAILABLE / ACCESSIBLE FROM EVERYWHERE*
+ Chandler is cross-platform: Windows, Linux and Mac. Install it at
home and at work. Collaborate with others even if they're on a
different operating system.
+ You don't need everybody in your group to use Chandler to enable
collaboration. Send others to view and edit shared collections in the
web browser instead. They don't even need to sign up for an account.
+ Chandler allows you to access your own data via the web browser.
+ Chandler doesn't assume that everyone you need to work with can or
will use Chandler, which is why you can also collaborate on notes,
tasks and events via email.

+ Chandler is working on ways to get data onto mobile devices.

===

Elevator pitch: *Stuff manager for organized chaos? Work manager for
organized chaos? Project information manager for organized chaos? Task
manager for organized chaos?*
*
*
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