My pleasure.

On Monday, 4 October 2021 at 05:18:47 UTC+8 [email protected] wrote:

> Thanks KC, that's an interesting addition to the taxonomy of goals and 
> projects I was unaware of.
> On Monday, 27 September 2021 at 12:05:52 UTC+1 KC wrote:
>
>> Due to the inspiration of latest reply by @Laurence, I'd like to add my 2 
>> cents, a project or projects without firm deadline, like getting better at 
>> a sport, could be considered an extreme project, check on the Wikipedia 
>> article of Extreme Project Management(A), the notion could improve the big 
>> picture while utilizing MLO app.
>>
>> (A):
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_project_management
>>
>> On Monday, 27 September 2021 at 04:09:22 UTC+8 [email protected] 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I interpret a project as an outcome with a deadline. So if you had to 
>>> buy a car by or on a given date, that would be a project.
>>>
>>> A goal relates to an "area of focus" where you want an outcome but there 
>>> is no firm deadline, like getting better at a sport. It would typically be 
>>> a recurring task, like practicing exercises. The timescale may vary, and 
>>> MLO handles this very well with weekly, monthly or yearly goals.
>>>
>>> For more, google Thiago Forte's PARA system, and Carl Pullein.
>>>
>>> There are many approaches to these concepts and it is confusing.
>>>
>>> Hope this helps
>>>
>>> Laurence
>>>
>>> On Monday, 30 August 2021 at 14:56:43 UTC+1 [email protected] wrote:
>>>
>>>> For me, goals and projects are two different things. First comes the 
>>>> goal, buy a ne car (while you’re there can you buy me one too?)
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> Now the question is: HOW DO I ACCOMPLISH MY GOAL?
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> There could be a project, there could be a set of recurring tasks, 
>>>> there could be affirmations on your mirror (which I hate), there could be 
>>>> visualization, etc.
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> A project is one approach to meeting your goal.
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> That’s how I look at it.
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> Take Care,
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> *Michael Emerald, CFA*
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> *Performance Business Design*
>>>>
>>>> Owner, Business Strategy Consultant
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> *From:* 'Ned ZTown' via MyLifeOrganized <[email protected]> 
>>>> *Sent:* Sunday, August 29, 2021 15:07
>>>> *To:* MyLifeOrganized <[email protected]>
>>>> *Subject:* [MLO] advantages of using goal vs project
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> What are the advantages of using the goal vs project feature? Let's 
>>>> assume if I want to buy a new car in next 6 weeks. What advantages will I 
>>>> get setting up this major task (with multiple subtasks) as a goal over a 
>>>> project or vice versa?
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
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>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mylifeorganized/432b6b80-93d8-4e27-b0d2-21daf6d9c6bbn%40googlegroups.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
>>>> .
>>>>
>>>

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