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    liqiongyu

    personal-productivity

    liqiongyu/personal-productivity
    Productivity
    16

    About

    SKILL.md

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    About

    Build a Personal Productivity System Pack (weekly timebox plan, capture+to-do system, daily/weekly review rituals, and a 7-day rollout)...

    SKILL.md

    Personal Productivity

    Scope

    Covers

    • Designing a weekly timebox plan for a high-meeting-load job (meeting windows, focus blocks, admin buffers)
    • Building a write-it-down capture system so tasks don’t live in your head (inbox → lists → reviews)
    • Creating daily + weekly review rituals that keep you current without constant re-planning
    • Producing a practical 7-day rollout plan (small changes you can implement immediately)

    When to use

    • “Help me timebox my week so I can handle meetings + deep work.”
    • “I keep forgetting tasks. Build me a write-it-down system and a review routine.”
    • “I’m juggling a demanding job plus side commitments (advising/board/etc.). Make it sustainable.”
    • “Create a personal productivity system I can follow next week.”

    When NOT to use

    • You primarily need to reduce burnout or redesign your week around energy (not just time) — use energy-management (this pack optimizes time; that pack optimizes energy)
    • You need a project plan, milestones, or delivery management for a specific initiative — use managing-timelines
    • You want to design team-wide meeting policies, rituals, or operating systems — use team-rituals
    • You need a delegation framework for distributing work to reports — use delegating-work
    • You need medical/mental-health advice (including ADHD treatment), or you are in crisis. Seek professional help
    • You want a team-wide process (meeting policy, org operating system). Use a team/ops skill instead

    Inputs

    Minimum required

    • Your role + primary responsibilities (and whether you manage people)
    • Your constraints/non-negotiables (time zones, caregiving, travel, on-call, deadlines)
    • A representative week (calendar text dump, recurring meetings list, or narrative)
    • Your current task system (or “none”) + tools you’re willing to use (any calendar + any to-do list works)
    • What “better” means in 2–4 weeks (e.g., fewer dropped tasks, more deep-work blocks, lower weekend spillover)

    Missing-info strategy

    • Ask 3–5 questions at a time from references/INTAKE.md.
    • If the calendar is unavailable, proceed with a default-week draft using explicit assumptions and ask the user to correct it.
    • Do not request secrets, credentials, or sensitive personal/medical details.

    Outputs (deliverables)

    Produce a Personal Productivity System Pack (Markdown in chat; or as files if requested) in this order:

    1. Context Snapshot (goal, constraints, assumptions, success definition)
    2. Commitment & Workload Inventory (fixed commitments + “floating” responsibilities)
    3. Weekly Timebox Plan (meeting windows, focus blocks, admin buffers, protected time, weekend spillover rule)
    4. Capture + To-Do System Spec (inbox, lists, processing, prioritization, timeboxing method)
    5. Daily Plan + Shutdown Ritual (how you start the day; how you close loops)
    6. Weekly Review Ritual (calendar + task review; reset rules)
    7. 7-Day Rollout Plan (setup steps + first-week experiments)
    8. Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)

    Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
    Expanded guidance: references/WORKFLOW.md

    Workflow (7 steps)

    1) Intake + success definition + boundaries

    • Inputs: user context; references/INTAKE.md.
    • Actions: Confirm scope (personal productivity for career execution). Define “better” in 2–4 weeks and 1–2 measurable signals (e.g., dropped tasks/week, deep-work blocks/week). Confirm boundaries (not medical/therapy; not a team policy rewrite).
    • Outputs: Context Snapshot (draft) + assumptions/unknowns list.
    • Checks: Success definition is specific enough to evaluate after 2 weeks.

    2) Build a commitment & workload inventory

    • Inputs: calendar/recur meetings; responsibilities; side commitments.
    • Actions: List fixed commitments (meetings, deadlines, recurring obligations) and floating workload (projects, people mgmt, admin). Identify 3–5 “high-leverage” responsibilities and the biggest sources of fragmentation.
    • Outputs: Commitment & Workload Inventory (table) + top constraints.
    • Checks: Inventory separates fixed vs flexible time and includes side commitments (if any).

    3) Design the weekly timebox plan (default week)

    • Inputs: inventory; energy preferences; constraints.
    • Actions: Draft a default week: meeting windows, focus blocks, admin buffers, and protected personal time. Add explicit rules: meeting batching, buffer time, weekend spillover (if needed), and what gets timeboxed first.
    • Outputs: Weekly Timebox Plan (calendar-like block plan) + 5–8 rules.
    • Checks: At least 3 focus blocks/week exist; meeting time has limits or windows; buffers are real blocks (not wishes).

    4) Specify the capture + to-do system (“write it down”)

    • Inputs: current tools; task volume; common failure modes (dropped tasks, unclear next actions).
    • Actions: Define: capture inbox, processing ritual, list taxonomy, and a prioritization rule. Ensure every task becomes either: (a) timeboxed on calendar, (b) next action on a list, (c) delegated, or (d) deleted.
    • Outputs: Capture + To-Do System Spec + “rules of the system”.
    • Checks: The system has a single trusted inbox and a daily processing rule that takes ≤15 minutes.

    5) Add daily plan + shutdown ritual

    • Inputs: timebox plan; task system.
    • Actions: Create a daily routine: morning “top outcomes” + quick timeboxing; end-of-day shutdown (clear inbox, update next actions, plan first block tomorrow).
    • Outputs: Daily Plan + Shutdown Ritual (copy/paste checklist).
    • Checks: Ritual is small enough to actually do; includes handling of new tasks during the day (capture rule).

    6) Add weekly review ritual (reset + recalibration)

    • Inputs: default week; backlog lists; upcoming commitments.
    • Actions: Create a weekly review to: reconcile calendar ↔ tasks, reset priorities, and re-timebox next week. Include a “kill list” (stop/defer) to prevent backlog bloat.
    • Outputs: Weekly Review Ritual + weekly reset checklist.
    • Checks: Review includes both (1) looking forward (next 2 weeks) and (2) backlog cleanup.

    7) Quality gate + finalize rollout plan

    • Inputs: full draft pack.
    • Actions: Produce a 7-day rollout plan (setup + first experiments). Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Include Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
    • Outputs: Final Personal Productivity System Pack.
    • Checks: Next 7 days have specific actions scheduled; risks and unknowns are explicit.

    Quality gate (required)

    • Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
    • Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.

    Examples

    Example 1 (timeboxing + side commitments): “I’m a product leader with wall-to-wall meetings and I advise a startup. Use personal-productivity to create a Personal Productivity System Pack with a default week timebox plan and a task capture system.”
    Expected: weekly timebox plan with meeting windows + focus blocks, capture/to-do spec, daily/weekly reviews, 7-day rollout.

    Example 2 (dropped tasks): “I keep forgetting small but important follow-ups. Build me a write-it-down system and a daily shutdown routine.”
    Expected: capture system with inbox → processing → lists, a 10–15 minute daily shutdown checklist, and success metrics.

    Boundary example (medical): “Diagnose my ADHD and tell me what productivity meds to take.” Response: out of scope for medical advice; recommend professional help. Offer a neutral capture/timeboxing system and ask for work constraints only.

    Anti-patterns

    1. Over-engineered system — Building a 15-list, 4-tool, color-coded productivity apparatus that takes longer to maintain than the work it manages. The capture system should have one inbox and daily processing under 15 minutes.
    2. Calendar fiction — Designing a beautiful default week that ignores real constraints (meeting culture, timezone overlap, manager expectations). Every focus block must survive contact with the actual calendar — if it can't, redesign the week, don't just wish for fewer meetings.
    3. Ritual bloat — Adding a morning routine, mid-day check, afternoon review, shutdown ritual, and weekly review that together consume 90+ minutes/day. Rituals should be the minimum viable habit: start with a 5-minute shutdown and a 30-minute weekly review.
    4. No kill list — Adding new habits and systems without stopping anything. Every productivity system needs a “stop doing” list to make room for the new routines.
    5. Skipping the rollout — Implementing everything at once instead of staging changes over 7 days. Behavior change works when it's incremental: day 1-2 setup, day 3-4 first ritual, day 5-7 iterate.
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    Repository
    liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus
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