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  • This Is MY Holy Grail of Planning Systems. Could It Be Yours?

This Is MY Holy Grail of Planning Systems. Could It Be Yours?

  • Posted by Anne Marie Nantais
  • Categories ADHD in the Workplace, Book & Product Reviews, Coaches’ Corner
  • Date December 10, 2019
  • Comments 9 comments

I’m an ADHD coach. My clients often want help with time management, planning and prioritizing. They get tired of scrambling from one urgent deadline to another. They want to bring some calm to their lives. But they still want to move “Important, Not Urgent” tasks forward.

We know planners are part of the solution. But many of us have complicated histories with planning and organizing systems. A few hardy souls are willing to give it another try. They often ask, with a weary but faint glimmer of hope in their eyes, “What’s the best planner to use?”

My answer: “The one you actually use.”

I love helping people find, create, or blend systems to fit their brain wiring, work-flow and life.

I’m an unapologetic enthusiast of planners and all things office supplies. I’ve tested untold numbers of paper planners, apps, journals, calendars, mind maps, Post-Its, trackers and digital systems.

I was on the search for the Holy Grail of planning systems. This will wrangle my wild ideas, grand plans, mundane tasks, appointments, long-range projects, random musings, contact information, and must-do NOWS into a manageable life. A life where things get done and projects move ahead. And since I’m imagining, I want time for the fun and connection with others that makes for a life worth living. (No small pressure and expectation for a planner!)

I’ve also partnered with clients, all with different brains and demands. All on their quest for the Holy Grail of organizers. I’ve got a broad perspective of what works (and doesn’t) for different people.

Here’s a hard truth. There is no magic planner or system to fit all wonderful brains in this world.

A surprising truth? For me, and for many of my clients who gravitate to paper planners, the Planner Pad comes pretty darn close.

The Planner Pad offers many ADHD-friendly features. And it’s flexible. Intrigued? Let’s examine the Planner Pad through an ADHD lens:

  1. Seeing the Forest AND the Trees

Does your ADHD brain focus on the big picture? Or on the nitty-gritty details? Either way, the Planner Pad has you covered.

The Planner Pad has a unique funnel-down planning system. It keeps mid-range plans and daily tasks in view. And you can carry over tasks you didn’t get to as needed.

You can keep tabs on “Urgent” and “Important, Not Urgent” tasks so nothing slips through the cracks.

Here’s How the Funnel Works

Each week displays on a double-page spread divided into three sections, top to bottom.

Imagine an inverted triangle. The top level (Categories) is a place for your weekly list of activities in categories that make sense to you. Examples: Home Projects, Work Project A, Work Project B, Family, Personal.

Put tasks from Categories in the middle level (Daily Things-To-Do). Then assign them to days of the week.

The bottom level (Appointments) is where you write daily appointments and time-bound tasks.

ADHD “Watch-Fors” with the Funnel: 

  • It’s common to overestimate what we can get done in a week, or a day.

If you have used “One Thing” or “Big Three” strategies, keep applying that to the “Daily Things To-Do.” Resist the temptation to fill all the space.

It feels uncomfortable. But I promise, unless they are deadline items, you can carry tasks in your Category lists to the next week.

  • Many people struggle with days broken into hours. I too prefer 30-minute increments. But I’m not willing to tote a poster-sized planner! I learned keep daily tasks in the middle section. I appreciated having them there. It was better than crowding my days with fixed appointments and ever-changing tasks.
  • IF your day is full of 15- or 20-minute appointments, this may not be the system for you.
  • Benefit: I’ve watched people develop a new relationship with time. I’ve seen them develop realistic expectations of what they can do in a day. It’s kinda cool. And Planner Pad is the catalyst. It doesn’t happen overnight. But there is a calm and peace that comes with that, and it’s beautiful to witness.

Real-life applications:

I have a client who plans his week ahead on Friday afternoons.

He starts with Categories at the top. He carries over anything from the previous week. He adds in new tasks. Then he jumps down to the bottom section. He blocks in fixed-time commitments: appointments, meetings, events and time blocks he sets aside for work on Project A and B.

Once he marks the appointments in, he can see which days have space for daily tasks from the categories. Finally, he fills in priority items from the category lists on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday into the Daily Things-To-Do section. He deliberately leaves Thursday and Friday open. He knows unexpected things come up in the week. (Hello, surprise visit from Head Office!) This leaves space to adjust.

Client – Exhausted, using the Planner Pad helped her see she committed more time than she had in a day, week, month. She couldn’t argue that time was infinite any longer. With this clarity, she began to wrap up projects. And she did not say yes to new ones. Over months, she began to free up time and energy. Now she had energy to spend on things that mattered to her. She could spend time with her family and reconnect to her love of photography.

  1. Ooooh! Shiny!

The Planner Pad’s funnel system is their claim to fame. And there’s good reason. But that’s not all, folks! More features help manage big picture/long-range plans. And even handle those smaller, random ideas you don’t want to lose them. Perfect for our novelty-seeking brains!

  • A year on a double-page spread (3 years ahead)
  • A month-at-a-glance
  • A full Notes page at the end of each month
  • Several Goals/Projects pages at the back, broken down by days of the week
  • Space each week to note expanses and notes or calls.

ADHD Watch-Fors with the many features of the Planner Pad:

  • Notice if you tend to approach new planners with All-or-Nothing thinking. In the past, have you spent hours setting up a new planning system, only to have no interest or energy to ever use it?

There is no need to use all the bells and whistles in order for the Planner Pad to be functional.

A colleague trying out the Planner Pad shared: “It’s so simple, amazing, and logical. I can’t believe it’s not more common as a system!”

  • Benefit: Explore the different features of the Planner Pad a little at a time. It’ll stay shiny (and interesting to your ADHD brain) longer.

Real-life applications:

  • When I was new to the Planner Pad, my challenge was to get used to having a place to write mid-range plans, a to-do list and a daily schedule in ONE PLACE.

Other planning tools made me juggle pads of paper, Post-Its and calendars. It was unsettling not to scribble “don’t forget to” lists on a random notepad. I still did for a while. Until I got in the habit of writing (and looking for) larger project tasks and daily to-do’s in the Planner Pad. Now, I love the reliability of knowing where I wrote things.

  • I’ve changed how I use it over the years. And I’m happy to say Planner Pad is flexible enough to grow with me as my business and life evolves.
  • Clients often start using the Planner Pad for the funnel system. It takes time to adjust how they use it to fit their needs. After they’ve gotten comfortable with feature, they start adding in other ones.
  • I still use my digital calendar on my phone and computer. I need the reminders and notifications for appointments and meetings. Reminder apps are handy for urgent tasks such as returning phone calls or emails you MUST do today.
  • One client loves big-picture thinking and artistic layouts. She starts new projects with colorful mind-maps of her ideas on paper, as she brainstorms possibilities. When she’s ready to act, she turns to her Planner Pad. Then she enters the Weekly Lists of Categories into the funnel system.
  • Another client relied on lists scattered around his home and work to guide his daily actions. He started using his Planner Pad Weekly Lists of Categories for brain dumps. He saw his to-do’s as a big wall of tasks he needed to do. He admitted it was overwhelming to see it all in one place at first. But in a couple of weeks, categories started taking shape. Soon, he felt less overwhelmed and more in control of his days. He gained clarity about priority items. And he knew what could wait until another day. That clarity also made it easier to act. There were fewer tasks competing for his attention.
  1. Get Your Planner Pad Today

How to Buy a Planner Pad

Visit the Planner Pad website today. If you have questions about ordering your Planner Pad for the first time or your refills, they have a comprehensive FAQ available.

Messy planner and disorganized schedule? Leave the mess behind and use a system that works for your brain. Planner Pad! Free Shipping! Learn more at the Planner Pad Web site.

Planning how you’ll use your resources (your time, your attention and your energy) is an ADHD-best practice. But it’s also something we all learn wrong. We don’t learn the ADHD-friendly way of planning — traditional “time management” doesn’t work for adults with ADHD. If you’re new to planning and you’d like some help, ADDA members, check when the next Planning Your Year 4-week workshop series is running. It’s included in your membership!

What do you think?

I’d love to hear your feedback on the Planner Pad. Share your comments below.

 

Anne Marie Nantais is an ADHD coach helping adults live their best lives – as they define it. Diagnosed in adulthood, Anne Marie understands, and works with clients to help them find personalized and unique solutions to their ADHD obstacles, using their strengths to create the energy and ease they crave in their lives. 

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    9 Comments

  1. Theresa
    February 3, 2020
    Reply

    Just started using the Planner Pad and I love it much more than any other planner system I have used in the past. However, I find their Customer Service to be atrocious – slow to respond (if at all), and then not all that interested in keeping their customers happy. Their attitude is kind of like “well, we sell a lot of these things, so if you don’t like our policies, you can go buy something else.” (I’m paraphrasing.) I will have a dilemma on my hands at the end of 2020 when it is time to order another planner, because my policy is to spend my hard-earned dollars only with businesses who appreciate it. Already looking…

  2. Brooks Perry
    May 1, 2020
    Reply

    Great post- I found your article on Google while searching for tips on how to make the best use of the Goals/Projects section in the back of my new Planner Pad. I love the funnel system for my ADHD mind! I already started laying out some long-term goals and projects for the year, creating mind maps and steps, but I’m a little perplexed by the layout of the Goals/Projects section. How are you and your clients using it (particularly, how are others making use of the days of the week in this section)?

    I expected this section to be filled with blank pages or lined pages, but it’s formatted like a weekly schedule without dates; it’s a bit counterintuitive!

  3. Sarah E Meagher
    July 5, 2020
    Reply

    I love the layout I love the idea. I think it could work for me. The spacing doesn’t allow me to even fit in or legibly what appointment I need to be at when or if an appointment starts on the half-hour or at fifteen minutes past. I need a larger layout and possible on the computer for it to work. The concept works for me though

    • Lisa Feinberg
      February 20, 2021
      Reply

      I have one and the way I make it work is by labeling the columns A-G(?) and with each task 1,2,3 or the time. Then on the side margin, I write for example: A1 or A 9am. With needed details. It works.

  4. Laura Traynham
    December 21, 2020
    Reply

    I would like to order this planner but the link is not opening. Could you please email information on how to order the planner? Thanks,

    Laura Traynham

  5. Victoria Roche
    January 13, 2021
    Reply

    Hi Ann Marie,
    I just started coaching again with the Center for Living Well with ADHD. At a recent team meeting I asked others about which planners they use. Planner Pad was the favorite. It’s the tool I used in the past for many years and now I’m using it again. Thanks for your article. I hope to connect with you soon. Happy New Year!
    Victoria

  6. G. J. Marsh
    March 19, 2021
    Reply

    Have you tried the Bullet Journal? I have used the Planner Pad for awhile now and like it, but was thinking of switching to Bullet Journaling. But I’m wondering if it is just my ADD seeing a glittering object and that I will prefer a planner pad in the end. And if Bullet Journaling might just have a great marketing machine behind it, and not actually be that great of a planning system for everyone.

  7. Teresa Dyck
    May 31, 2021
    Reply

    PASSION PLANNER is my go to for planners. I discovered the Passion Planner from a recommendation by my therapist. I have looked at the Planner Pad and bullet journaling. While I like the concept of the Planner Pad I prefer the expandability of the Passion Planner. Bullet journaling from what I’ve seen can be simple or complex, I use a very simple one I came up with before knowing what bullet journaling was; a table of contents (or index) of subjects and the page(s) they are on. I’ve also seen a very complex, artistic version to which my first impression was “what a huge waste of time”, but then I’m not an artistic type. The Passion Planner has the ability to be used simply or expansively, plain or artsy; they offer a lot of stickers (that’s for people like me that can’t draw but want to add expression and color). The planner comes in 3 sizes, a variety of colors, bound or coiled, a digital version, daily dated or undated, weekly dated or undated. It has inclusions like; Roadmap-a guide to mapping out your goals, going from your general goal to planning how to get there and when. It has yearly and monthly over-views, spaces for monthly focus, people to see, places to go, things to learn, personal projects, work projects, creating mind maps, good things that happened, and a lot of free downloadable pdf extra pages, and inserts for tracking(water, habits, etc), spring cleaning, self-care reflection, and too many to list everything here. Does it sound overwhelming? This is my first journal/planner in my 61 years of living and just learning to use a planner was daunting, but they also have a community with ‘how to’s’, videos, etc., and always ENCOURAGING to use the planner as SIMPLY or complexly as you want, never a ‘you have to’. Their customer service is excellent, I’ve always gotten a friendly and helpful reply (I use email contact). The price is higher then most others BUT you get a lot more for your money. I don’t know what shipping is like in the U.S. but I’m in Canada and my shipments have been delivered within 2 weeks before and during the pandemic. For my ADHD self, I figure this is my best bet/tool to create the structure and flexible routine to create my best life. Which ever method/planner you chose, may it be the one best suited for you and your successful, happy life. 🥳😀👍

  8. Ann ODea
    November 25, 2021
    Reply

    I am new to discovering that I have ADHD Inattentive. I prefer to use technology. Does Planner Pad come in an app version?

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