Getting Things Done with a Rocketbook and the Bullet Journal System

I’ve been using the Bullet Journal System (Bujo) and Getting Things Done (GTD) for awhile now. This year’s review of my merging of these methodologies have resulted in a few new opportunities now that I’ve included Rockebooks into the mix.

GTD and The Bullet Journal System

I adhere precisely to The Bullet Journal System with no creative variations. No habit tracking, no elaborate designs or meticulously designed spreads. Does this make me a minimalist? No, I just use the system as it was intended. While social media loves artfully laid out spreads I use the system exactly as described in the website. Pencil to paper, usually in a basic notebook.

Getting Things Done is the methodology I use to process everything. Capture, Clarify, Organize, Reflect and Engage with what I need to do.

The capturing process is where they differ. I mostly prefer Rapid Logging. GTD is flexible and adaptable with loose sheets of paper ready to be processed as non-linear actions. BuJo works best in a linear notebook. Merging the two has become personal process and here’s how I’ve evolved the two.

My Combined Methodology

Capture and Collect Everything as I discover what needs to be done.

An tray containing two Rocketbooks
My physical Inbox – The top tray is unprocessed items I need to decide what to do with. The remaining trays are for materials. At right is my accordion file for paper reference material storage. GTD uses file cabinets is far more space than I’ll ever need.

  • Inbox tray, everything analog
  • Email, text messages, Basecamp, Twitter, everything digital
  • Next Actions Lists & Project Lists
  • Calendar items and deadlines

Clarify what comes next, I clear my inboxes once a day or as often as needed to keep current.

  • GTD’s Two Minute Rule, if it takes two minutes do it now.
  • Gather everything into a single place. This varies. Sometimes it’s my Bullet Journal’s Daily Log, or a Rocketbook spread.
  • Not actionable yet? I’ll trash it, place it on a Projects List or archive it as reference.

I don’t stare at my inbox constantly, I process the items or perform the action. Ideally, I’ll let the inbox sit and gather several unprocessed items before it needs my attention.

Organize

  • Update Projects Lists with new information or to-do items, keep them current and when possible in one place.
  • Migrate a single next task for each project to a Next Action List, anything that could be done right now but only one!

Weekly Review

Rocketbook Matrix on a desk
Weekly Review spread open for review.

  • Every week I review all my projects
  • I review my Bullet Journal’s Daily Log
  • Review what I’ve finished
  • Verify there are no open loops or unfinished actions.
  • If I need to follow up on something I’ll place a note in the Bujo’s Daily Log or a sheet of paper placed into the in tray, Often I jot it on a single Rocketbook page then place that in my In-Tray for clarifying later.

Engage by moving each project forward by it’s next action

My Rocketbook scan of a mostly complete Next Actions @ Computer List. The two remaining items have been re-captured and will be clarified again for next week during my weekly review.

  • Perform the next action for each project on the list
  • Update that action’s Project list, add that projects next task to the Next actions list.
  • Decide to keep working on that project or move onto another next action from the list.

My method is to engage with My Next Actions Lists in such a way that I review all that needs to be done often enough maintain a big picture outlook on all my projects. I may dive further into a project and tackle a few more items or simply do the one action. By looping though the process I am able to keep non-linear lists current and drill down into any one of them at a time of my choosing.

What’s Best? A Rocketbook, a Journal, Evernote?

The short answer is all of them. While re-reading Getting Things Done and reflecting on the last few months of this pandemic I realized that there is no single system that does everything perfectly for my needs. Chances are you feel the same way.

I’ve found that a Bullet Journal excels at linear organization by Rapid Logging everything that is on my mind. However, it fails in keeping all the non-linear and digital items from slipping by. I’ll create a two page spread for a new project only to discover a few hours later that the project has concluded leaving me with nearly two empty pages. It’s a bit of a waste. It takes up physical space in the book between other ongoing projects.

Rocketbooks are fantastic for “weekly project spreads” that may not continue past that week.

My Rocketbooks excel at non-linear and temporary collections or Project Lists. Over the course of the last couple weeks I’ve create a spread in any one of them and upon review a project discover it’s not longer needed. I’ll archive the pages in Evernote and during a weekly review decide if there are any next actions.

However, If the project was particularly important or insightful I’ll migrate key information back to my Bullet Journal.

The failures of Rocketbooks are also the features that make them invaluable. While fantastic for capturing notes and daily activities they are temporary and never intended to be used as an archive. Evernote allows me to archive their contents but once erased from the page are not as easily accessed as flipping through my Bullet Journal.

Monthly Future Logs, Someday Lists, and other long term information won’t work well in a Rocketbook as they need to be completely erased within a few weeks or risk the ink permanently staining the page.

While Evernote is invaluable as an archive reference, it really sucks for casual reading. That’s where the Bullet Journal takes over.

Yearly Reviews

Every December I review everything I did and didn’t do that year. I’ve found that a Bullet Journal is ideal for this task a single A5 notebook if maintained properly takes me from 12 to 14 months to fill up making it ideal to browse my life page by page, project by project.

My process has become a funnel of sorts. I collect tasks from a dozen or so sources daily and organize them onto a page and refining them into a single place where the actions are precisely organized.

My Rocketbook Matrix Arrived Today

I’m already enjoying this version of the Rocketbook, within minutes I drafted a webpage layout scanned it with the Rocketbook Android app and pushed it to Evernote.

Enter The Matrix*

*Bad movie pun intended.

left to right: Matix Grid, standard dot grid from the Rocketbook Fusion.

What I Enjoy When Using any Rocketbook Notebook

These lightweight rugged notebooks are ideal for tossing into a loaded backpack. I found myself frequently pushing my Leuchtturm a5 journal aside in favor of one of my Rocketbooks. Particularly the Fusion Executive size for it’s comparable dimensions.

Features I can’t live without

  • Everything is somewhat temporary, until I scan it.
  • Evernote as my preferred digital destination integrates seamlessly
  • Possible destinations not supported by Rocketbook often have a email to feature and we can send our scans to any email address.

Rocketbook Matrix, Flip, and Fusion
The Matrix, Flip, and Fusion on my desk

Where Rocketbook Could Improve

This is tricky, a lot of the areas where improvement could be made are not related to Rocketbook itself.

  • Rocketbook’s app could benefit from an optional contrast and brightness slider. Scans are frequently high contrast that colors and fine may become washed out.
  • Frixion 0.7mm pens included with these notebooks draw a hard line. I haven’t yet tried a 0.5mm pen
  • Left handed users like myself might find the ten second drying time of the pen takes some getting used to.
  • I have terrible handwriting and the fiction-less paper makes it a little worse 😀

I’m enjoying the tighter and darker grid of the Matrix compared to their standard dot grid. I find this suits my writing better than the more relaxed grid of the Rocketbook Flip and Fusion which I also own.

The Scans

The destination icon didn’t automatically share to my designated Evernote notebook as it does for my Fusion and Flip notebooks. Perhaps the Matrix is so new the template wasn’t recognized? 😛

This Matrix is very new, I expect it a future update to the Rocketbook app may adjust things a bit.

Screenshot from Evernote

Rocketbook Matrix scanned page
Scanned using the Rocketbook app; Delivered to and downloaded from Evernote.

Made in the USA

Made in the USA
Rocketbook makes their notebooks in the in the USA.

While most notebooks these days are printed in Asia Rocketbook makes theirs in the United States and I think that’s worth mentioning as it does reduce the carbon footprint a bit and if you prefer buying American Made products that’s also a benefit. I’m curious why they don’t mention their production location and methods on their website as these are considered one eco-friendly alternative to buying traditional paper notebooks over the Rocketbook’s lifetime.

I noticed that when purchased the Matrix directly from their website it shipped from Massachusetts where they’re located.

If you’re curious visit the Rocketbook website for the Matrix, Flip and Fusion.