Using Todoist to Track Tasks and Organize Your Life: Simple Getting Started Guide | Moontower Creative Productions | Skillshare

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Using Todoist to Track Tasks and Organize Your Life: Simple Getting Started Guide

teacher avatar Moontower Creative Productions

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introduction

      1:36

    • 2.

      Navigating Todoist

      2:38

    • 3.

      Creating Tasks

      8:34

    • 4.

      Projects

      10:19

    • 5.

      Labels

      1:22

    • 6.

      Filters

      4:39

    • 7.

      Task Inbox

      4:45

    • 8.

      Integrating With Other Tools

      3:18

    • 9.

      Conclusion

      1:50

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About This Class

If you find yourself struggling to keep track of tasks in your work, side hustle, or personal life, you might benefit from a task tracking and to-do list app. But setting up an app to track your tasks can feel like a difficult and intimidating process. 

We're here to help. In this course, we'll walk you through Todoist, our favorite task tracking app, and help you get started with a system that will make it easy and fun to stay on top of your to-do list.

In this course, you'll learn:

  • How to download Todoist and set up an account
  • Navigating the user interface and understanding how tasks are organized
  • Creating and tracking tasks
  • Using filters and labels to curate your to-do list
  • Ways to integrate Todoist into other tools you already use

Whether you're just getting started with tracking your to-do list or interested in moving to Todoist from another tool, after taking this course you will be familiar with how Todoist works and how to best use this powerful task tracking tool.

Meet Your Teacher

We're Moontower Creative Productions, and our goal is to help you learn to use tools to improve your productivity and reduce stress in your everyday life. 

See full profile

Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Introduction: Today we're going to learn about to-do list. To do list is a Todo application system that you can work into however you get things done. We're going to first look at the interface and walk through each of the components of seduce. You can understand how the application works and how best you can use it. We're going to first start by downloading the application and then setting up an account really quickly so that we can get started together in your web browser. If you go to to-do list.com, that's like to-do list. But without the l, You'll find where you can get started and download the application. So here you can either sign up or just download. So what we're gonna do is we're going to sign up. I'm gonna go ahead and sign up with my Google account just because it's a little easier, but feel free to use your email or your Apple account. Great. So now we're logged in. You can use to do just in the browser, in any browser. Or you can download the application on your phone, your iPad, or your Windows or Mac. Now let us downloaded, we can easily installed the dualist. Now that you have to do is installed on your computer, Let's open it up for the first time. And then we're just going to login to continue with your browser. Login to the same account that you set up with, which you may already be logged into. And then it will open up on the application. 2. Navigating Todoist: We're going to start by learning about the interface of to-do list. So if you open up to-do list, you'll see on the left pane is your navigation. This is gonna be really similar to a file explorer. Or if you're a 105, it'll be similar to iTunes. On the left you'll see first, you have your inbox. Whenever you create a task that isn't associated with a project, it'll show up in your inbox. This feature you use to basically sort things so you can quickly add tasks to to-do list without having to think too much about where they go or when you're going to do them. And then whenever you have time to organize yourself, you'll go into your inbox and sort them by project and priority. The next thing to do us on the menu bar is your Today View. This is probably the primary place that you're going to be introduced. But once you set up filters and labels, those are great ways to sort your tasks or to focus on projects. But in the today view, you can easily see everything that you're looking at today. The upcoming view is a week view for your to-do list. You can see what you're doing each day of the week. This will go on basically forever. And you can even sort by specific days. If you're curious what you're doing on say, March tenth, 2022. The next item in the navigation pane is filters and labels. We'll get into more detail on this later. But filters are ways that you can filter out your tasks. And you can filter by basically anything. You can set up your own labels, your projects to due dates, and then filter down into very fine details so that you can know exactly when to work on what and how best to be productive. The next item in the menu bar that you're not seeing here, because we haven't set up any tasks or labels. But whenever you create a label, you can favorite it, then your favorites will show up directly below filters and labels into fewest, smallest, create a label really quickly. One possible use of labels is to label things based upon location. Maybe whenever you're at the store or at your office or at home, you find that it's easier to focus on certain tasks. So let's create a label called Home. And we're gonna make this a friendly green color. How about mint? Now when I check Add to Favorites, you'll see Favorites has appeared in your navigation pane. And here, you can easily sort by anything that's labeled home. 3. Creating Tasks: The core functionality of to-do list is obviously the tasks that you're putting in it. So let's look at the Task interface and creating a task and know what the different settings and options are that you can have associated with the task. Because most of the powerful features in to do is come down to how you're filtering and sorting and prioritizing your tasks. So understanding how best to input information and input that information quickly is really important to getting the most out of to-do list. Let's start by adding a task. There's many different ways that you can do this. We can get into all options later. For now, hitting the Plus on the top right of To-do list or tapping Q on your keyboard will create a task. You see, because I was highlighted in the home favorites, it automatically added the tag home. What if I go to my inbox? I can add a task here or up here. When you first create a task, you're going to name it. And so you have a name and description field. The name field is where the smart input features of to-do list will automatically grab special words like today or do next week or at 06:00 PM. So we'll say we're going to grab the laundry. And we want to do that today at four PM. And we want to put that in a project. I haven't created any projects that yet, but you can actually do this on the fly. So we'll put a hashtag in which hasn't used for projects, will make one called personal. And now let's add some labels. I'm going to remember that I need to do it when I'm at home. So I use the at sign to pull up the labels and select home. Now, this is a pretty high priority item. So you can use priorities like P1 or P2. All the way down to four. There are four levels of priorities into newest. We're gonna make this a priority level three. Then we're going to spell laundry correctly. So that's a task. We had any specific information that we didn't necessarily want to be on the top level, you know, maybe there's some certain instructions that you were given on the laundry. Like Don't mix the red. We can add that in there just as a quick reminder to ourselves. Now, instead of using the short keys that we set for today or personal or home with the signs and the quick language recognition on the due dates. You can also do these with a click of a mouse. Or if you're using your phone or the application, you can tap the fields. So we'll click on today and maybe we set this wrong. We don't want it to be at four o'clock. We want it to be at 330. And we also want it to be tomorrow. You can easily change that. You could change the project. Tasks can only have one project. You can also add more labels. You can have an infinite number of labels on a task. And then the flag is for setting your priority, which we set as priority three. And this last item is to add a reminder, if you want your phone or your computer to prompt you before task is due, you can add a reminder. Now, this is a paywall feature, but if you're using to do this a lot, it may be worth it. We're gonna go ahead and add the task. So you see, we had created it in the inbox, but it's not in our inbox. That's because we assigned it to a project already. If we created a task called this dumb task and didn't assign it to a project. You can see it's in the inbox and it doesn't have a due date. If we go to the Today View, you can see that my dumb task isn't there, but grabbed the laundry is because it's due today. Now, tasks that don't have a project associated with them that are due today will show up in the today view. As you can see, there's my dumb task. The other part of task interface that we really need to get into is what it looks like when you're editing a task. The interface of adding something is focused on you getting it into to-do list quickly. Because you are working on something important and you need to be able to add things into to-do list fast so that you're not interrupting your workflow. You're over here answering emails. And you need to put in here, talk to Bob about the thing today at three. And it's important. And it's for important project. Then your makeover, working on your email. So now that you're in here today view, say something came up on the laundry. Now you have to use bleach because you got to stain on your shirt. You click on the task and it opens up this alternate view. And here you can add subtasks. So you can say separate the clothes. I am terrible at spelling. You can do fill the washer, grab more detergent. You can go to comments. This is where you would include information to do. This does have a collaboration feature where you can work with multiple people. And multiple people could add comments to a task, or if it's just you, what I use this for is to include details for something that I'm trying to do. If it wasn't someone sent me an email and asked me, Hey, can you do this thing? Then I may grab some texts from the e-mail. I may grab a folder location. Now, I'll just throw that into the comment information so that whenever I get around to doing that task, say tomorrow, I have all the information easily available in the comments. And you can embed voice notes and emoji and pictures and other attachments into the comments. So you can have everything that you need to complete a task included in the task itself. If that's something you're interested in, then activity, it just shows you a log. So if you have a task that is long-duration, say you have a project that's due next month, and you're using sub-tasks within that project to lead yourself up to completing it. And you're adding comments and completing things, you can see an activity log for what you've done on that task. Then you still have all of your same inputs at the top, your due date, your project labels, your priority, and your reminders. There's also a few other options here that I want to talk about. This first one, renaming the task. That's the same as clicking into the field and renaming it and hitting Save. The second one. Add comments via e-mail. If you're using to do is in a way that task or a larger thing instead of quick simple things, each task can have its own custom e-mail. You can e-mail comments into the task so that if you're working on something and you want to track all the email correspondence about it. You could BCC the email address for your task. And then those would just show up as comments. If you're sending this to somebody and you want to include all a log of all the comments and everything about the task. You can copy a link to it, send it to somebody. This last one, hide completed subtasks. Whenever you clued us, complete a subtask for task, you'll see that it crosses itself out, but it doesn't go away. If you don't want to see those, you can simply hide them. And the last one here is deleting the task. Now, when you check off a task is done, it'll go away. See, it's no longer in the today view, but checking a task offense as done and deleting a task are two separate functions. To lenient task makes the task go away. Whenever you check off a task is done, it's logging into something that you completed in your completion log, and it goes towards your to-do list karma. And it's more of a, this task was done. So you have to think about, is this a duplicate tasks that I just need to delete? Or is this something that I completed? And that is the Task interface for to-do list. 4. Projects: Now we're going to learn how to set up projects, introduced projects, or how you're going to categorize your tasks. This can be personal and work, or if you're a project manager, this could be every single project that you worked on. A lot of different ways that you can categorize it. But think of projects as a single category for tasks. And then labels would be things like locations or type of task that you're working on. Say you review contracts. So your labels may be contract reviews and then you can sort by all the contracts are working on today. And if you have a number of projects, so those would be associated with it, That's what your projects would be. We're gonna go ahead and create a project together and talk about the different settings that you can have four projects. Remember, your tasks can only be associated with one project. In your left navigation bar. You'll see next to projects a plus sign. This is where you're going to add a project. When you add a project, the name is the most important. If you're quickly adding a project from a task like we did earlier, where you just use the hash sign and then type the name of the project. You can't have any spaces. But whenever you create a project from this interface, you can have as many spaces as you want. My big project. Now, projects can be assigned colors, and these are not a sortable thing. You can't sort them like labels, but it's more of a good visual representation to you on how to see what your projects are. So I recommend setting your projects colors is something that you can easily see. And if you have a lot of projects that are similar, like say you do some film stuff on the side. But then also you work for a design company. You may set all of your film projects as blue, then all of your design projects as read. That way you can easily tell what kind of project is what without having to deal with labels or sorting, it makes, makes ordering easier. So we're gonna make this sky blue. Now, you can add to favorites, and that'll show up in your favorite column underneath filters and labels. I'm not gonna do that right now. Class one is view. You can see your tasks for a project in ListView or board of view. The board of you is going to be very similar to a Kanban board where you have columns and then each column has a title. Whenever you create something as a list view, you can create sections so that you have sections and then tasks under those sections. It doesn't matter which view you select it this point because you can always change it later in your section titles become your board columns. And I'll show you that. We're going to create this as a list view. Now here's our project. We're gonna go ahead and create a few sections for this. So for kind of create a backlog, doing entered, done. Then we're going to make a few tasks in here. Now, I have a done column. I talked off with the item that I put in it. If you want to be able to see those items that you've checked off, you can come up to your project menu and hit Show completed tasks. You see under Done. Now that I've shown completed tasks, I can see all the items that I've done. This could be useful, or maybe you want to keep it hidden. I'll leave them shown for now. Now, looking at the project interface will go to these settings here. And then I can hit View as I can view it as a board. Now you see, here's all of my columns. I can create a new column or I can add tasks and something that doesn't have one. Go back to List. Now, within a project, you can sort by priority or by due date, all kinds of things. And so we'll click on View again. We'll look at group. We can group things by due date, by date added priority, and by label. So you can easily see things as maybe location-based or priority based. And then sort is which order those appear in the grouping. Sharing within a project is so that you can easily add collaborators or other people to your projects. So if you have multiple people working with the fewest, you can have all of them adding tasks and completing tasks and creating comments. This is a pro feature that you do have to pay for. But if you want to add a collaborator, you can easily do that by sharing. Now, a project itself can have comments associated with it. So if you want to keep some sort of log or high-level information about the project as things progress. Perhaps, maybe when you sign the contract or when you moved onto the next phase or when you have approval for something. You can prove that here. You can see the activity of when things were completed for this project, who completed them, when they were created and when comments were added. Lastly, we have an overflow menu for a project where you can add sections. You can make this project a template. So you could create a project that's representative of the type of work you do. Export it as a template and then import it every time you create that project to save yourself some time, you can duplicate a project. So you could create a project as a template and just leave it into DOAS and then easily duplicate it. Now I can't have more than five projects because I'm on the free plan. This is pretty nice. You can e-mail tasks to your project. You can also email tasks to your inbox. We'll talk about that more later. The project calendar feed is a static calendar at everything that's due for your projects. So if you have a lot of tasks with due dates set, you can export that as an ICS file or Google Calendar file.com or whatever, and then import that into your calendar so you can see a static feet. This isn't a synchronization, is just a onetime snapshot of the calendar. Then we already looked at high completed tasks. Then you can archive or delete a project. When you do finish a project and you're not going to add any more tasks to it. It's nice to get it out of your project list. So to do that, you could delete it. But I like to keep a record of everything that was done for a project and that's where archive comes in. So we're gonna go ahead and complete all of these tasks for our project. I'm actually going to move these tasks into my done category, but just grabbing the Move icon and moving it down and then completing them. And now we're going to work out the project. When you archive it, it drops down here into archived projects which you can click and expand and also minimize. Another important thing about projects is using sub-projects. So these two projects here were created by to-do us whenever I created it. So I'm going to add a project here called Tutorials. Not going to match the colors. I'm going to create it. Now I'm going to move tutorials up here and then I can indent both of these projects. So now you can see I have a tree of multiple projects. This is useful because whenever you set up filters to see tasks in different categories, you can filter by each tree level of a project. So if you have personal and then you have work, and then you have projects, sub-products under each one. You could create a filter that's only look at tasks due this week that are personal and every project included under personal. This is a very exciting and interesting way. Prioritize your projects and to categorize your projects. When you look at the navigation pane and to-do list and you look at your projects, you'll see that you can move projects around and ness projects underneath each other. So this will let you nest projects, three projects deep. This is useful because whenever you set up filters, you can filter by top-level project and everything underneath it. So if you have a word category and personal category, and in under each of those you have multiple projects. You can easily say all of my projects that are under, that are sub-projects to work. And then all of those projects show me what's doing, what I needed to do today or this week. What's priority one? So you can use filters to filter by your sub-projects. Now, we're gonna go ahead and delete this project here. I'm going to add a new project. Whenever you create a new project, if you've made a template that you commonly use, you can import all the tasks from that template. So we're gonna do that real quick. We're going to import from template. You can see here, I've imported all the, all the tasks that were included in this. Welcome. So if you create a project that is maybe like a sample starting point for all your projects that you use. You can go into that project and then export as a template, and then export it as a CSV file. And maybe you can use relative dates or fixed dates. If you use relative dates, then you can say, set up the kick-off meeting tomorrow, do this thing by three weeks from now. If you work in that sort of structured way, you can use templates pretty effectively to automatically create all the tasks associated with project or whatever it is you're working on. 5. Labels: Let's talk more about label. If you click on the filters and labels, you can see all the filters that are created and all the labels you've created. I've went ahead and create a three. Now, keep in mind that labels can't have any spaces in them. So I'm going to create one more here for work items that I need to complete at the office. So we'll call it Office. And I'm gonna go ahead and make this a favorite. You can see it automatically pushes me into that label where I can add tasks to it. So you see if I have in my big project here, send out big project in two months, that's a priority one for me. And then I'm going to use the at sign to quickly get to my labels. And you can see I can just hit Enter and add it as a deliverable. Now, another way you could do this is click on the little tag here icon. Then you can see Oliver labels. Now this is actually has three labels associated with it. So you can see I added all of those. I'm going to go ahead and add that task. Now if I go to my labels, I can easily see anything that's associated with those labels. It's an easy way to filter out your tasks, but they're not filters. Those are something more complicated. 6. Filters: Filters are probably one of the more powerful features of to-do-list. Beyond how useful it is to quickly input tasks. Filters are also a little complicated and that you have to write out the syntax. And if you don't get it exactly right, it can not exactly work. And so they can be a little intimidating if you're when you're first jumping in. So I want to pull up a good resource page which should do is provides and this is another Help articles under introduction to filters. You can see here some quick examples of how to put in filter queries and to create a filter, the things to remember or that you can set as many filtering queries as you want. And you use similar logic that you put for like programming where you use an AND as an enzyme. So if you want to say things that are due today, ampersand. And then for a project, you would put the project. Remember that you use hashtags for projects and add symbols for labels. Now, if you want something that's the reverse of what you're asking for, you would put an exclamation in front of it. So you could create something like this example here that's due today. And you would say do colon or do you just type due today? And then an exclamation point overdue, which means not overdo. This resource here that I'm showing you is pretty helpful for some examples. But we're gonna go ahead and create some filters together. Now if you go to filters and labels and you click on Add, you can create a new filter. And so we're gonna make one. That's all of our work projects that are due today. So I'm gonna go ahead and create one more work project. And project below, the little project. And I'm gonna go ahead and add a task in here. Now I have a few tasks that are due today. So we can create a filter for everything that's due for work today. So if I come here and I create a new filter and I say today, and then we'll say that these are work projects. Then our filter query will say do today and hashtag work. And then we'll create our filter. Now, we'll go to the filter and you'll see where all my tasks I created it. And it said that they were due today. But you see, we just did work. We did hashtag work. There isn't anything due today under work. Things that are due today and then run the sub-projects. So if we go back to this filter and edit it, if we add a second hashtag, that means that project and all the products underneath it. So we'll hit Save. And then we'll go back to today work and see there's all of our subtasks. And you can see here there's the little project and the big project and just the things that are due today. Let's make another one. I want to see everything that isn't a personal project, or let's do it the other way around. I want us to everything that isn't a work project. So we'll say personal stuff. Now, if we were categorizing this as just looking for personal than we could just do hashtag, hashtag, personal. And that would pull up everything under personal. But say we had a lot of different product categories, like we had work and we had maybe our side hustle and then another project category you wanted everything except the stuff that's under work. What you would do then is include an exclamation point hashtag, hashtag work. And maybe we want to see only the priority one stuff. Priority one side. You can see everything that's priority one, that isn't a work item. So as you can see, filters are really powerful because you can easily sort your task by your labels when they're due, what category they're in, what nested project that they're in. Very useful. Now, a little complicated. So definitely play around with it and take a look at the resources available on this website to get ideas of how you can create the filters using labels and priorities and projects. 7. Task Inbox: Let's talk about putting tasks into to-do list. For me. The big appeal to do is how quickly I can put tasks into it. I don't want to have to think about moving things from week to week. I want the tasks to stay in my queue and articles magically moved from day to day. And I also wanna be able to put things into to do as fast so that if I'm working on email or someone asked me to do something, I can quickly throw it into my list. And now it's out of my brand. I'm not going to forget about it. And then whenever I sit down to prioritize and organize what I'm going to work on today or for the next hour or whatever my period of time is. I can then prioritize and think about how I'm working on these tasks and what the right order is and who should be doing them. So let's talk about getting tasks into to-do list. Obviously, you can use your phone. You can open up the to-do list app and hit Add tasks, type it really quickly. It's the same as on your phone as it is on the computer as far as the interface of just typing the task. So whenever you're introduced, if you hit Q, it's a quick add feature. And then you can just type the task. Do this thing tomorrow, enter. That's it. Now, I didn't set a project or anything for that, but it's in my inbox so that I can quickly sort these. Now, to sort them, I can click on the scheduled date, or I can click on the Edit button to quickly edit. Or if you hold down the Alt or Option key, it will open up to Edit as well. And then here I can add a description. And I can go ahead and put it in a project. If you're not introduced and you're just on your desktop. On Windows, on Mac, it's a different short key, but on Mac it's Control Command a. You can bring up the prompt to add something. So if you're working on your computer, you didn't have to go to to-do list. You can just hit control command a. Do this thing tomorrow. Done. So you can quickly, when something comes up, get it out of your head, get it into to-do list, and then later you can prioritize other ways that you can add tasks are by email in your inbox or a project. So if you look at your personal here and then you go to your three dots, you can hit email tasks, this project, or what I do is you can have an inbox and then you're going to hit email tasks that this projects. When I click this, it'll give you the inbox. So I'll copy that to the clipboard. And then here you'll see that whenever you augment the subject line, you can actually set things like when it's due, what the priority is, or you can even include your labels. So we're gonna go ahead and email ourselves a task by premium for to-do list. And we're going to do that Thursday. And it is can be a priority two. And we'll just hit Send. Actually, we're going to add some context here. Here is information that will go into the comments. Now, if we come to our inbox, it'll show up in your inbox. Otherwise you're going to add tasks are through app integrations. Outlook, Chrome, if this then that Safari, all of these have integrations or applications or sub apps to create tasks. So wherever you are, whether or not you're working in your e-mail or you're using some sort of integration tool or you're on your computer, you can quickly add tasks to do just to do this, we'll also integrate with your voice assistant. So you have a Google Home or Alexa. You can ask it to add things to your to do list, and it will quickly put it in your inbox so you can sort it later. You can see here that my task showed up. So if I click on it and then I look under comment, There's a link here. If I click on this link, it will pull up the texts from the e-mail. I find this very useful whenever I'm trying to quickly triage my email and not use my inbox as my to-do list, but rather use to-do list as my to-do list. So I'll go through and if something has an action item, I'll forward that email to my inbox and then I can quickly reference what the email said because it's included as a comment for that task. And I can sort and complete those tasks. One of the big advantages of to do is is how quickly you can put tasks into the software. So if you're on your phone or on your computer, knowing those hotkeys and knowing how to quickly get things into your inbox and out of your head is going to make you more productive. 8. Integrating With Other Tools: Because of to do us as dedicated developers and its broad appeal, it's on a lot of applications and has a lot of integrations. So once you're in the newest ecosystem and you're really using this to get all of your things done. It can be helpful to know how else this can integrate into your system. If you're using toggle to track your time, you can integrate toggle width to-do list so that you can start a timer whenever you start working on a task. And then the timer stops when you cross it off. You can use if this then that automatically add tasks into deduced based upon your location or things that you're working on. You can integrate to-do list into Google Calendar to sink tasks. For instance, you can sink anything that has a due time, like four PM, five PM, and have that show up in a dedicated Calendar in your Google Calendar. So let's look at some of these integration possibilities. I'm going to come up here to the top right, and I'm going to click on integrations. And then this will show you everything that's included currently and that you're integrating with. And I can click on Discover integrations. And this is where you can look into all the different possibilities. And I'm not gonna go through a lot of them, but I wanted to show you a few. So one of the ones that I find really useful is the Google Calendar integration. So you can see I have connected my Google Calendar to do list. And here you can create, you can use your primary calendar or you can make a new calendar like one called to do. And then you can sync all of your projects or a specific project. And then you can choose to sink only all day events or things that have specific times. And then you can choose how they show up on the calendar with durations. So what I've done before is all set up. Anything that's not set as an all-day task. So it has a time associated with it, 01:00 PM, three pm. And I'll make the tasks. The duration is 15 minutes, and then I have a calendar call to do. So. Whenever I open up my Google Calendar, I can see anything that's due with a time. If I have projects going out or something that I really important that happens at a certain time. Then I'll make sure that I put 02:00 PM, 4PM, 01:00 AM onto that task. And then I know that it's going to show up on my calendar as that's specifically do today. So whenever I'm looking at my calendar, I'm able to see those important deliverable type tasks, but it's not cluttered up with everything that I have to do today. This is a really cool integration and it's just one example of how you can leverage your tasks into the other aspects of your workflows. 9. Conclusion: We covered a lot of information today. We talked about how to interact with the newest and work through the navigation. We talked about creating projects and creating tasks and labels and filters. There's a lot to the software. It can be pretty simple. You can have one project where you just dump your tasks and to them, you can use just the inbox. Or you can have hundreds of projects where you're quickly filtering things and organizing by when you're doing things based upon your location or who you've delegated it to. You can work with teams to do this has a huge breadth of things that you can do with it. And hopefully you've learned today how to get around the software. You've learned about a lot of the different features that are available to you. And you can start thinking about how does this work with my workflow? And how can I best use out of this to do system really needs to not get in your way. You need to spend as little time putting things into your to-do system and prioritizing them and maximizing the amount of time that you're spending working on things or with your family or whatever you're doing. So I think that one of the big advantages of really understanding how to do is work some bits into your workflow, is finding a way that you can integrate it in that minimises the amount of time you're actually spending and setting up labels and filters and projects in a smart way so that you can quickly add tasks into them and then quickly prioritize and then get things done. So, I hope you enjoyed this course. There's gonna be more courses that discuss really specific types of setups that you can use them to do is you can get the most out of it. But hopefully with this foundation, we can really get into some more exciting ways to get things done.