Quick Ways to Track Work Progress Without Overcomplicating

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Summary

Tracking work progress doesn't have to be overwhelming. By focusing on simple, clear methods, you can stay organized and productive without adding unnecessary complexity to your workflow.

  • Prioritize high-impact tasks: Identify 3-5 key tasks each day that directly contribute to your goals, and focus on completing them before anything else.
  • Use visual tools: Integrate a visual tracker like a donut chart in Excel to monitor your progress in real-time and stay motivated throughout the day.
  • Let tools do the remembering: Use tools like OneNote to document tasks, allocate time, and carry over unfinished work, freeing up your mental bandwidth for actual problem-solving.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Sahil Bloom
    Sahil Bloom Sahil Bloom is an Influencer

    NYT Bestselling Author of The 5 Types of Wealth

    677,267 followers

    I've tried the fancy productivity systems, but here's what works: This 3x5 notecard... Each evening, I sit down at my desk and write down the 3-5 highest impact to-dos for the following day. These are the "important" tasks that directly contribute to my long-term projects or goals. The list is pure—I specifically avoid writing down all of the miscellaneous urgent and unimportant to-dos (more on that later). In the morning, I sit down at my desk for my first focus work block and start at the top of the list, working my way down and crossing off the important items as I get through them. My primary goal is to cross each item off the list by the end of the day. I am intentionally conservative in the number of items I write on the list. It's usually 3, sometimes 4, and very rarely 5. I never want to end the day with open items, so being conservative helps me accomplish that (and get the extra rush from getting through more than I expected). As I go through the day, I stole an idea from Marc Andreessen to use the back of the card to write down and cross off any minor to-dos that I complete (the urgent or unimportant tasks that are not welcome on the front of the card). The process of writing and crossing off an item on the back of the card is a further boost of momentum, so I find it to be a worthwhile exercise. My notecard productivity system is painfully simple, but it's grounded in five powerful realizations: 1. 15 minutes of prep in the evening is worth hours the next morning. By setting out your priority tasks the night before, you eliminate any friction from having to decide what to work on. You hit the ground sprinting. 2. Important > Urgent. By tackling the important to start the day, you guarantee progress against the big picture projects and goals. If my day went to hell after that morning focus block (which it sometimes does with a 1-year-old at home!), it would be ok, because I know I've gotten through much of my important work. 3. Momentum is everything. Crossing important items off your list to start the day immediately creates a winning feeling that you keep with you. Success begets success. 4. Simple is beautiful. If you're spending time thinking about your productivity system, you're studying for the wrong test. That's movement for the sake of movement. You should be focused on progress. 5. Find what works for you. It used to stress me out that I didn't have a beautiful productivity system that would impress others. Then I realized that whatever works for me is the best productivity system. Identify how you operate and find the system that works for you. To get started, just buy a stack of simple 3x5 notecards and give it a shot. If you've ever been overwhelmed by productivity systems and advice, this is an approach to try. Follow me Sahil Bloom for more ideas like this in the future and join 800,000+ others who get these in my weekly newsletter: https://lnkd.in/esGsF85Q

  • View profile for Emma Chieppor (Excel Dictionary)

    Founder of Excel Dictionary, your ultimate source for impactful, digestible Excel tips and tricks.

    656,635 followers

    Struggling with never-ending to-do lists? 📝 Here's a simple Excel trick that changed how I work: add a linked donut chart to your to-do list that updates in real-time as you check off tasks. Why it works: -Visual progress tracking keeps you motivated -The chart updates automatically with each completed task -Clean, minimal design that's easy to implement I created a quick tutorial showing exactly how to set this up in Excel: https://lnkd.in/eeqhwQtq No fancy add-ins needed - just basic Excel formulas and a donut chart that gives you that extra push to finish your tasks. #excel #productivity #msexcel #microsoft365 P.S. If you know someone drowning in to-do lists, share this with them - they'll thank you later!

  • View profile for Chinmay Kulkarni

    I Simplify IT Audit for You | Tech Risk Senior @ EY US | SOX 404 | SOC 1 & 2 | CISA • CRISC • CCSK • ISO 27001 LA | Creating #1 Learning Hub for IT Auditors

    18,798 followers

    I Was on the Brink of Burnout (Here’s How I Turned It Around.) Last year, I hit a wall. It was late 2024, and I was juggling three clients at once. Here’s how my plate looked: For two clients, I was responsible for documenting workpapers. For another, I was handling more than 30 IT application controls and managing budgets and actuals for their entire engagement. September came, and everything spiraled out of control. Three clients. Three managers. Three teams. Multiple deadlines. 45-hour weeks. I started working on ad hoc tasks just to survive. But the cracks were showing. I was exhausted, overwhelmed, and ready to give up. Then, a thought struck me; a lesson I had heard from Ankur Warikoo, someone I admire deeply. He once said, “Your brain’s job isn’t to remember things; it’s to understand and execute them.” That changed everything for me. I realized my problem wasn’t just the workload. It was how I managed it. Here’s what I did. I stopped relying on my brain to track everything. Instead, I used OneNote to manage tasks for each client. Step 1: I created three pages—one for each client. Step 2: Each day, I added a new heading with the date and listed every task as a checkbox. Step 3: For each task, I estimated how long it would take and noted it in brackets. Step 4: At the start of the day, I planned my available hours. If I had 9 hours and 6 were already allocated, I knew I could only take on 3 more hours of work. This simple system changed everything. I met my deadlines. I stopped feeling overwhelmed. I didn’t need to remember tasks anymore. Everything was written down. By the end of the day, I knew exactly what was done and what needed to be carried forward. The biggest lesson? Your brain is for thinking, not for remembering. Let tools handle the memory part. You’ll save your energy for what really matters—getting the work done. #itaudit #risk #internalaudit #riskmanagement #timemanagement #job #career #success #productivity

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