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Setting Up Your Planner

The D*I*Y Planner system was created to be highly tweakable and organisationally agnostic, so feel free to build and fill your planner however you want. That being said, it can be rather difficult to jump in and come up with a productivity system from scratch, so to get you started with a very basic GTD implementation, we'd suggest the following as a base for your planner. (If index cards are more your thing, then pop on over to Setting Up a GTD-Based Hipster PDA.)

A Cover
preferably of high-quality card stock (varnished, if you have it), with a Profile form on the opposite side. Don't forget to fill it out! Laminate this to make it last longer. This could be followed by a GTD reference chart or two, printed on card stock. The dual-sided Important Numbers form should be the last part of the first section of your planner.
Contacts tab
use your purchased forms and tabs for this section. 'Move in' to your planner by writing down the most important personal and business contacts. Use pencil, if possible, as contact information changes a lot. (Note: since the contacts pages change far less often than the actions and projects, it's better to keep the latter two nearer the centre of the planner as it is easier to add and remove pages when they are closer to where the rings open.) Use adhesive tabs to divide the contacts alphabetically for fast referencing.
Calendar tab
Mark your current date with a'Today' clip-in or a Satellite Action Card. Transfer all birthdays, anniversaries and personal dates into your calendar. Create a list using a Notes sheet with all the important dates so you can populate each new set of calendars with it. The Internet can provide a list of all the holidays according to your country's calendar.
You have a lot of choices within this kit when choosing which type of calendar to use. To start, think about how much you need to accomplish, how many appointments you will have, and where you would like to store your actions.
For example, you can keep a monthly calendar in your Calendar tab, and Actions/etc. in your Actions tab. Some possibilities:
Actions tab
populate this section with:

Note: If you have a lot of Waiting For and Agendas forms, you may wish to create other tabs for them. Mark all these tabs with red dots, which signify immediate review (think red = hot).

Project tabs
create tabs for each major project or project category. Populate with:

Mark these tabs with green dots, signifying weekly review.

Potentials tab
fill with a handful of Potentials Quicklist and Potential Projects sheets. Mark with yellow dot (occasional review).
Read/Review tab
a few Checklist forms with appropriate headers ('Websites to Review', 'Articles to Read', 'Reports/Proposals', etc.). Mark with yellow dot (occasional review.).
Reference tab
for now, put a few Notes sheets in here. Mark tab with blue dot (for reference materials). Any major reference categories should probably get their own tabs. For example, I have a Ref:Tech tab that contains things like Emacs cheat-sheets, software registration serials, Internet account info (sans passwords), Python notes, etc.
Misc Lists tab
off-the-cuff lists that you wouldn't consider serious enough to call 'reference'. Use the Notes, To Buy, Checklist or other generic forms. A few selections from mine:
Templates tab
Keep a few spares of each form here that you're likely to need. Replenish each week, or whenever you're using a lot of sheets.

Any other tabs you'd use frequently, such as Timesheets, Finances, etc.

Inbox tab
keep regular cheap note paper here. This is your scratch pad. Move finished thoughts and materials out of here as soon as possible to the correct section of your planner. If the phone rings or someone wants to talk with you about something, open this section up immediately. (For more about this, see Using a Paper Planner Inbox.)

Originally from DIY Planner.com