Colter Reed

Remember Everything with Siri

The other day, I was listening to a book on the way home, and the author said something profound I wanted to remember. I was only two blocks away. “I can remember this for two blocks; then I’ll pull out my phone and write the quote in Evernote.”

Then I got stopped at a light. “Perfect! I have a chance to do it now.” I pulled out the phone. Woke it up. Tweetbot was still open. “Oh, right. I wanted to read that article later. Let me add that to Pocket…” Done. Pressed the home button. “When did I get a text message? Maybe it’s from my wife. I’d better check, in case she needs me to swing by the store on my way home…”

You know where this is going. You’ve been there.

Capturing an idea as soon as you have it is key to peaceful productivity. You want to be able to forget everything you need to do and trust that you’ll remember at the right time.

Siri is great at helping you remember what you need to do. Just ask. She’ll remind you.


Capturing Tasks

The most common thing I need Siri to help me remember is something I need to do.

If you have OmniFocus reminder capture enabled, OmniFocus will automatically import reminders with due dates and notes. If the reminder has a geofence attached to it (“when I get to work” or “in the car”), OmniFocus will leave the task in Reminders for iOS to handle. This usually works pretty well, since these tasks tend to be smaller, more focused, and one-off reminders that don’t need to be fully integrated into your planning system.

Scheduling Meetings

Siri will also schedule meetings for you. The syntax is pretty self-explanatory.

Declaring “I have a meeting…” usually doesn’t work. I’ve found that if I phrase it like I’m asking my assistant to schedule the meeting for me and don’t overthink the syntax, Siri usually gets it right.

When All Else Fails

When all else fails, you can capture anything using Siri with just one word: Note.

Siri will create a note (in Notes) with everything that follows. My most common use case for this is to capture quotes from books I’m listening to while I’m walking or driving.

It’s okay if the capture isn’t perfect. A word is misspelled, or the event is on the wrong calendar, or things aren’t capitalized just right. You can clean all those things up during your next daily or weekly review.

Think of Siri as placing a reminder in your inbox for you to process later. The important thing is that you’ve captured enough of the idea for now. You won’t forget it. Go back to enjoying what you were doing.

Fortunately, I was able to clear my mind enough to remember the quote later that evening.

Planning is good. Blindly following a plan is a terrible idea.

Jeff Sutherland, Scrum

Question: How do you capture on the go? Share your thoughts in the comments, on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.

Never Miss a Post

When you sign up to receive my blog posts by email, you’ll get a FREE copy of The Digital Goal Domination Guide, my new ebook that will show you how to reach your goals using OmniFocus and Evernote. Get more done this year than you ever thought possible!

PLUS, you’ll receive occasional bonus content and special offers, some of it not available on the blog.

You’re subscribed! Check your email for instructions on how to download your book.

Exit mobile version