Start with Backlog, Doing, and Done, then refine only after reality teaches you what is missing. Add Waiting or Blocked if handoffs slow you. Keep names short, define entry and exit rules, and ensure each column answers one clear question about state, not ambition.
Write cards as small, testable slices that a future you would instantly recognize without rereading old messages. Use strong verbs, include a crisp definition of done, and prefer splitting over postponing. If a card lingers, rewrite it until the next action is blindingly obvious.
Color code by energy type, not only by project, so your brain can pull the right work for the moment. Swimlanes for home, client, and learning reveal balance. Add tiny blocker stickers and due‑date dots to surface friction before it surprises your schedule.
Scan the board before email. Choose work by capacity, energy, and urgency, not by adrenaline. Move only the few cards you commit to finishing, set a tiny start ritual—tea, timer, breathing—then begin. Momentum built early shields the day from noise and wandering decisions.
Halfway through, step back for five minutes. Ask what is blocked, what can be finished by trimming scope, and what must move out of Doing to respect the limit. A tiny course correction here prevents late‑day thrash and preserves meaningful attention for deep tasks.
Close the loop by celebrating one concrete win, however small. Move finished cards to Done, jot one sentence of learning, and preselect tomorrow’s likely pulls into the top of Backlog. Ending with clarity quiets ruminating thoughts and makes morning momentum almost automatic.
Once a week, prune the Backlog, reorder near‑term intentions, and add one small delight that makes the week worth savoring. Review metrics, celebrate learning, and schedule maintenance. Ending with a single bold commitment prevents hedging and reinsures your board with simple, compelling direction.
Tag cards by energy demand—creative, analytical, administrative, or social—and match them to your circadian highs and lows. Protect recovery by leaving white space between heavy efforts. When energy dips, pull maintenance cards instead of forcing brilliance, preserving morale while still advancing meaningful outcomes across the week.
Every Friday, choose one friction to study and design a micro‑experiment: change a policy, try a new WIP limit, or rewrite card templates. Run it for seven days, then keep, tweak, or drop. Continuous improvement stays playful when experiments remain small, safe, and frequent.
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