Dashboard Maps
Transcription
Dashboard Maps
ResultsManager 2 © Gyronix 2003 - 2007 All Rights Reserved Table of Contents The Basics What is ResultsManager? Getting Started Using Express mode What is Express mode? Getting started in Express mode Entering Activities Creating a Dashboard Working from your Dashboard Implementing 'GTD' with ResultsManager About "Getting Things Done" How do you plan your day? Get in control of MindManager Choose where to use ResultsManager Terminology Basics Tell ResultsManager who you are Review the Implementation Plan Setting up your Master Lists Organise your maps Add Activities Visualise your Projects Create a Dashboard Take Action Review and refine Purchasing License Keys ResultsManager Standard and Professional compared Purchasing License Keys Using Power User mode What is Power User mode? Configuring ResultsManager Configuring Options Creating and Editing Activities Inserting a new Activity The Edit dialogue Project, Result or Next Action? Committed or Someday-maybe? Setting start and due dates Priority, Duration and Status Assigning Contexts Assigning Owners Assigning Categories and Areas Setting activities as Lists De-activating Activities Finishing the Edit Editing multiple Activities Working with Dashboard maps What is a Dashboard map? Generating Dashboard maps Regenerating Dashboard maps Default Dashboard maps Working from your Dashboard map Customising Dashboard maps Dashboard configuration options Managing Dashboard maps Editing Dashboard definitions Dashboard templates and filters Adding filters to Dashboard maps Reports in Dashboard maps Synchronising with Outlook Outlook synchronisation overview 5 5 7 9 9 10 12 14 16 19 19 20 22 23 24 25 27 29 32 35 38 42 44 45 48 48 50 51 51 52 52 58 58 59 61 63 64 69 70 73 77 79 80 81 82 85 85 89 91 92 97 101 101 105 108 113 115 117 118 118 How the MindManager connection to Outlook works How ResultsManager handles synchronisation with Outlook Getting started with Outlook Synchronisation How extra information is handled How completed tasks are handled Advanced topics Appendices A: Glossary of terms B: MindManager Essentials C: Menu commands and shortcuts D: The List Picker Dialogue E: Dashboard Filters F: Dashboard Report Keywords G. Dashboard Template Properties H: System Requirements J: Installing and uninstalling K: MindManager 6 and Categories Frequently Asked Questions Installation and Licensing Editing Activities Creating and using Dashboards ResultsManager and 'GTD' Microsoft® Outlook and PDAs Other questions Try the demonstration maps Tips and Tricks Other Stuff About Gyronix Keeping up to date Obtaining support Disclaimers ResultsManager License Agreement Copyright and Trademarks 119 120 121 123 125 126 129 129 136 139 142 143 159 161 162 163 164 165 165 171 176 181 183 189 192 194 199 199 200 201 202 203 206 The Basics What is ResultsManager? Using MindManager® software for brainstorms, project planning, meeting notes, problem solving or creative thinking is highly productive, very addictive and a lot of fun. You quickly discover that you and your team know a lot more than you thought you did, and you can rapidly create sophisticated concepts from a few initial ideas. This is the real power of visualisation and focus, and is the reason that MindManager is the market leader. In all of these maps, some items will require action to deliver them. Some of the more complex maps will contain not only multiple actions, but sequences of things that must be done in a certain order, by different people, with deadlines. So what happens when you have ten, twenty or more of these maps alive at the same time, each containing something that is important to you embedded in them? How do you keep track of your commitments without re-entering and reorganising them somewhere else, and losing your project focus in the process? Gyronix Dynamic Planning System ResultsManager provides the best of both worlds - graphic visualisation of projects and all their related information and thinking, and dynamically created action lists for taking action and managing your time. ResultsManager sweeps maps looking for incomplete activities, and dynamically creates "dashboards" that give you an immediate overview of all your open action items. These dashboards are designed to help you take action on a daily, weekly or monthly basis. Each day, you can focus on what you need to do next to maintain momentum. Each week or month, you can review and re-prioritise your projects and workload, to keep aiming at your longer term outcomes. ResultsManager is perfect for visually implementing David Allen's internationally renowned productivity system, Getting Things Done. It does this by Helping you visually define the successful project, outcome or action that you want to achieve Choosing completion or review dates for time-critical activities Identifying where you can complete this activity (e.g. on the phone, at the office, or on the train) Creating "Dashboard" maps that draw together all your projects and next-action items, reorganised into lists, so that you can easily review, prioritise and schedule your work. ResultsManager gives you timely answers to very practical questions such as What is my next action on the Cost Reduction project? Do I have next-action items on all my committed projects? What issues from the last month do we need to address at the next marketing team meeting? What phone calls must I make today? Which of my "Someday-Maybe" projects should I activate? But what happens when your projects involve other people? How can you keep track of responsibilities or delegated actions without using complex project management software? ResultsManager also tracks who is doing what, and who they are doing it for, so that you can share maps with colleagues. You only need one project plan that everyone accesses, not a separately maintained to-do list for each member - ResultsManager creates these dynamically. Getting Started If, like most people, you want to see something happen, then try the following: If you have not run the Express Setup Wizard yet, then o Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin o Select the "Express Setup Wizard" o Provide answers to the Wizard's questions. When it asks you if you want to create a Map Central map, select "Yes", and also answer "Yes" when it asks you if you want it to create a first Dashboard map. ResultsMerlin will create a personalised demonstration map using some sample projects. If you have already run the Express Setup Wizard, then click on the ResultsManager tab | Help group | Demonstration, then click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard. Go to the section on Using Express mode to start working with the Daily Actions Dashboard. Daily Actions Dashboard example ResultsManager v2 and "Getting Things Done" ResultsManager is much more than an Add-in for the leading visualisation software, MindManager. It is a complete process for managing activities, and can replace to-do lists in many cases, together with project plans drawn on napkins, envelopes and whiteboards. Although ResultsManager is fairly simple to use, the challenge of getting all your activities organised consistently should not be underestimated - and neither should the rewards. The chapter on Implementing Getting Things Done with ResultsManager takes you a step at a time through the process of organising your activities and using ResultsManager to help you focus and deliver them. Using Express mode What is Express mode? Express mode is designed for users who are new to ResultsManager, and who want to understand its capabilities and use it productively without too many options and details. When you are comfortable with Express mode, you can migrate to Power User mode for more advanced features and options. To select Express mode, click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode, then select Express mode: Selecting Express mode Selecting Express mode and clicking OK will automatically open the Express mode options dialogue, so that you can update your options for working in Express mode. You can run the Express Setup Wizard from the Express Mode Options dialogue or by clicking the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin. Express mode provides: Simpler dialogues for entering Activities, creating Dashboards and editing Dashboards Simpler Option configurations Express Mode temporarily overrides the Power User mode option settings. Refer to the Dashboards FAQ section for details of the settings used. Getting started in Express mode Getting started in Express mode will only take a few seconds. First, check you are in Express mode. Click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode, and check that Express mode is selected: Checking you are in Express mode When you click OK, ResultsManager will display the Express mode Options: Express mode Options Type your name into the box labelled "Me", check that the other three options are as shown, and click OK. You are now all set to start working in Express mode. If you want to configure other options for Express Mode, click the Express Setup Wizard button. In case you were wondering, the other options control the following: Any Activities that do not have a specific owner assigned to them will be assigned to you ResultsManager will automatically follow Multimap links when looking for Activities to do Any overdue Activities or Activities with no date will be rolled over to today, so that you still see them as something you should do. Entering Activities When you are creating brainstorm maps, meeting minutes or planning maps in MindManager, some of the Topics in your map will represent activities that you or someone else needs to complete. You can either Convert an existing Topic into an Activity, or Add a new Topic as an Activity. Start a new MindManager map, or open one that has some Activities already in it. To convert an existing Topic into an Activity, select it and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity. To add a new Activity to your map, select the parent Topic and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Insert Activity. The ResultsManager Edit dialogue will then appear: The Express mode Edit dialogue Begin by typing your intended outcome in the "Successful outcome" box. Then, decide if this is a Project (that will have Actions of its own), or an Action that you can do. Selecting the radio button will change the Icon. If this activity must be completed by a deadline, then choose the due date. Click the shortcut list button ( ) to choose dates such as today, tomorrow, one week's time and so on. Or click the browse button ( ) by the date to choose from a calendar. If it is just something that needs to be done as soon as possible, leave the date blank. In Express mode, if you set a date on an Activity, it is automatically regarded as having a deadline, so you will see the Deadline icon on the topic after editing it. If you have already made some progress with this activity, you can enter it here. Otherwise, leave it set to "Not started" if this is a new Activity. Next, choose where you can do this. Type in the Context, or choose one by clicking the Browse button ( ). When the list of Contexts appears, double-click in the left-hand column on the ones that apply, then click OK. You don't need to put "@" in front of Contexts - ResultsManager will deal with this automatically. Lastly, ResultsManager needs to know who is responsible for this Activity. Click the List button ( ) by the Owner box, and select your name from the list. You are now the owner. That's it! ResultsManager now has everything it needs to know about this Activity to include it in a Dashboard map, so that you can see everything organised by Context and Project. Creating a Dashboard A Dashboard map is a map that ResultsManager creates, containing Activities that it has found in your maps, but organised so that you can easily decide what to do next. Open a map that contains Activities that have been created with ResultsManager, then click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard. The Dashboard dialogue will appear: Creating a Dashboard in Express mode Click the OK button to start creating the Daily Actions Dashboard. This Dashboard will reorganise your Activities to help you decide what to do today: Daily Actions Dashboard map, dynamically created by ResultsManager Working from your Dashboard Once you have created your Dashboard, you can use it to work through your to-do lists, or review your projects. As an example, let's suppose that one of your action items was to purchase your ResultsManager license. It might appear in an original "Project" map like this: An action in a project map When you create your Daily Actions Dashboard, including this project map in the sweep, this action item appears in the Dashboard map organised either by date and/or context. It will probably appear twice (once in each list). Activity shown in a dynamic Dashboard map, in the Context list So, the next time you speak with your Boss, you can get the go-ahead to purchase your ResultsManager license. If you had five other things from different projects (in different project maps) that were also labelled with "Boss", these would appear here as well. An action item taken in isolation might not be completely clear - if you had an action to "Call Jim", for example, you might not immediately recognise what this was about. While you are viewing your Dashboard map, click on View | Show/hide | Callouts, and you will be able to see where action item "belongs": Action item with parent activity shown in a Callout In the dynamically-generated Dashboard map, there is a Hyperlink Icon on every action item. Clicking on this Hyperlink Icon will take you straight back to the original copy of the action item in the project map, so that you can see it in the context of the whole project that it belongs to: Going back to the original activity in the Project map You can work straight from the Dashboard map as well - you don't need to keep returning to the original project maps to update activities. Let's suppose that you have purchased your ResultsManager license, and now you want to check this item as done. In the Dashboard map, select the Activity and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity: Editing activities in the Dashboard map Change the Progress to "Finished" and click OK. ResultsManager now updates all other copies of this activity in the Dashboard map (as it might be listed in other places too), and also sends the change back to the original Project map: Updates sent from the Dashboard to the original Project map So the next time this Dashboard is created, it will contain the latest status information. Implementing 'GTD' with ResultsManager About "Getting Things Done" "Getting Things Done" is the leading personal organisation system created by David Allen. Visit the David Allen Company Web site for a definition of GTD. If you haven't read "Getting Things Done" yet, then we recommend that you do. (See the FAQ for links). David and his associates also present regular seminars and provide coaching to help busy people get organised and stay organised, by focusing on outcomes and thinking through activities before doing them. You don't need any knowledge of "GTD" to use ResultsManager. You can achieve real benefits from ResultsManager without knowing GTD, but you will gain more in the long term by understanding the GTD process as well. In this documentation, we will not teach you about GTD itself, but will show you how to implement it with ResultsManager. ResultsManager converts Mindjet's MindManager® software into a tool for implementing the Getting Things Done process. For those already aware of GTD, ResultsManager adds some new dimensions: ResultsManager provides a systematic and supportive way to implement GTD. You can visualise projects graphically in MindManager maps to communicate their focus and objectives. Visualisation of successful outcomes is critical to success. Projects lists are automatically created by defining projects. You don't need to keep separate lists of projects and action items. You can mix information together with actions in the same MindManager maps. This reduces the need to keep separate project files. You can share joint project maps with colleagues, and ResultsManager will extract just your activities to dynamically build your lists ("dashboards"). In this way, GTD can grow from being an individual discipline into a team activity. You can work from either your dynamic lists or from the original project maps. Ideas for new or different activities often occur while you are doing something else. If you are experienced in GTD and have suggestions for improvements to ResultsManager, we would love to hear from you. How do you plan your day? "There are management solutions to technical problems, but no technical solutions to management problems" Don't you have enough technology in your life already? Why would this system be more effective than the others? The short answer is that the secret of good prioritisation and execution of your ever-increasing workload is the visualisation of successful results. The better you are at visualising your outcomes and projects, the clearer your day to day decision-making process gets. There is no technological "magic bullet" - the initiative and will-power come from you, not from the technology. So almost any system can be made to work, provided you are committed to it and use it consistently. But what MindManager and ResultsManager do (that other technologies don't) is visualise your ideas and outcomes so that you can see them, work with them and work on them. In this chapter we will show you how to use ResultsManager to effectively manage your workload, so that you are in a position to make informed decisions, judge priorities and stay focused on what is really important. We will show you how to: Identify key projects, and set up your Master Lists of people, areas, categories and contexts Organise your information within MindManager (this is useful whether or not you use ResultsManager) Sweep up your activities and add them to working maps Use MindManager to think through and visualise projects and outcomes Generate "dashboards" that keep you on top of what has to be done next Use review techniques stay focused and productive in the long term So, how do you plan your day? (Or your life?) The top 5 mistakes in daily planning A-B-C priorities and four-quadrant prioritisation are too simplistic to reflect a wide enough range of thinking and focus, from core strategies down to individual actions Daily to-do lists are usually dominated by short term issues and do not give insight into projects Chronic reactive mode ("greasing the squeaking wheel") simply teaches everyone that to get your time they just need to make a fuss The Busy Trap is sometimes hard to see, as you are certain that you will "have more time" next week, or after the current crisis, or after the restructure, or after your vacation, or... Lists of action items that aren't action items - it is likely that four- fifths of "action items" on to-do lists do not qualify as action items. An action item is something you can do. Anything else is not an action item. It's a project, a dream, or a fantasy. How many of the items on your to-do list for today are actionable in full, given the right setting or resources? Or how many really need to be broken down into smaller steps? Our implementation programme shows you how focusing on your projects, charting simple routes to successful outcomes, and reviewing your workload from different perspectives will help to create a system that you can use every day, and trust to help make good decisions about how to spend your time. ResultsManager has been carefully designed to support the implementation of David Allen's " Getting Things Done" system. If you haven't read David's book of the same name, buy it now. If you are already familiar with "GTD", then you will know that a lasting change in habits does not happen overnight, and that in the early days, it is easy to regress. Your colleagues may not appreciate your new focused approach, and were happier when they could abuse your time and good will. ResultsManager provides a platform for implementing GTD using MindManager, with some key advantages over simple lists - you can focus on and visualise projects much more easily, and you can manage and track shared activities and projects with team members. ResultsManager takes you from graphical brainstorms to organised action lists in one step, accelerating the mechanics of GTD so that you can spend more time focusing on and visualising outcomes. If that sounds like Californian daydreaming, prepare yourself for a nightmare - you are going to have to think about and decide on things that your "busy trap" has kept hidden from you for too long. Get in control of MindManager Before we get going on organising activities, it is important that you are comfortable with MindManager. It's difficult to learn two new things at the same time. MindManager is a very powerful tool, but like most sophisticated software, you don't need to know all of it to use it effectively. If you are new to MindManager, then take few moments to work through the MindManager Essentials section in Appendix B. You might find it useful to print it out and make your own notes on it. Choose where to use ResultsManager In this section, we will choose one or two areas as a starting point for implementing ResultsManager. The optimum way to use ResultsManager is to track as many of your activities as possible with it. In this way, you will be able to take balanced view of where your effort is being expended, and where you need to increase focus for more effective results or to deliver longer term objectives. However, for practical purposes it is better to start small and widen your horizons as you become familiar with not only the software, but the concepts behind it. We recommend choosing perhaps one or two areas at most where you have a series of activities to complete over the next month. Examples of this might include a short term or mid-term project at work, such as a big meeting, a presentation, or a new initiative planning for a holiday, a party or a wedding a personal health improvement programme acquiring a new skill or knowledge Examples that are not so useful to begin with include Stuff that you have to get done today Things you can do in a few minutes anyway, without writing them down first Unsolicited things such as customer requests or minor crises These kinds of activity could be integrated later, but are not the best place to begin. You don't need the additional stress of urgent decision-making on top of learning a new tool, otherwise you won't have the time to understand how to get the best from it by experimentation. So before continuing, select one or two short to mid-term projects to manage with ResultsManager. Terminology Basics We will frequently use five different names for elements of planning and managing activities. so it is worth getting to know them: Activity - a general name for something that you intend to do. Specifically, an Activity will be one of the four different types listed below. Project - a set of related Activities that are focused towards an outcome. Result - an intermediate step within a project, that has a defined outcome or something that is delivered. Project Managers would recognise these as "milestones" and "GTD" users as "Subprojects". If you prefer to use the term "Subproject", there is a setting in the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options dialogue to select this. (Power User mode only). Action - a step in a project that creates progress Next Action - a particular type of Action that is ready to be done. Next Actions are not waiting for anything else to happen, and can be started straight away. Some of the other terms are listed in Appendix A, but those listed above are the basic ones that are used frequently. Tell ResultsManager who you are To distinguish your activities from things being done by other people, ResultsManager needs to know who you are. Now is also a good time to configure the basic options. We will assume that you have already tried ResultsManager in Express Mode. This section will describe the use of ResultsManager in Power User mode to implement GTD. 1. Open MindManager and click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode. Select "Power User" mode and click OK. 2. You can use the Power User Setup Wizard to complete your Power User configuration by clicking the button. If you prefer to use manual configuration, set the options as shown below: 3. Now click the button labelled "Dashboard Options": 4. In the box labelled "Me", type your name (without using commas or semicolons). ResultsManager will ensure that your name is always available so that you can assign activities to yourself. 5. Configure the rest of the options on the left hand side as shown. Do not add or delete any Dashboards, as your default list may vary from the above screen shot. 6. Click OK to return to the main Options dialogue. ResultsManager now knows you who are, and can use this information to create dashboards that are personalised around your perspectives. Review the Implementation Plan As part of the installation package for ResultsManager, we have included an Implementation Plan for ResultsManager itself. As the implementation ResultsManager is a project in its own right, it acts as both an example of using ResultsManager, and is something you can actually use straight away. Have a look at the plan and the Dashboards it produces now. You might not follow all of it now, but you can return to it in the following sections to understand how it works, and experiment with changing it. To view the ResultsManager Implementation Plan: Click the ResultsManager tab | Help group | Implementation map The ResultsManager Implementation Plan will open. (It will also open another Help window - you can close this). This is a plan for starting to use ResultsManager. It contains all the activities in the rest of this section, wired up in the order in which they can be done. ResultsManager Implementation Plan Click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard Select the "Daily Actions Dashboard (Express User)", and check the option for creating the dashboard from the whole map, then click OK ResultsManager will create the Daily Actions Dashboard for the Implementation Plan, showing you what can be done next You can link this Implementation Plan into your own Map Central later, so that these activities are integrated with your own projects. Daily Actions Dashboard for ResultsManager Implementation Plan Try the "Calendar" dashboard too, to see how ResultsManager can create different views of the same activities. Setting up your Master Lists Creating a master list of Owners One of the ways that ResultsManager lets you track activities is by the name of the person responsible (the "Owner"). As you start to add activities to your maps, it will be useful to have a list of frequently used names ready. Do the following: 1. Open MindManager and click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options: 2. If you prefer, click the Power User Setup Wizard button. The Wizard will take you through setting up your Master Lists. If you would rather do this manually, follow the rest of the instructions below. 3. In the box labelled "Manage Master Lists", click the button labelled "Export". ResultsManager will generate a new MindManager map containing the lists of Owners, Contexts, Categories and Areas that it knows about. 4. Save this map in a safe place where you can find it again. We will need it again later, so leave the map open. 5. In this map, there is a Main Topic called "Owners". The subtopics are a list of all the people to whom you can assign activities, or who might be waiting for things from you. Add subtopics under here with the names of other people that you work with or deal with frequently, who might be responsible for activities you have asked them to do, or who might be waiting for things from you. Think about work colleagues, managers, direct reports, friends, family or professionals such as your accountant, consultants or contractors. You don't need an exhaustive list - just the ones that come to mind the most frequently. Add them to this map as subtopics of "Owners". 6. After you have entered a few names, click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options again, and click the "Import" button while your Master Lists map is in view in MindManager, with the Central Topic selected. ResultsManager will read the lists back in and add any new entries. You can confirm that ResultsManager has read them correctly by clicking on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options, then clicking the "Manager master Owners list" button. You should see your list of names in the right- hand column of the list picker dialogue. Creating a master list of Contexts Next, consider the places where you can work, and how the location affects what you might be able to do. If you are learning to play the trombone, then you will probably make some time every day for practice. "At the library" might not be the ideal place for this, but there probably are some activities that can only be done at the library, such as a piece of research. So the location (the "Context", in Getting Things Done terminology) has an important part to play in deciding what you can do when at a certain place or when you have specific resources to hand, such as the telephone. Think about the different places that you can work on things on your lists, and edit the list under "Context" in the Master Lists map to reflect them. By default, ResultsManager puts some on there already, and you can add to this list by adding them to the map and importing it again, like we did for the list of Owner names. Another very useful type of Context is when you are next speaking to a particular person. For example, if you create a context named "Sarah", and assign activities to this context, then you can see at a glance all the things you meant to speak to Sarah about. The next time she calls you can spare her the usual syndrome of "I'm sure there was something else I meant to tell you". However, you should only add the names of people you are in regular contact with; don't add lots of people who you might only contact occasionally. The chances are that contacting them about something will be an activity with a specific purpose, and you are less likely to be chatting to them at the coffee machine anyway. Creating Master Lists of Areas and Categories You can use Areas and Categories in any way you like, including not using them at all. They are more useful for reviewing your workload than for taking immediate action on. You should use them for aspects of your activities that cross project boundaries, and are ongoing processes rather than projects with a beginning and an end. For example, you could use Areas to label areas of improvement, such as improved cash-flow or improved employee satisfaction. There may be projects or certain activities within other projects that contribute to this area, and you will be able to see these grouped together in a special dashboard so that you can visualise the balance between these areas of improvement; your dashboard might show you at a glance that you haven't got anything planned that contributes to employee satisfaction, for example. So you might decide to do something about this, unless this status is already compliant with company policy. Categories can be used to group together similar projects so that you can focus your reviews. For example, making a distinction between major and minor projects will help you split them up between monthly and weekly reviews respectively. Think about different perspectives on your activities that could help you understand (and amend) the balance and focus of what you do. ResultsManager adds some default Areas and Categories to the Master Lists map, and you can add some more of yours under the Main Topics and re-import the map again. Save your Master Lists map Don't forget to save your Master Lists map when you are done. You might need it again if you need to re-install ResultsManager. Organise your maps In this step, we will set up some useful maps to organise project- related activities, and a single starting point so that you can find things easily. If you are already using MindManager, you will most likely have some maps related to current projects, such as brainstorm maps, planning maps, minutes from meetings and so on. ResultsManager can use these maps, provided that it can find them. We will set things up so that it can do this. Let the Wizard create a Map Central map ResultsMerlin, the ResultsManager Wizard, can create a Map Central map for you. Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin and select the "Express Wizard". Follow ResultsMerlin's instructions and allow it to create a new Map Central map for you. You can then extend and update this map by hand. Note: if you have already created a Map Central map, and you run ResultsMerlin again, it will overwrite your previous map if you allow it to. It will warn you of this, so it doesn't happen entirely automatically - you need to agree to let it do this. But if you do, there is no way to recover your original Map Central again once it has been replaced (unless you have a backup copy somewhere else). If you prefer to create your Map Central map manually, follow the instructions below. Create a "Map Central" map manually Start by creating a new MindManager map, and call it "Map Central". (You can call it something else if you prefer, but we will refer to it as "Map Central" in these notes). Spend a little time making it attractive, as you will be looking at it a lot. You can make it very personal if you wish, unless you think you might need to show it to your manager, and you don't want to spend much time explaining the ornate graphics. But do remember that the key advantage of using MindManager to implement this system for delivering objectives is to visualise success, so your maps should be memorable and high-impact for maximum effect. When you are done, save your map somewhere where (a) you can find it again, and (b) it will get backed up when you make backups. You do make backups, don't you? The next step is to make a shortcut to your Map Central map so that you can always find it in a few seconds. Click on the "My Maps" task pane tab in MindManager, then right-click on the "My Projects" collection, and select "Add current map". Next, click on the Mindmanager button | MindManager Options, click on "View", and enable the option for showing the "My Maps" task pane at start-up. This will mean that every time you start MindManager, the My Maps task pane will be in view, and you can click on the "Map Central" entry to open your Map Central map without hunting around for it. So within a few seconds of launching MindManager, you are straight into your working maps. Map Central is where ResultsManager starts when it collects together your current activities to create Dashboard maps. It will not be practical to put everything you are doing into one map, so we can use MindManager's Multimap features to create links to all the brainstorm maps, project plans, vacation ideas, meeting minutes, design ideas and other maps that reflect your workload. This is done by adding Hyperlinks pointing to the Topics in your maps. Link to Multimaps from Map Central If you are already familiar with MindManager, you can skip the next paragraph. If not, let's create a Multimap for one of your projects: 1. Select the Central Topic in your Map Central map and press the INS key. 2. Now type the name of one of the projects you are working on, then press F2. 3. With the Topic for your project still selected, right-click on the Topic and select Send To | New Linked Map. 4. In the dialogue that opens, check that the option "Assign selected topic to new Central Topic" and "Delete original topics and create hyperlinks to exported topics" are both selected, then click OK. 5. MindManager will then prompt you for a location to save your new project map. If you followed this part, you have now (a) created a new map and (b) made a Hyperlink from Map Central to this new map, all in one operation. ResultsManager will now be able to find your new project map from Map Central by following the Hyperlink. If you already have some project maps or maps that you would like to link up from Map Central, add Topics to Map Central for each map and add Topic Hyperlinks to them. ResultsManager will only follow Topic Hyperlinks, not Hyperlinks in the Notes pane. A very simple "Map Central" map In the above example, our user has an enviably simple life consisting of involvement in two projects ("MK II Widget" and "Q2 Marketing"), and a "Bits and Pieces" map that contains everything else that is not organised into collaborative projects, such as getting the light fixed in their office. Their "Map Central" map links to these three maps, and if ResultsManager is asked to sweep for open action items, it can find them all by starting at Map Central. Linking to folders You have a whole collection of maps in a folder that you would like ResultsManager to check through for action items, but you don't want to make a Hyperlink to each individual one. You can add a Hyperlink to the whole folder and ResultsManager will look for any MindManager maps in the folder. So you can throw more maps in there later, and ResultsManager will still find them without your having to update Map Central. Use the folder browse button in the Hyperlink dialogue instead of the file browse button. Using a "Bits and Pieces" map So, what about things that are not part of a project, or don't really "belong" anywhere? We recommend that in addition to project maps that are focused around an outcome, you also have a map for stray dogs. Then when you remember that your cat needs vaccination (while you are in the middle of planning a marketing campaign, naturally), you will have somewhere to add this. We call this map the "Bits and Pieces" map, as it contains assorted odds and ends whose only common feature is that they don't belong anywhere else. (Some of the things in mine are "Stationery list", "Things to buy from Screwfix.com", "Interesting web sites" and so on). Using the Multimap View in MindManager If you have added some links to other maps from your Map Central map, you can now use MindManager's Multimap view to scare yourself. Select the Map Central map and Click the "Multimap" button in the Action Bar to see a page of preview images of all your project and other maps. The good news is that this is not nearly as scary as it's going to look in a month's time when you have really started to work this way, and ensure that everything is accessible through Map Central. Controlling what ResultsManager scans ResultsManager follows Hyperlinks in Topics to discover maps to scan for action items. When it opens a map linked from Map Central, it will then explore the Hyperlinks in that map, and just keep on going, looking for more linked maps. So you do not need a link to everything from Map Central - the sub-maps can have further links in them. If ResultsManager finds a link to a map that it has already looked at, it just ignores it the second time around, so don't worry about having multiple links to the same maps. You can even include links back to the Map Central map. You might be thinking that the Map Central concept is a nice idea, but you don't need ResultsManager to search through all the maps in there. You might have some projects that are not active yet, or projects that are finished but you still want to keep a link to them. Fortunately, you can both have your cake and eat it. You can tell ResultsManager to ignore a Topic and everything underneath it, including any Multimap Hyperlinks, by adding the "No Entry" Icon to the Topic. Click on the Library task pane tab and select the Icons folder. Scroll down until you find the No Entry Icon and add this Icon to any part of any map that you don't want ResultsManager to visit. When ResultsManager finds this Icon on a Topic, it ignores this Topic and all subtopics or Callout Topics connected to it. A Hyperlink blocked to ResultsManager This Icon stops ResultsManager from exploring this Hyperlink or any of the Topics under here in the map. You use this to prevent ResultsManager from sweeping projects that are finished or genuinely dormant. Add Activities In the previous step, you created a "Map Central" map and some placeholder maps for gathering action items to keep track of. Now we will add some actions to these maps, or convert existing action items into ones that ResultsManager can track. We recommend that you don't put activities in your Map Central map, but only in linked Project maps or the "Bits and Pieces" map. This is so that the Map Central map stays fairly clean - because it is not a project map, it does not necessarily have a focus and purpose that drives the activities it contains. If you are also following the Getting Things Done method, you will know that sweeping up all your action items is one of the first parts of the process. Places where you find commitments include Your in-tray - letters, faxes and memos Your e-mail inbox Project files and project maps Meeting minutes Voicemail Post-it notes Your conscience Your subconscious It can take weeks or even months to gather together all your commitments into a single place, as like most people, many of them are not even written down. This is why we suggest that to evaluate ResultsManager, you just pick one or two projects at most, and only handle the activities from those to start with. You can use ResultsManager in parallel to your existing planning and activity management systems, which helps you to make a comparison between them. The key data that ResultsManager needs to know about an activity is Who is doing it When it is due, if it is dated How much progress has been made, if any Where it can be done (the context) In fact the above information is also optional, but you will get more out of using ResultsManager if you give it a little more information to work with. In this section, we will just dump activities into maps without building in any planned structure, and in the next section, we will rearrange the activities so that ResultsManager understands the sequence of work. ResultsManager lets you specify information about Activities from drop-down lists and recently used information. When ResultsManager runs, some information about Activities is automatically inherited from parent Topics in the map, unless otherwise specified. So to make life simple, if you assign your name to the Central Topic in a map, then you will own all the activities in the map by default, unless you explicitly assign certain ones to someone else. Begin by opening one of your project maps, select the Central Topic and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity. Click the list button next to the "Owners" box, and you should see your name on the pop-up menu that appears. (Entering your name in the Options dialogue earlier means that your name will always be in this shortcut list). Click on your name, then click OK to close the edit dialogue. You have now made yourself the default Owner for everything in this map, unless you use a different owner name elsewhere. Select a Topic (any Topic) and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Insert Activity. When defining an activity, describing the successful outcome is a key to achieving it. David Allen says, "You won't see how to succeed until you can see yourself succeeding". So instead of writing "Call Barry", write "Barry agrees to new pricing". It may sound silly, but half the challenge in any task is your perception of it. Begin by clicking the "Action" radio button. We will look at the others in the next session, but for now, we will enter Action items. Next, always write down the purpose or reason for this activity. If your reaction to this is that it is an unnecessary waste of effort, because you already know it, then you should regard this thinking as a danger signal. There is no escape from the trap of being too busy doing things to think about why you are doing them. If you have any discretionary time at all, and are responsible for deciding what you do next, you must evaluate the reasons for doing it. The Pareto principle tells us that 80% of our results come from 20% of our efforts; if we are too busy delivering the other 80% of tasks to evaluate which 20% is the really important stuff, then we can never escape from trying to do every single thing that presents itself to us. Next, decide on whether this activity requires dates. ResultsManager understands several different patterns of dates, for example: No start date and no due date: this is something that you want to do "as soon as possible", where the definition of "possible" is "when you get around to it". In reality, this means that you will do it when nothing more important or more attractive is outstanding. It will probably get done when the alternatives to doing it are worse. A start date on its own: this is the electronic equivalent of the "bring forward" or "tickler" file system. You are telling ResultsManager that you don't want to think about this activity again until the date entered as the Start date. ResultsManager will display it in your Dashboard maps starting on that date. A due date, without the Deadline marker ( ) : this is an activity that you would prefer to finish by a certain date A due date, with the Deadline marker ( ) : this is a dated item you are entering into the Deadlines list, and is something that must happen on that date. If it doesn't, then there will be a price to pay. A start date and a due date with the deadline marker: this is something that is deferred until the start date and must finish by the due date. An example would be the preparation for a presentation; it is essential that you are properly prepared, and the presentation must happen on a certain date. In fact, showing up unprepared may be worse than not showing up at all. ResultsManager will display this activity in your dashboard starting on the start date, as a reminder. Note that you should not use due dates for Deadlines to indicate when you would "like" to do something. You should only use them for deadlines that have consequences. Otherwise, your calendar contains optional activities, you will become accustomed to ignoring them or rescheduling on the fly, and eventually you will overlook something that really is a deadline date. If you do use due dates to schedule a "meeting with myself" to complete something, then you must actually do it and not break the promise. Next, select the Context where you can do this activity. When you click on the list picker button next to the Context field, you should find the ones you created earlier in the master lists. You can also add others as you go, and ResultsManager will prompt you for permission to add them to the Master list if it finds new ones. If you defined any Categories and Areas, you can add these as well, and click OK to save the new Activity in your map. Add as many of the open Activities as you can think of for your project. You might find it easier to simply brainstorm, and then convert Topics to Activities afterwards. Select a Topic or Topics, and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity, and ResultsManager will present each one in turn for editing. You will probably find that the more you think of to do, the more things will come to mind. This is because you can only hold a limited number of things in your head at any time, and moving them out makes space for others to come to the surface. It is very likely that by focusing on one project, you will start to think of things to do in other areas. When this happens, switch over to your Bits and Pieces map and add them there, and we can clean them up later. In the next section, we will rearrange the activities you have gathered into a Project, so that you can visualise the path to a successful outcome. Visualise your Projects In this section, we are going to take the Activities that you gathered in the previous session, and reorganise them to represent a project flow. A key concept in David Allen's "Getting Things Done" method is the "Next Action". A Next Action is something that can be done without waiting for anything else, or doing any other preparation or information gathering. If something else needs doing first, then it's not a Next Action by definition. One of the biggest weaknesses of typical to-do lists is that many of the "action items" listed are not actionable. For example, "Get car serviced" is not a Next Action, because it is made up of several distinct actions, such as finding the telephone number for the garage, picking a suitable day, arranging a courtesy car and so on. So "Get car serviced" is really a little project in its own right, and splitting it up into action items that really are actionable is the secret of making progress. Otherwise, you will look at this action item many times and think "I really must do something about that". Defining the "something" is the way to start. In addition to Action items, ResultsManager understands two other organising items: "Projects" and "Results". A Result is an intermediate stage in a project, and a Project is a collection of action items and Results. In the above example of getting your car serviced, we could say that getting the service booked in at the garage is a "Result" - a milestone or clearly defined point within the whole project. Working towards a series of shorter term Results is often easier than trying to stay motivated towards a more distant outcome. ResultsManager also understands the distinction between "Actions" and "Next Actions". An Action is something that needs to be done as part of a Result or Project. A Next Action is something that can be done now. ResultsManager usually only shows you Next Actions, and does not show other Actions on your to-do lists until they become Next Actions themselves. It does this by understanding the structure of your project when you draw it in a MindManager map. So by visualising projects in MindManager maps, you score a double benefit; not only do you get to "see" how your project flows and fits together, but ResultsManager can look over your shoulder and work out which bits can actually be done next. You can separate your project thinking from delivery of the individual elements, and you can go back to review, re-organise and re-prioritise your projects. When ResultsManager reads MindManager maps, it looks for Project and Result Topics, and understands a technique called "Funnel timelines". This is a way of drawing activities in MindManager maps so that you can see what has to be done before something else can be done, which is the key concept in project management. If you have ever thought that project management software was more complex and cumbersome than the projects it manages, then you will enjoy project planning in MindManager - you can create a solid, workable and reasonably sophisticated plan for a project in an hour, or maybe two for a bigger project. But the real bonus is the amount of thinking that the plan captures, and the way that you can mix activities with information. Project Management software rarely allows you to also keep brainstorms, half-baked ideas, undecided issues and research material in the same document as the "plan". In the world of project management, a plan is a plan. In the slightly more practical world of planning with MindManager, the plan is just one part of a collection of related information and work in progress, something that is alive and being constantly updated or developed. ResultsManager keeps track of the activities embedded within MindManager maps, so that you can manage their implementation through the GTD process. How Funnel Timelines work 1. You add a Topic to a map that represents an outcome or achievement, near to the Central Topic. 2. As children of that outcome (i.e. further from the Central Topic), you add the Activities that must be completed before you can start the parent Activity. 3. You can then read the map from the outside inwards in an approximate time line, so that in general activities furthest from the centre will be the ones that need to be done first. As you move towards your objectives, the project "funnels in" nearer completion as you move further in towards the centre of the map. Funnel Timelines in MindManager The example above is part of a small plan to prepare for a Conference event. The final completion point is at the right of the picture, called "Conference Ready". Actions are marked with the "Task not started" Icon, as none of them have been completed yet. They are connected up so that dependency of one on another is shown by their relative positions. For example, the action "Set budget for conference" cannot start until "Review last year's costs" is complete. We can also cross-connect across the tree using Relationships, so that "Check venue facilities and cost" cannot start until we have finished "Define what facilities we need", "Make venue shortlist", and "Set conference dates". By using this simple convention, we can represent reasonably complex project structures in a very accessible format. The "logic" of a project, showing what depends on what, can be used to answer the question "What can be done next?". In the above picture, we can see that there is nothing preventing the activity "Review last year's costs" from starting today. However, it would be premature to begin with "Visit at least 2 potential venues", since we have not done enough homework to make this a worthwhile activity. The diagram visualises this in a simple form, and is very quick to construct and negotiate with the project team. ResultsManager understands maps drawn in the above way, so it can easily work out what the Next Actions are within a project. You can draw several sub-projects inside the same map, or can have a map per project. By default, ResultsManager expects a map to contain one or more complete projects or sub-projects. Applying Funnel Timelines You can now use this technique to reorganise your Project maps. So far, you have just gathered activities in your maps, without organising them very much. Now you can reorganise them to visualise the way your project flows towards its outcome. 1. Add a new Main Topic on the left of the Central Topic. 2. Right-click on it and choose Edit Activity. 3. Configure this Activity as a Project ( ). Describe the project outcome and reasons. Click OK when you are done. 4. Ask the following question: What needs to be in place (completed) for the project to be completed? Identify the main Results within your project. For each one, select the Project Topic and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Insert Activity, and configure the Activity as a Result ( ). 5. For each Result, ask yourself the same question as above. You can now start moving the Action items from elsewhere in your map, and positioning them as subtopics of the Result that they contribute to. 6. When one activity depends on another one, position the one that must be done first as a subtopic of the one that can only be done second. ResultsManager will then be able to keep track of Next Actions. 7. If one Activity depends on another one that is somewhere else in the map, you can draw a Relationship from the Activity that must be done first, pointing to the one that can only be done second. To insert a Relationship, click the Insert tab | Insert group | Relationship. Click on the first Activity Topic, then drag to the second one and release the mouse button. ResultsManager checks for these Relationships when working out what can be done next. 8. Don't forget to save your map when you are done. Working with lists of Activities If you have a lot of activities that must be done in order, the Funnel Timeline technique can make maps wide and thin, and not very easily viewed. ResultsManager also allows you to define lists of actions that are treated as a top-to-bottom sequence, instead of as parallel activities. You tell ResultsManager that the subtopics of an Activity are a list by adding the word "(list)" to the topic text. (Although an icon or some other visual marker seem more obvious, we chose this method to ensure that the logic was always visible regardless of where the activity is exported to, e.g. the Tasks folder in Microsoft Outlook). Identifying lists in your maps In the above example, the word "(list)" tells ResultsManager that the subtopics of the activity "Complete tax form" are to be executed in order, from top to bottom. When calculating what the next actions are, ResultsManager interprets the sequence of work as follows: The actual sequence of activities So in this part of the map there is only one Next action: Collect last year's figures. None of the others can be done until this is complete. The Power User mode Edit dialogue provides a shortcut for adding or removing the word "(list)" from topic texts. ResultsManager ignores any non-activity (information only) topics in lists. You can include items in lists that are not activities, and ResultsManager will just skip over them. Create a Dashboard You are now ready to create a Dashboard map from your Activities. The Dashboard map will let you quickly see what needs to be done next, across multiple projects, without re-thinking the logic of each project every time you check your lists. 1. Open your Map Central map, and select the Central Topic to ensure that ResultsManager scans the whole map. 2. Click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard 3. In the Dashboard selector drop-down list, choose "GTD Lists Dashboard", and click OK 4. ResultsManager will scan all the maps linked from your Map Central map, and build a set of "GTD" lists 5. If you have everything set correctly, you should see a new map called "GTD Lists", with today's date in the Central Topic: The "GTD Lists" Dashboard map The "GTD" Lists Dashboard map is personalised for you and contains only your action items. If you were sharing some project maps with colleagues, your Dashboard map picks out your activities, while theirs will pick out the ones where they are the owners of actions. The GTD Lists Dashboard, like any of the Dashboard maps in MindManager, can be viewed as an Outline if you feel more comfortable with to-do lists: "GTD" Lists Dashboard viewed as an Outline in MindManager What ResultsManager is doing here is creating the GTD lists automatically, from project plans drawn inside maps. You don't need to maintain these lists directly as ResultsManager will regenerate them each time you create a Dashboard. Take Action Once you have created a Daily Actions Dashboard, you are in a position to use it to manage your day. But remember that you have only collected action items from a couple of projects so far, so there will be gaps in the coverage, and the lists will not be completely reliable there may be higher priority activities elsewhere that are not yet known to ResultsManager. As you expand the coverage of the actions in your maps, the lists in ResultsManager's dashboards will become more and more dependable. The first place to look in your Daily Actions Dashboard is the section marked "Deadlines I'll Accomplish". This contains activities that have a deadline today or are already overdue. If you entered due dates on activities as dates that you would like to complete things, then you have already undermined this due date list. It must contain only things that must be done on the dates shown, otherwise you will start to ignore it and re-prioritise dynamically. Now is not the time to re-think your projects. You will do that separately, during the project reviews. When ResultsManager shows an Activity in a Dashboard map, it usually adds a Callout Topic to the Activity to show which Result or Project this activity belongs to. This helps you recognise the Activity "out of context" and recall what it is a part of. If Callout Topics are not visible, click View | Show/hide | Callouts to display them. You can jump back to the original project map by clicking on the Hyperlink Icon in the copy of the Activity Topic in the Dashboard map. This takes you back to that Activity in its context in the original project. You can also jump straight to the Result or Project by clicking the Hyperlink Icon in the Callout Topic. You can also now see that the Notes for a Result or Project are a very handy place to add information that you might need at any time, such as a client's telephone number. This will be in view above any Activity in that Project or Result. Explore the rest of the Dashboard map to see how ResultsManager has listed the same Activities in several different ways, so that you have a number of options for deciding what you need to do next. The default Dashboard contents are configurable so that you can display and organise your to-do lists in almost any way you wish; the dashboard is created from a template map that tells ResultsManager what to write where. When you complete or update an activity, right-click on it and select Edit Activity. Change it to reflect its new status (e.g. changing it to 100% complete), then click OK. What happens next will depend on how you have configured ResultsManager to send updates from the Dashboard maps, and is described in more detail here. ResultsManager will either send the new status back to your original project map immediately, or it will wait until you click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes. You can also change the status of an Activity by editing it with normal MindManager commands. For example, if you right-click on the Task Icon, you can choose a different Icon (e.g. Task Complete). Don't forget to use the Send Dashboard changes command to update your original project maps after editing them with normal MindManager commands. Review and Refine Congratulations! You have made it to the last part of our implementation process. If you have been keeping up, then by now you will have created your first Dashboard maps and used them to take action. The last and most important stage is the regular review of activities. Reviewing and refining your commitments and focus is at the heart of the "Getting Things Done" process, and is made easy by the dashboard maps that ResultsManager generates. In addition to the daily dashboard maps, you can use Review dashboard maps that are designed to support these critical reviews. They are organised differently than the one you use every day, because you only want to see some things weekly or monthly, and not daily. The main purpose of reviews is to check that you are making progress on the things that are really important, and not letting them slip - either because of other interruptions, or because they are not well enough defined to take action on. Even when you use the Daily Actions dashboard map, you are making a mini-review of some of your activities. You can set up reviews in any way you wish; it matters more that you review your workload, than the precise process that you use. We suggest three levels of review; daily, weekly and monthly. The Daily Review Preparation Complete an "emergency scan", looking for things Purpose of Daily review To keep track of deadlines To make the best use of your time by using How to review Time budget that are about to fall on your head Sweep up all loose ends and new activities Contexts To check that your next actions are actionable Look for next actions that are not clearly enough defined to take action on Look ahead for the contexts that you are likely to be able to use today Look at today's bring-forward or tickler file Look ahead to tomorrow's calendar and bring-forward file to check whether you need to make any additional preparations A few minutes The Weekly Review Preparation Sweep up all loose ends and new activities Get your in-boxes and in-trays to zero Purpose of Weekly review To check that you are making progress with Projects and Results To identify the Next Actions in your Projects and Results for the next week The Weekly Review How to review Time budget Check the Next Action for each of your current Projects and Results. Check that it is actionable and does not need any additional preparation such as a decision or some extra information. If it does, add it Consider whether the Next Action on each of the Projects or Results is the one that is the most likely to deliver the outcome you want; if not, change its status to "uncommitted", go back to the original project map, and review the project again for a more productive Next Action. Remember, 20% of your actions create 80% of your achievements Look for Committed projects and Results that have no Next Action. If you have used a Context for the next Weekly Review, look through these activities and decide what kind of activity they are, and whether you need to take action on them If you have used a "Weekly Review" Context, check through the new ideas or inputs and decide whether to make them projects - do they contribute towards your higher level objectives? A couple of hours The Monthly Review Preparation Sweep up all loose ends and new activities Purpose of Monthly review To check that you are working on the right Projects, and that the Results and Actions you have identified in each Project are the best ones to take you forward To add new Projects or close down old ones. The monthly review sets your main priorities for the month, against which any new opportunities or requests are evaluated The Monthly Review How to review Time budget Look for uncommitted projects that should be activated Look for projects that are running out of steam that you can deactivate If you have used a "Monthly Review" Context, check through the new ideas or inputs and decide whether to make them projects - do they contribute towards your higher level objectives? Review each of your committed projects in detail, and add or discard Action items and Results to keep the project focused on its outcome Check that the project outcome statements reflect what you need the project to deliver, and that the Actions and Results are the ones most likely to deliver the outcome effectively. Re-prioritise them if necessary Defer unimportant things until the next review, or put them on a bring-forward list or tickler file for consideration at a later date A few hours - this review and refocusing process is the most important work you will do each month, so it has to be worth your best quality time. Schedule the Monthly Review for a time when you are likely to be alert and inspired, not burnt out Purchasing License Keys ResultsManager Standard and Professional Editions ResultsManager v2 is available in two editions: ResultsManager Standard and ResultsManager Professional. ResultsManager Professional contains all the features of ResultsManager Standard, plus additional features for collaborative use and more advanced Dashboard operations. Feature ResultsManager ResultsManage Standard r Professional Edition Edition Accepts ResultManager v1 license key • 28-day trial Configuration & support Wizards • • Express and Power User operating modes • • Define Projects, Results and Actions in MindManager maps • • Generate predefined Dashboard maps • • Maintain, import and export master lists of Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas • • Configure Dashboard options • • Implementation plan map • • Demonstration maps • • Complete set of default Dashboard maps • • Suppress confirmation messages for rapid use • • Log completed Activities • • Rapidly edit Activities in blocks • Edit Dashboard maps and send updates back to project maps • Mark Activities as complete and update project maps with one click • Directly add new Activities to Dashboard maps • Add, delete and configure Dashboard maps • Create templates for custom Dashboard maps • Filter tool for adding Filters to custom Dashboard maps • Feature ResultsManager ResultsManage Standard r Professional Edition Edition Automatically support maps on shared drives or servers • Support Digital Ink in Dashboard maps (MindManager X5 Pro / Pro 6 only) • Synchronise Dashboard maps with Outlook • Choosing your edition of ResultsManager ResultsManager Standard Edition will fulfill your needs if: You acquire action items in project maps, meeting minutes and brainstorm maps and need to keep track of your commitments across multiple sources You need a basic system for implementing David Allen's "Getting Things Done" methodology You can work from the default dashboards (Action Dashboards, Review Dashboards or Maintenance Dashboards) You are not sharing maps with colleagues, or working together with colleagues on shared projects ResultsManager Professional Edition will support you best if: You acquire action items in project maps, meeting minutes and brainstorm maps and need to keep track of your commitments across multiple sources You are already familiar with David Allen's "Getting Things Done" system You use MindManager frequently for planning and organising You are working collaboratively with colleagues on some projects You need to make on-the-fly decisions while working from your Dashboard maps You use a Tablet PC and MindManager X5 Pro / Pro 6 You need customised dashboard maps for analysis of your workload and other people's activities. Examples of customised Dashboards include o Automatic collection of meeting agenda items o Analysis of stagnant projects o Progress / status reports on projects o Review of other people's activities o Group project reviews Purchasing License Keys ResultsManager will work for 28 days without a license key. After 28 days, the OK buttons will be disabled in the dialogues. You will not lose information already entered, but you will not be able to use ResultsManager to create new Activities or Dashboard maps. If you would like help with your purchasing decision, click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin and choose the "Purchasing & Support Wizard". This will guide you through your decision making process and offers you further options. To purchase a license for ResultsManager, click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager and click "Purchase license". This will display a local page in your web browser showing your purchasing options. You can purchase a license for ResultsManager on its own if you already have MindManager software, or you can purchase it together with MindManager X5 Pro / Pro 6 as a bundle. Gyronix recommends MindManager Pro, as MindManager standard does not contain any task management features or Microsoft Office integration. When you receive your license key, click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager, then click the Enter Key button: Entering your license key Enter your license key exactly as received, and click OK. You can check that the license was correctly loaded by launching ResultsManager again and checking that it shows "licensed version" in this license dialogue. Using Power User mode What is Power User mode? Power User mode is designed for users who are familiar with MindManager and are comfortable with ResultsManager in Express mode. Users who prefer to see the full set of options and gadgets will also enjoy Power User mode. You can select Power User mode by clicking the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode, then selecting Power User mode: Selecting Power User mode Selecting Power User mode and clicking OK will open the Power User mode options dialogue, so that you can configure your options for working in Power User mode. You can also run the Power User Setup Wizard from the options dialogue. Power User mode gives you access to: More detailed control over Activity settings Additional configuration options Additional dashboards and options when creating or refreshing Dashboard maps Dashboard configuration (ResultsManager Professional only) Configuring ResultsManager Configuring Options The ResultsManager Options dialogue lets you manage your master lists of Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas, and gives you access to the Dashboard Options. Options are stored in the Registry on your system. If you move ResultsManager to a new system, you will have to recreate your options again. The Master Lists can be exported and imported to aid this process. To view the ResultsManager Options dialogue, click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options in MindManager. The main ResultsManager Options dialogue Click on a heading below for details. Run Power User Setup Wizard Clicking this button will launch ResultsMerlin (the ResultsManager Wizard), starting at the Power User setup Wizard. This will configure the principal settings for this dialogue and establish defaults for the others. The Wizard gives you more explanation of the settings and takes you through them one at a time. Changes made by the Wizard are reflected in this dialogue the next time you open it, and changes made in this dialogue become the default settings for the Wizard. Manage master Contexts List Clicking this button displays the master Contexts list containing the choices for Contexts that can be used in any map. You can add or delete items from the Contexts list using a List Dialogue. Manage master Owners List Clicking this button displays the master Owners list containing the choices for Owners that can be used in any map. You can add or delete items from the Owners list using a List Dialogue. Manage master Categories List Clicking this button displays the master Categories list containing the choices for Categories that can be used in any map. You can add or delete items from the Categories list using a List Dialogue. Manage master Areas List Clicking this button displays the master Areas list containing the choices for Areas that can be used in any map. You can add or delete items from the Areas list using a List Dialogue. Import (Master lists) The Master Lists can be imported from an open MindManager map, for example from either a Dashboard map or from a map that has been created using the Export function below. This allows you to archive, transfer and restore Master lists, and also create them in a Map for import into ResultsManager. When importing, ResultsManager looks for Topics labelled "Contexts", "Owners", "Categories" and "Areas", then imports items from the subtopics below these. The easiest way to see how this works is to first export the Master lists, then re-import them again. The import only reads the map below the selected Topic, so select the Central Topic first if you want to import the whole map. Export (Master lists) Clicking this button exports the current Master Lists to a new MindManager map. This allows them to be archived and re-imported later, or transferred to another user or system by sending the MindManager map. You should periodically export and save the Master Lists in case your system Registry gets restored to an earlier status, which would cause the Master lists to be lost. The export includes: The Master Contexts list The Master Owners list The Master Areas list The Master Categories list The Master Dashboard Filters list (Pro version only) The Dashboard Templates All other settings in this dialogue and the Dashboard Options dialogue Reset Clicking this button will reset all your Master lists to their default settings. This operation cannot be undone, so use it carefully. You have the choice of making an archive of all Master lists before resetting them. Tip: if you lose your Master lists, you can recreate most of them by creating Dashboards from your maps. Any Contexts, Owners, Categories or Areas that are not already on a Master list can be added automatically when the Dashboard is generated - see below. Automatic updates to Master Lists When a new Activity is edited, or a Dashboard map is generated, ResultsManager checks to see if any new Contexts, Owners, Categories or Areas have been used that are not on the existing Master Lists. If it finds any new entries, you have the choice of adding them to the Master Lists for use next time. You can configure the default behaviour for this: Never add to master list does not check for new entries Prompt me for permission checks for new entries and asks if you want to add them to the appropriate Master list. You are prompted for each new entry in turn. Always add to master list checks for new entries, but does not prompt you for permission to add them to the Master Lists - they are added automatically. This mechanism means that if you receive a MindManager map from another user that contains ResultsManager Activities in it, you can automatically acquire the Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas for use in your own maps, where they differ from your existing lists. Do not create Local lists from maps The ResultsManager Activity Edit dialogue automatically creates "local" lists of Contexts, Areas, Owners and Categories used in the current map when it is launched. This allows quick selection of a previously-used item in the map that may not be included in the related Master List. However, very large maps with many hundreds of topics can slow down access to the Edit Activity dialogue, because ResultsManager reads all the topics in the map each time the edit dialogue is opened. This can make the edit dialogue slow to respond. Checking this option disables the building of these local lists. This speeds up access to the edit dialogue for large maps, but does require that any frequently-used items are maintained in the Master Lists. Normally, you would leave this option unchecked unless you frequently experience slow response to the Edit dialogue. Working Week starts Sunday Checking this option will display calendars starting on a Sunday instead of Monday. Use fewer confirmation messages Enabling this option will suppress most of the confirmation messages that appear when ResultsManager is sending Dashboard updates and at other times. Use this option only when you are comfortable with ResultsManager's behaviour and do not need confirmation of the actions it takes. Label "Results" as "Subprojects" If you prefer to use the term "Subproject" instead of "Result" in ResultsManager, setting this option will change it in the dialogues and dashboard maps. No other functionality is changed, and Dashboard maps containing filters for either Results or Subprojects will work in either mode. Tip: fixed texts in the Dashboard templates are not affected by this option. If the Dashboard templates contain the word "Result" then this is not automatically updated. Allow commas as list separators This option lets you also use commas to separate Contexts, Areas, Owners and Categories. This is required if you are using the Outlook Synchronisation feature, otherwise it is optional. Note that if you enable this option, then any names of the form "Smith, John" will be regarded as two separate people. This option is automatically enabled if the option for storing Contexts and Areas is enabled. Support MM/Outlook Synchronisation (ResultsManager Professional Edition and MindManager X5 Pro / Pro 6 / Pro 7 only) Enabling this option will allow ResultsManager to generate Dashboard maps that can be synchronised with Microsoft Outlook, using MindManager's built-in synchronisation features. Refer to the section on Synchronising with Outlook for more details. Store Contexts and Areas in Categories (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) This option makes ResultsManager keep the Context and Area information for each Activity in the Categories list, and means that all the information about an Activity is visible in MindManager. This option is normally required when synchronising with Outlook, as it makes the Context and Area accessible in the Outlook Task list. If you do not want to see extra information in the Categories field, turn this option off. Shared Drive and folder list (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Enter the drive letters or folder paths of shared storage locations, where you keep maps that other people have simultaneous access to. ResultsManager will check whether a map or template is in a shared location before opening it automatically, either during the generation of a Dashboard or when updating or inserting Activities in original project maps. You can specify more than one shared location, separated with a semi-colon. Drive letters should have the colon appended (e.g. "W:\") otherwise any path beginning with "W" would be treated as a shared storage location. Private lock files In normal use, when ResultsManager accesses maps in shared locations, it looks for the lock file written when MindManager edits a map, and will not open the map if the lock file is present. This is usually a hidden file of the form "~$mapname.mmap.~$lock". However, there are some sharing environments that work by replicating folder contents in the background, and some do not replicate lock files or hidden files, which prevents the MindManager-generated lock file from being used to protect against multiple simultaneous access. In these cases, define the shared folder location after an empty list item, and ResultsManager will generate a non-hidden text lock file that will be synchronised and replicated. For example, if "C:\GrooveSpace\" was a shared folder that worked with synchronisation that excluded hidden files or normal lock files, specify it as ";C:\GrooveSpace\" in the shared drive and folder list. Note that this requires you to manually close this file with the command File | Close and unlock shared map (MindManager X5 and 6 only) in order for ResultsManager to delete its own lock file. This mechanism is private to ResultsManager and is not honoured by other systems. If a lock file is encountered when ResultsManager attempts to open a map in a shared location, and you do not already have the map open in MindManager, ResultsManager will display a warning message and will show the contents of the lock file. You should manually delete the lock file or ask the other user to close the map and remove the lock file. ResultsManager does not require a "lock" when scanning maps for dashboards, as no write permission is needed for this operation. If a map is already open for edit in the same session of MindManager, the current state of the map is used without re-opening it. If a map is already open for edit by another user, then the last saved state of the map is used for the dashboard. Automatically close shared maps (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Enabling this option forces ResultsManager to automatically close any shared maps that it opens while sending updates from edited Dashboard maps. Note that this only applies to maps that ResultsManager opens itself. If you already have a shared map open in MindManager when ResultsManager needs it, ResultsManager will not try to close it when it has finished. Disabling this option means that ResultsManager leaves any shared maps open, so that you can close them manually later. This is helpful if you need to make a number of changes and you want to keep a shared map locked for further updates. Dashboard Edit Mode selector (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Selects how and when ResultsManager sends changes from Dashboard maps back to Project maps. "No Editing from Dashboards" will not permit you to launch the Edit dialogue from within a Dashboard map that ResultsManager has generated. This is the default setting for ResultsManager Standard Edition. You can only make updates in your original project maps, by clicking on the Hyperlink Icons in the Dashboard to access the original activity. "Edit in Dashboards, defer updates" gives you the most flexibility. You can make changes in a Dashboard map using either the ResultsManager Edit command or MindManager's regular features (e.g. changing Topic Icons). All changes are replicated within the Dashboard map and posted to the original Project maps when the Send Dashboard changes command is used. See also When would I used deferred updating?. "Edit in Dashboards, immediate update" lets you edit items in Dashboard maps, using the Edit dialogue. As soon as the Edit dialogue is closed, ResultsManager updates all copies of the edited activity in the Dashboard map, and posts the changes back to the original Project map, so that everything stays updated. Dashboard Options Clicking this button will open the Dashboard Options dialogue, where you can configure Dashboard options and manage the list of available Dashboards. Automatic Completion Logging This option configures the automatic logging of Activities when their status is changed. The choices are: Do not log anything: completion logging is turned off Log when finishing (100% complete): when an Activity is changed to 100% compete by editing in the ResultsManager Activity dialogue, using the Send Dashboard Changes command or by using the Set Activity Complete command, ResultsManager will append the details of this event in the Notes of the parent Project or Result (Subproject) topic. The notes in the parent Project or Result will become a completion log for the project or subproject. Log any change in percent complete: logging to the Notes of the parent Project or Result will occur when any change in the percent complete setting is implemented, either through the ResultsManager Edit dialogue or by sending Dashboard changes back to project maps. OK button The OK button saves all changes made in the Options dialogue, and closes it. Cancel button Clicking this button quits the Options dialogue without saving any changes made here. Note that this does not cancel any changes already made in the separate Dashboard Options dialogue. Help button Displays this Help file. Creating and Editing Activities Inserting a new Activity There are four ways to create a new Activity Topic in a MindManager map: Select a Topic (or the Central Topic) then click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Insert Activity, or press Alt+E then I on the keyboard. Right-click on a Topic (or the Central Topic) then select Insert new Activity from the pop-up menu. Create a new Topic in MindManager with the INS key or toolbar button, right-click on it and select Edit Activity from the pop-up menu. The topic will be converted to an action by default. These methods all launch the ResultsManager Edit Dialogue. The Edit dialogue The ResultsManager Edit dialogue allows you to quickly enter the information about this activity so that it can be managed and tracked to completion. To edit an existing Activity in a map, either: Select the Topic and click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity or press Alt+E, Y on the keyboard, or Right-click on the Topic and select Edit Activity from the pop-up menu The ResultsManager Edit dialogue (Power User mode) The Edit dialogue lets you define the information that will be used to organise and track your Actions, Results and Projects. Most of the information is stored in the MindManager map in visible fields, so can also be edited via other means (e.g. the Task Info task pane), but the ResultsManager Edit dialogue is quicker for configuring all the information in one place. Some of the information (such as Contexts and Areas) does not normally have any visible storage in the map, so can only be edited through ResultsManager. The current project is shown at the top of the dialogue: Current Project at top of Edit Dialogue This means that the new Action, Result or sub-project that we are adding or editing "belongs to" the "Moving House" Project. ResultsManager automatically determines where you are in your map, and works out to which project this Activity belongs. If it reaches the Central Topic without finding a parent Project or Result, the Central Topic becomes the "parent project". If the next highest item in your map is a Result or Subproject instead, the dialogue shows: Current Result / Subproject at top of Edit Dialogue This means that the new activity that we are adding or editing "belongs to" the "Everything packed" Result or Subproject. Project, Result or Next Action? Your first decision is: is this activity a new Project, a new Result, or a Next Action? If it is a simple task such as making a phone call, and you have all the information available, then it can be a Next Action and you can click the "Next Action" selector: Setting an activity as a Next Action But if this activity is a bit more complex, and might need a little bit of planning or involve other people, then it could be a Result or Subproject in its own right, and you should click the "Result" radio button: Setting an activity as a Result (or Subproject) within a project If this is a larger project that might take many actions and intermediate achievements ("Results"), then you should click the "Project" radio button: Setting an activity as a Project For example, if the activity is "Buy a new car", then this is probably not something that can be completed in one event. It will consist of research, evaluation, decisions and a number of actions and milestones, so it is really a whole project in its own right. The point at which you have chosen your car might be a "Result", one of several within the whole project. You can easily change Actions into Projects or Results later, and vice versa. ResultsManager treats Projects and Next Actions as almost identical. Projects can consist of Actions and sub-projects, and Actions can have sub-projects underneath them. The only difference is that the ResultsManager dashboard knows how to distinguish between Projects and Actions, so that you can create a Review dashboard for a specific project, or list just the Actions that belong to one project. Working with Projects inside maps Within a MindManager map, ResultsManager adopts the following convention: The Central Topic is always a Project. A sub-project cannot be any bigger than a single map. (One reason for this is that you can't use Relationships between Topics in different maps). When you assign an activity to be a Result or a Project, ResultsManager writes the appropriate Icon to this Topic in the map. You can manually add or remove the Project and Result Icons to change the status of the activity, using the normal MindManager features. So you can change a Topic from a Project to a Result or a Next Action or vice versa. ResultsManager automatically adds its Icons to the Map Marker set in MindManager. Committed or Someday-maybe? Is your new activity something that you have promised to yourself or someone else? Or is it a "would be nice" action? You can label explicitly committed activities by checking the "Committed" check box: Committed activity Someday-maybe activities are shown by checking the "Someday / Maybe" check box: Uncommitted (Someday/Maybe) activity If you leave an Activity without either marker set, then it will inherit the setting from its parent topic: Committed or Someday-maybe setting is inherited from parent Topic This information is used by ResultsManager when compiling lists in the Dashboards. For example, you can ask it to show only committed Next Actions, or you could ask for a list of Someday/Maybe Projects so that you can review them and decide whether to change their status. ResultsManager uses a MindManager Icon ("handshake" or "meeting") to mark Activities as committed. You can change the status of an Activity by adding or removing this Icon on the Topic. This Icon is automatically added to the Map Marker set when the Edit command is used. It also uses the "Hourglass" icon for Someday/Maybe and will automatically add a legend to this icon in the Map Markers. The Committed or Someday/Maybe marker will be inherited from the parent topic if not explicitly defined. This means you can set a whole project to Committed or Someday/maybe just by setting the marker on the Central Topic (for example). If you have used ResultsManager before, this is a change from earlier versions that simplifies this feature. By default, the Central Topic of a map will be regarded as "Committed" if not explicitly set otherwise. You can also add the Purpose for this activity in the box. This is written to the Notes for this Topic in the map, and will appear in the Dashboard when this activity is listed. Any existing Notes in the Topic are displayed, but if the Notes contain any rich text (tables, Hyperlinks, bullet points and so on) then they cannot be edited in the ResultsManager dialogue, and this box will be greyed. Only plain text can be edited via the ResultsManager edit dialogue. Setting Start and Due dates The next step is to decide whether this new activity has a starting date or due date. This depends on what kind of activity it is. You will find your Dashboard maps are much more useful if you are consistent about the use of dates on tasks. For any activity, you can define up to three pieces of date information: The Start / Review date. This date describes when an Activity becomes startable, and controls when ResultsManager displays activities in dashboards (where they are filtered by date). No Start date means "Start as soon as possible" and is eligible from today. You can keep things out of sight until they are needed by defining a Start date in the future. The Due date. This date describes when the Activity should finish. If there is no Due date, it means "finish as soon as possible". Only Activities with specific due dates can be overdue. The Deadline marker. When combined with a Due date, this marker distinguishes between preferred due dates versus those that are immovable and must be achieved. An example of a non-deadline date is the date when you think you should finish painting the garage door. An example of a deadline date is the date of the shareholder's meeting. It is unlikely that the shareholder's meeting will be delayed if you have not finished your presentation in time. The Deadline marker has no meaning if there is no Due date for an Activity. ResultsManager recognises six different combinations of Start / Review Date, Due Date and the Deadline marker. These reflect different types of activity. They are: Start Date Due Date Deadline Meaning - - - Start and finish this as soon as possible, and remind me about it from today Yes - - Remind me about this from the Start date, finish as soon as possible after that - Yes - Start this as soon as possible, and preferably finish it by the Due date Yes Yes - Start this from the Start date, and preferably finish it by the Due date - Yes Yes Start this as soon as possible, and it must finish by the Due date Yes Yes Yes Start this from the Start date, and it must finish by the Due date No Start date or Due date means "Start and finish this as soon as possible" This is an "as soon as possible" activity. You have not deferred it or scheduled it, and want to be reminded about it until it is complete. Typically, this would be something that you could put off until either you can make the time for it, or it turns nasty, or it just goes away. ResultsManager will automatically display undated Activities in the Dashboard maps as actionable today, if you have enabled the "Rollover" option. A Start date only means "Remind me about this from the Start date" This is an "as soon as possible" activity that you don't want to be reminded about for a while. Setting a future Start date means that ResultsManager will only display it in the dated sections of Dashboards when this Start date is reached. Once it becomes startable, it should be finished as soon as possible. Use this for reminders about future activities that are not critical, such as a decision whether to go to next year's trade show. (Note: this date combination cannot be entered if Outlook Support is enabled, as tasks must have both dates) A Due date only, without the Deadline marker set, means "Start this as soon as possible, and preferably finish by (date)" This is an activity that you want to be reminded about straight away, and has a preferred finish date. You can use this when there is not much time between now and the finish date, or if you really want to keep it in view all the time in case an earlier opportunity arises. An example of this is finishing a report for your manager by the end of the week. Be careful not to let too many of these kinds of activity build up, otherwise you will still need to re-evaluate them in your dashboard maps. (Note: this date combination cannot be entered if Outlook Support is enabled, as tasks must have both dates) A Start date and a Due date without the Deadline marker set means "Start this from (date), and preferably finish it by (date)" This is an activity that needs some preparation beforehand which you want to be alerted to. ResultsManager will display this in the Next Actions section of a dashboard from its Start date, and it will become Overdue after its Due date. Use this for scheduling activities where the finish date is important but not completely immovable. A due date, with the Deadline marker set, means "Start this as soon as possible, and it must finish by (date)" Anything with a due date and the deadline marker set is a Deadline, and ResultsManager will display it in the Deadlines section of a dashboard. Deadline means " Must be done on or by this date". It does not mean "It would be nice idea to complete by this date". Don't use Deadlines to "schedule" things that can slip, otherwise you will reduce the significance of your list of things that cannot slip. Use Deadlines for anything that you would put in a calendar, or where the consequences of missing the date are important. (Note: this date combination cannot be entered if Outlook Support is enabled, as tasks must have both dates) A Start date and a Due date with the Deadline marker set means "Start this from (date), and it must finish by (date)" This is an activity that needs some essential preparation beforehand which you want to be alerted to. ResultsManager will display this in the Deadlines section of a dashboard on its due date, or in the Bring-Forward section starting from its start date. Use this for activities such as a presentation that will take a couple of days to prepare, to ensure that you don't only remember it on the morning of the presentation, when it's too late to do anything about it. You can type dates by hand (following the "short date" format on your system), or you can browse for dates with the buttons. The options are the same for both start and due dates. The "date list" button lets you pick from a predefined set of dates: Choosing predefined dates For example, if you were reviewing an existing project and decided to bump a follow-up phone call to next week, you could click on "One week from now" to change the date. Clicking on "More dates..." or clicking on the date browse button ( ) displays the Date picker: Date picker dialogue If you set a Due date for an activity, then the browse button ( offer a list of prior dates, relative to the Due date: ) for the Start date will Choosing a relative Start date If no Due date has been chosen then the list is the same as the Due date (tomorrow, end of month etc.) Note that ResultsManager converts these relative dates to an actual calendar date and saves that. Changing the Due date afterwards will not automatically move the Start date to maintain the same gap. Working with Start and Due dates If a Start or Due date is set on an activity, and the option for automatically rolling incomplete activities over is enabled in the ResultsManager Dashboard Options, then ResultsManager will keep bumping the date of overdue activities to today until they are complete. This means that even if the date has passed, you will still see this activity in today's Dashboards unless you decide to change its status. If no date is given for an activity, ResultsManager looks "up" the tree for a parent Project or Result to see if there are any dates there. If it finds a Start date on the parent Project or Result, then it will not display this Activity until the Start date of the parent Project or Result are reached. This feature can be switched off by disabling the option "Automatically inherit activity settings" in the Dashboard Options dialogue. Priority, Duration and Progress You can assign a Priority, Duration and Progress status to Activities in the Edit dialogue. This information is stored in the Task Info task pane and can also be edited by the normal MindManager features. Defining a Priority or Progress status (percent complete) also adds the automatic Icons to the Topic, and changes made outside ResultsManager will be reflected the next time you open the ResultsManager Edit dialogue. Priorities should be used as a short-term status. Dashboards can filter and sort by Priority, but if everything in your map is Priority 1, then you are no nearer a decision. Although it is tempting to consider priority as a global measurement scale, you are better off using Priorities within smaller groups of actions where there is some discretion. If you share maps and plans with others, then it is important to have an agreement about what Priority means in your plans. Your "Priority 1" might be someone else's "Priority 3"! The "Priority Action Dashboards" will display only Activities that belong to Projects or Results marked as Priority 1. A good way to use this is to agree each week what your must-achieve outcomes are for the week, and label these as Priority 1. Then the Priority Action Dashboards will show you only what you need to focus on to achieve your commitments for the week. Priority 1 items should not be allowed to build up over a long period of time, otherwise priorities stop being a useful way to discriminate when time is short. You can set the duration of an activity in hours, and this information is saved in the map. ResultsManager does not make any use of the Duration information at present, but may do so in future versions. The "Progress" selector lets you mark how complete this activity is, from 0% complete (not started) to 100% compete (finished). There is a subtle distinction between an activity that is 0% complete, and one that has no percentage complete value. The former is an activity that needs to be actioned, and the latter is just information - there is no action associated with it. By default, ResultsManager sets the Percent Complete of a new Activity to zero, so that it is marked with the "Task" Icon. If you decide that this Activity does not actually need doing, you can change the Progress to "Not actionable". When you close the Edit dialogue, this Activity will not be a task of any kind. Assigning Contexts Where can this activity be completed? If it is a phone call, then it should appear on the "Phone calls" list when a Dashboard is generated, so that you can group similar activities together. If it can only be done in the office, then it should also be on the "Office" list. You can type a Context name into the Context box, or choose from a list. Choosing from lists is preferred, as ResultsManager will organise activities by unique name, and "Phone call", "Phone", "Telephone" and "Call" would create four different lists. So it makes sense to have a single name for this context and use it consistently. ResultsManager will automatically add the "@" character in front of Context names when it displays them in dashboards or sends them to Outlook. The contexts "@Phone" and "Phone" are the same to ResultsManager, and both will appear as "'@Phone" in the dashboards. It will remove any "@" signs already present. Clicking the List button ( ) next to the Context text box will display a list of the most recently used Context settings. This is useful where you are entering several activities that all have the same context. Recently-used Contexts pop-up Clicking the "More contexts..." selection, or clicking the Browse button ( field displays the Context List picker dialogue: ) by the Context Context list picker dialogue The list picker dialogue lets you choose previously defined or used Contexts and add them to the current Activity. Click on a name in the left hand column, then click "Add" to move it to the right-hand column. To remove an existing context, click on it in the right-hand column and click "Remove". When you click OK, the contexts shown in the right-hand column are written to the Activity. Working with Contexts The context where an activity can be completed is often a physical location (home or office), or a specific piece of equipment required (such as a telephone or a computer). You can also use the names of people you frequently work with as contexts, to remind you to ask someone about something the next time you see them or speak with them on the phone. However, it is not a good idea to list people whom you only see infrequently, or will only see once, otherwise your Contexts list in the dashboard will become too large to be meaningful. The objective of using Contexts is to be able to take advantage of specific locations or opportunities that arise, by having a list of things that can be done in that context. Whole projects are not usually associated with Contexts, unless the project requires a specific piece of equipment or is exclusively completed in one place. An action or project can have multiple contexts assigned to it, and will appear in each of the lists when a dashboard containing breakdown by context is generated. However, note that a list is generated for each context used. If you assign "Phone" and "Office" to an action, then it will appear in each of the "Phone" and "Office" lists in the dashboard. But if this task can only be done from the phone in the office, then you should create a new Context called "Office Phone", and use this instead, to ensure that the action only appears on one list. If no Context is given for a task or project, ResultsManager looks "up" for a parent task or project to see if there are any Contexts there. If it finds a Context on the parent project, for example, then it will automatically show this activity as having the same Context as the parent project, when listing it in a Dashboard. This feature can be switched off by disabling the option "Automatically inherit activity settings" in the Dashboard Options dialogue. Using unique Contexts Sometimes, it makes no sense for Contexts to be inherited by the sub-topics in the map. For example, if you assign a context of "@Phone" to a particular activity, then it does not follow that all the sub-topics (predecessors) of this Activity are also phone calls. You can prevent a specific Context from being inherited by adding a star (*) at the end of the Context name: @Phone* Sub-topics in the map will not inherit this Context, but will look further up the tree for a valid Context to inherit. Assigning Owners Activities must have owners who are responsible for completing them. The ResultsManager Edit dialogue lets you assign owners to an activity, so that when a Dashboard map is generated, activities can be listed against their owners. The Owners text box in the Edit dialogue works in a very similar way to the Contexts box: You can type a name or list of names straight into the box. Multiple names are separated by semicolons, e.g. "Adam; Bill; Christine" You can choose recently-used Owners from a pop-up list by clicking the List button next to the Owners text box. The last 5 owners are shown, and the default Owner ("Me") is always in this list You can choose Owners from a master list or the current map by clicking on the browse button . Working with Owners ResultsManager handles owners of activities in two very different ways, selected by an option in the Dashboard Options. First, let's have a little discussion about responsibilities. Most project management and scheduling tools allow you to assign more than one owner to a task, and will schedule the project assuming that multiple people are working on these shared tasks together. However, this is only sometimes practical in the real world. In many day-to-day cases, shared ownership of a task means that nobody feels they own it, and as a consequence, it just doesn't get done. An alternative way to manage ownership of tasks is to make a rule that only one person at a time can actually own a task. If they delegate it to someone else, then ownership is temporarily transferred, until it is returned. But at any point in time, there is only one current owner, who is responsible for the task. ResultsManager can cope with both Shared Ownership and Delegated Ownership scenarios. Shared Ownership If you are comfortable with the idea of multiple owners of an activity, then ResultsManager can interpret a list of activity owners as "all the people responsible" for it. This activity will appear against all their names when displayed in a dashboard. For example, if the activity owners list is "Adam; Bill; Christine", then Adam, Bill and Christine have joint responsibility. To use Shared Ownership, you should disable the "Automatic Delegation" option in the Dashboard Options. Delegated Ownership Alternatively, ResultsManager can interpret a list of activity owners as a delegation list, where the first name is the ultimate owner. So the same list ("Adam; Bill; Christine") means that Adam is the original activity owner, and has delegated it to Bill. Bill has then delegated it to Christine. Christine is the current owner of this activity, and Bill is waiting for her to complete it. In turn, Adam is waiting for Bill to complete his part. Let's take a typical example; during a meeting, Peter's manager (John) asks him to find out when the next shareholder's report is due. He does not know himself, but he knows that Jill (the CFO's secretary) will know. So even from this simple example, we have two levels of delegation and a network of interactions: o John has asked Peter for something, assigning him an activity o Peter will ask Jill for this same information, then return the answer to John. So somewhere in his project maps, Peter adds a "Next Action" and selects the Owners as John; Peter; Jill When he runs his Daily Actions Dashboard (Power User version), he can see that he is waiting for something from Jill, and he owes a reply to John. If John also runs his dashboard linked to Peter's project map, he will see that he is waiting for a response from Peter, but he won't necessarily see that Peter has sub-delegated it. To support Delegated Ownership in ResultsManager, the List Picker dialogue allows you to move Owners up and down the list when assigning Owners to an Activity. The Owner at the top is the ultimate recipient, and the name at the bottom is the current owner. Assigning owners and sorting the Delegation order The Owners list is the only list in ResultsManager where the order matters - the others are automatically sorted alphabetically. Automatic Delegation To use Automatic Delegation in ResultsManager, enable the "Automatic Delegation" option in the Dashboard Options. This enables special inheriting of owners of tasks in your maps. ResultsManager keeps track of activity ownership as it "drills down" through a project, and when a new owner is encountered, they are added as a delegated owner. For example, if "James" is the owner of a project, then by default all activities in the project will be his responsibility. Somewhere in the project, the owner for task "C" is set to "Charles". ResultsManager derives the owner list "James; Charles" when building the dashboard for this project, so that the current owner is Charles, but James is waiting for him to complete it. There are filters in the Dashboard that will display who is waiting for what from whom. Working with other kinds of participant Sometimes, you need to reference other people who are connected with an action, but don't have any direct responsibility for completing it. For example, you might need to call someone about something you are doing, or you might want to mention something to someone the next time you meet with them. But you are not delegating anything to them, nor they to you, nor do you expect them to take any action. There are two solutions: use their name as a Context, or use their name as a Partner. Using their name in the Context field will mean that activities associated with this person will appear listed with the other Contexts you may be using, such as "@Office" or "@Phone". A context of "@Kim" is useful for collecting together things for your next call with Kim. The disadvantage with using a person's name as a Context is that this does not automatically group together everything that may connect you with this person. If they also owed you a couple of actions, you would not see these under the same Context (unless you took the trouble to also assign their name as a Context in activities where they owed it to you). The alternative way to reference people who are indirectly involved is to identify them as a Partner in this activity. This is done by including a "@" character in their name (either at the start or end) when using it in the Owners list. For example, in the list of Owners "Jim; @Pete; Jane", Pete is referenced as a Partner, and Jim and Jane have responsibilities for this activity (Jim has delegated it to Jane). Several things happen when you identify someone as a Partner: o They do not have any executive responsibility for this activity. If they are also using ResultsManager, this activity will not be listed as theirs to complete. o Their name is not inherited inside the map to the sub-topics (predecessor activities). Setting them as a Partner on one activity only applies to that activity. o They can be shown in Dashboard maps as someone who you need to contact about something. o Activities for which they are responsible (or which they have delegated to you) can also be shown against their name in Dashboard maps, so that you have everything for your "agenda" with this person in one place. Summary of roles How ResultsManager defines people's roles People with executive responsibility for completing actions are the Activity Manager (who delegates it to an Activity Provider), the Activity Provider (who is responsible for delivering it to their Activity Manager), and the Activity Owner, who is the person currently responsible for completing it. There is only ever one Activity Owner. If the activity has not been delegated, then there are no managers or providers. In many cases, the Activity Provider and the Activity Owner are the same person, if the activity has only been delegated once. If it has been delegated several times, there may be further managers & providers in the chain. Grouped together, the Manager, Provider and Activity Owner are known as Owners. By contrast, a Partner is someone who does not have any executive responsibilities with this activity. Grouped together, Owners and Partners are known as Parties to this activity. You will only need to know this term if you create your own Dashboard templates and use the filters to find certain kinds of people in your dashboard maps. Valid names for parties to an activity The texts "Y" and "N" cannot be used for owner or partner names, as these are reserved for filtering in ResultsManager dashboards. Assigning Categories and Areas You can use Categories and Areas in any way that helps analyse your workload and make decisions about what to do next or where effort is needed. Categories and Areas are edited in the same ways as Contexts and Owners: You can type a Category or list of Categories straight into the box. Multiple entries are separated by semicolons (;) You can choose recently-used Categories or Areas from a pop-up list by clicking the List button ( ) next to the input box, or You can choose Categories or Areas from their master list or from the current map by clicking on the browse button ( ). Categories entered in the ResultsManager Edit dialogue are copied to the Categories field in MindManager's Task Info task pane, and can be re-edited from there or made available to other task management applications. Areas are not stored in a visible field, and are only accessible through the ResultsManager Edit dialogue. Both Categories and Areas have their own Master lists that you can keep up to date. Categories and Areas can be used to collect together related items from separate projects when building dashboard maps. They may have some common attribute that helps you during your weekly review, without necessarily making them into a project on their own. For example, you may have lots of action items related to your business, organised into projects, but only some of them contribute directly to revenue generation. Instead of duplicating these actions in a project that is focused on driving revenue, you could create an Area called "Revenue" and assign certain tasks from other projects to it. Then in the weekly review you could get an overview of all the individual actions and sub-projects that are revenue-generating, collected together into one list. Choosing which to use Although Categories and Areas appear to be similar, there is a basic difference between them. ResultsManager treats them differently for the purposes of organising Activities in Dashboard maps. Area settings are inherited cumulatively within the map, whereas Categories replace inherited settings. The Category or Categories assigned to an Activity will either be the Categories explicitly assigned to it in the Topic, or if none are defined, the Categories it has inherited from its parent topic will be used. If Categories are explicitly assigned to a Topic, then they will replace any that are inherited from its parent in the map. For example, if an Activity has the category "Improvement", and a subtopic has the Category "Bug Fix" assigned to it, then the subtopic's own category will replace "Improvement" that was inherited from its parent. Areas work slightly differently. The Area or Areas assigned to an Activity will be combined with those inherited from a parent. So the inherited settings are not lost, but are added to. If an Activity has an Area of "Management Meetings", and has a subtopic with the Area "Weekly Meetings", then the subtopic's Areas will be regarded as "Management Meetings; Weekly Meetings". It will retain the Area inherited from its parent and add its own to the list. When it is displayed in a Dashboard that organises Activities by Area, it will be listed under "Management Meetings" and "Weekly Meetings", even though it only had the latter assigned to it explicitly. Setting activities as Lists If you are using the Funnel Timeline layout for your project maps, you can select some Activities as the parent of lists rather than members of chains. ResultsManager recognises the word "(list)" at the end of the topic text. The Power User mode Edit dialogue has a check box next to the Activity text that adds or removes the word "(list)" from the text: The "(list)" check box in the Edit dialogue Checking this box will append "(list)" to the topic text if not already present, and un-checking will remove it. Most of the time, you can ignore this feature. If you are creating sequenced lists of actions as subtopics, enable this check box on the parent topic, or add the word "(list)" by hand. De-activating Activities Sometimes, you decide that an action item that you planned to take is no longer valid, and you don't want it in your plan any more. Select the "Deactivated" option in the Edit dialogue to reset all the information related to planning, except for the description and reason. The Topic is returned to a "non-task" Topic in your map. It is not an Project, Result or Action any more, as shown by the indicator at the top of the edit dialogue: De-activated Topic If you use the ResultsManager Edit dialogue to edit a Topic that is not already an Activity, ResultsManager will automatically set the "Action" option, assuming that you want to convert this Topic into an Activity. Finishing the Edit When you have entered all the information necessary to define the new activity, ResultsManager will check to see if you have added any new Contexts, Owners, Categories or Areas that have not been used before, and will add them to your Master Lists. This requires that you have given ResultsManager permission to do this in the Options dialog. The automatic updating of Master Lists means that you rarely have to set them up manually - they can grow over time. Closing the Edit window Exit options from the Edit Dialogue To complete editing this Activity, you can: Click the Cancel button or the Window Close button to cancel the edit. This will abandon any changes you have made. If you were editing a newly inserted Activity that had not been previously saved, the newly inserted Topic is also deleted. Click the OK button to save the changes you have made and close the Edit dialogue. Click the Save/Add button to save the changes you have made, add a new Activity at the same level as the current one, then continue editing Click the Save/Insert button to save the changes you have made, insert a new Activity underneath the current one, then continue editing Saving and adding a new Activity to the current project, or as a sub-task of the current Action item means you can quickly build up a series of actions towards a Project or Result. Editing multiple Activities (ResultsManager Professional edition only) Power User mode also offers the option of editing groups of Activities together, to save time. For example, you can change the Owner name of a set of selected Activities in one operation. You can select multiple Topics in a map with the "rubber band" selector (dragging a rectangle around a group of Topics) or with Ctrl+Click. When you launch the ResultsManager Edit command with multiple Topics selected, ResultsManager prompts you to choose whether you want to edit the selected Topics together, or individually: Selecting Block edit or individual edit If you answer No to this prompt, ResultsManager will display the normal Edit dialogue for each of the selected Topics in turn. Clicking OK will save the changes and move to the next selected Topic. If you answer Yes to this prompt, ResultsManager will display a restricted version of the Edit dialogue that allows you to edit certain fields together. The changes you make will apply to all the selected Topics: Editing multiple Activities in Block Edit mode In the block edit dialogue, the following fields only can be edited: Project / Result / Action selector Someday-Maybe / Committed selector Contexts Owners Categories, and Areas The other fields (Purpose, dates etc.) cannot be block-edited. Changing one of the editable fields will apply the change to all the selected Topics. When more than one Topic is selected, it is possible that they will contain different values for the same field (e.g. two different lists of Owners). ResultsManager deals with this as follows: If all the values of a certain field are the same for all selected Topics, this value is shown in the edit dialogue. In the above example, all the selected Topics are Actions, and they also all have a context of "Phone". So ResultsManager shows these values explicitly. If you change this value, it is written to all selected Topics when you click OK. This includes deleting the value. If the values of a certain field are different across the selected Topics, ResultsManager does not display a value but leaves the field blank. (This is similar to selecting text of different point sizes in a word processor - the text size indicator is blanked out). If you put a new value in this field, all Topics will be changed to this value when you click OK. If you leave this field empty, then no change is made to the field when you click OK. This lets you leave existing (and different) values unchanged. Let's take an example. Suppose you selected three Activities: Activity A has a Context of "Phone", and "Bob" as the Owner Activity B has a Context of "Phone", and "Jim" as the Owner Activity C has a Context of "Phone", and "Bob" as the Owner When you edit these Activities together, the Context box will contain "Phone", and the Owner box will be blank, because not all the Owners are the same. If you replace the Context with "Meeting" and click OK, then the Activities will be changed to: Activity A: Context of "Meeting", and "Bob" as the Owner Activity B: Context of "Meeting", and "Jim" as the Owner Activity C: Context of "Meeting", and "Bob" as the Owner The original Owners would not be changed. But if you entered "Karen" into the Owner box instead, then the Activities would change to Activity A: Context of "Phone", and "Karen" as the Owner Activity B: Context of "Phone", and "Karen" as the Owner Activity C: Context of "Phone", and "Karen" as the Owner You can use the block edit mode in conjunction with the Maintenance dashboard to quickly make global changes across a set of maps. Power tip: If you want to delete a field from a block of selected activities (e.g. delete the Categories value), and the selected Activities already contain different values, then use the block edit dialogue to set all the Categories to the same non-blank value first. Then you can re-edit the same selection again, and change the non-blank value to an empty field. Working with Dashboard maps What is a Dashboard map? A Dashboard map is a map that is dynamically generated by ResultsManager, to give you a new perspective on all the projects and activities that you or others are involved with. ResultsManager takes all the classification information that you defined when you edited the Activities, and uses it to create organised lists. This new map contains copies of the activities taken from the original project map, but organised in a different way. In fact, it will usually contain several copies of the same activities, if they appear in different lists (e.g. things to do today, and Phone calls). The purpose of a dashboard map governs its design. Dashboard maps are designed to support the decisions you need to take when executing or reviewing your workload. Analysis processes must be consistent to have any value, so performing the same analysis each week on your projects allows progress and direction to be better understood and realigned. There are two basic Dashboard types when using MindManager and ResultsManager to implement the "Getting Things Done" methodology - an "Actions" Dashboard and a "Review" Dashboard. A "Daily Actions Dashboard" typically shows o Upcoming deadlines - early warning of deadlines coming up in the next week o Today's Next Actions - ResultsManager can work out from the structure of a project plan whether an action item can be started, by checking the status of prior activities o Things you are waiting for from other people An example Power User Daily Actions Dashboard map The "Sweep o A o A o A o A and Review" Dashboard typically shows list of overdue Activities list of Committed Projects, showing who own then and what the next steps are list of Committed Projects that do not have any Committed actions list of Someday/Maybe Projects An example "Sweep and Review" Dashboard map Both dashboards are generated from the same set of project maps. You would use a Daily Actions Dashboard to keep track of what you can or should do each day, and would use a Review dashboard to take stock of your projects and re-prioritise or re-shape them. Other more specialised Dashboards can be created to provide further analysis: Review what another team member is currently working on Extract agenda items needed for a meeting (e.g. if you categorised "Issues" or used a "Next review meeting" Context) Keep track of the status of a complex set of specification documents, by tagging items as fixes, improvements, required, optional etc. Run diagnostics on your project maps, looking for unusual situations such as committed activities inside Someday-Maybe projects A Dashboard is a database report presented in a visual form, but which also allows you to update the source from the Dashboard itself. This last point is crucial to understanding the role of Dashboards; when you see something re-presented in a different form, it is likely that you will have something to add or some new piece of insight, just because of the way our brains work by association. You may have forgotten that you intended to call a supplier about something until you saw a list of phone calls - and you need to be able to park the newly remembered thought somewhere relevant before it has gone forever. Alternatively, when you finally get to work on the things on your list, you may realise that you need to find some other piece of data first, which can't be done immediately. So rather than return to your project plan, you need to be able to make a correction to your to-do list there and then. The Dashboards that ResultsManager generates allow you to modify and add new Results to them, and the updates are automatically posted back to the original project maps, so that they reappear in the right place in future Dashboards. Lastly, because Dashboard maps are generated from templates, you can fine-tune what is displayed and how it is organised until the Dashboard map provides optimum support for your review or delivery processes. Because they consist of a snapshot of a project, they can also form a useful archive if you need to keep track of progress at milestones in your project. Generating Dashboard maps Once you have some Activities defined in your project-focused maps, ResultsManager can generate Dashboards to help you prioritise and take action towards them. Click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard to see the Dashboard Selection dialogue: Power User Dashboard selection dialogue This dialogue allows you to choose which Dashboard map you want to create, and what to create it from. Choose a dashboard from the drop-down list. The available dashboards are defined in through the Dashboard Options dialogue. When you select a Dashboard, the comments underneath the box explain more about what this dashboard does. When you launch the Dashboard Selection dialogue, you may have a Topic already selected in your map. You can generate a dashboard from just a part of a map, or you can revert your selection to be the whole map, which is more usual. Click the Options button if you want to change Dashboard options, or even add a new Dashboard before generating a Dashboard. Click the OK button to launch the Dashboard generation. If you have a large number of linked maps and tasks to scan, this operation may take a few minutes. Normally, you would regenerate dashboard maps either daily or weekly, depending on the purpose of the Dashboard. ResultsManager is not currently optimised for the frequent regeneration of Dashboards. When you click the OK button, the display shows a progress bar as it sweeps all the maps linked from the current map, then builds a Dashboard based on the selected template: Dashboard creation in progress You can click the Cancel button while the Dashboard is being created, for example if you realise that you are using the wrong template, or generating from the wrong starting map. (For some reason, this insight is only made available by clicking the OK button). ResultsManager will stop, and will display a warning message: Dashboard creation cancelled by user Note that any Dashboard map that ResultsManager has started to create will probably be incomplete, and you should delete it. You should not use it to decide on any actions. Regenerating Dashboard maps ResultsManager Professional edition only Once you have generated a Dashboard map, you can regenerate it again without returning to the original project map - or even knowing which Dashboard template was used. Open the generated Dashboard map, then click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard. This will prompt you for confirmation to regenerate and replace this dashboard: Prompt for permission to regenerate Dashboard Clicking "No" will abort the process. Clicking "Yes" will perform the following: The current map is closed without saving ResultsManager opens the project map that was originally used to create the Dashboard map that is being regenerated ResultsManager uses the Dashboard Template that was used, and regenerates an updated version of this Dashboard map If the map was saved, the newly generated Dashboard map is saved in the same location, overwriting the original. Note that ResultsManager only remembers which project map was used to create the original dashboard, and does not store any information about which topic or topics were selected at the time. The replacement Dashboard will therefore be started from the Central Topic of the project map. If you have made any changes to activities in the current Dashboard map, you should be sure to use the "Send Dashboard Changes" command to If the Dashboard option to warn about missing Multi-map hyperlinks is disabled, then no prompt for confirmation is issued. This is so that a Dashboard map can be regenerated through external scripting, without any user input required. Default Dashboard Maps When you install ResultsManager, you get a default set of Dashboard maps. These are designed to support daily working, reviews and maintenance. If you are using ResultsManager Professional, you can modify them yourself or create new ones based on these Dashboard templates. In the descriptions below, the "default owner" refers to the person entered as "Me" in the ResultsManager Options dialogue. Note that when ResultsManager creates Dashboards, it does not normally leave empty headings in the map. If a section of the Dashboard has nothing to display, the section title is not shown. So if your Dashboard maps do not contain examples everything mentioned below, the probable explanation is that your maps did not generate relevant activities. Daily Actions Dashboard (Express User) The basic Daily Actions Dashboard is designed to be quick and easy to use for daily delivery of actions. It shows Activities for the default owner: Deadlines that are already overdue Deadlines coming up in the next 7 days Next Actions that are either overdue or startable today. This includes any actions that have no date ("as soon as "possible" actions) A list of Committed Projects and Results for which no committed Actions have been identified The Daily Actions Dashboard (Express User) is available in both Express and Power User modes. Daily Actions Dashboard (Power User) The Power User version of the Daily Actions Dashboard gives more detail and extra information about delegated Activities. It shows Activities for the default owner: Deadlines that are already overdue Deadlines coming up in the next 7 days - also including anything you have delegated to someone else. Where someone else is actually responsible for taking action, their name is shown. Deadlines are organised by Context or by the person who you need to contact Next Actions that are either overdue or startable today, organised by Context or by the person you need to contact. This includes any actions that have no date ("as soon as "possible" actions) A list of Projects or Results for which no committed Actions have been identified A "Relationship Central" section, organised by person, and showing things that you owe them, that they owe you, or that you need to discuss with them at the next suitable occasion The Power User version of the Daily Actions Dashboard is only available in Power User mode. You should normally be using the Automatic Delegation option to get the most from the Daily Actions Dashboard. Priority Actions Dashboard (Express User) The Priority Actions Dashboard is designed to show you only your most important activities, for days when you do not have time to think about things. The dashboard shows Activities for the default owner: Committed Deadlines that are already overdue Committed Deadlines coming up in the next 2 days Committed Next Actions that are either overdue or startable today, and belong to a Priority 1 Project or Result A list of Priority 1 Projects or Results for which no committed Actions have been identified A list of In-Tray topics in maps that you are responsible for The Express User version of the Priority Actions Dashboard is available in both Express and Power User modes. To get the most from using the Priority Actions Dashboards, you should mark your most important projects with the Priority 1 marker in your maps. Priority Actions Dashboard (Power User) The Power User version of the Priority Actions Dashboard shows additional detail compared to the Express User version. The dashboard shows Activities for the default owner: Committed Deadlines that are already overdue, organised by Context or person to contact Committed Deadlines coming up in the next 2 days, organised by Context or person to contact Committed Next Actions that are either overdue or startable today, and belong to a Priority 1 Project or Result. Activities are organised by Context or by person to contact A lists of Priority 1 Projects or Results for which no committed Actions have been identified A "Relationship Central" section, organised by person, and showing things that you owe them, that they owe you, or that you need to discuss with them at the next suitable occasion. Only Activities which are Deadlines or which belong to a Priority 1 project are listed A list of In-Tray topics in maps that were scanned to build this Dashboard The Power User version of the Priority Actions Dashboard is only available in Power User mode. To get the most from using the Priority Actions Dashboards, you should mark your most important projects with the Priority 1 marker in your map. Sweep and Review Dashboard (Express User) The Sweep and Review Dashboard is designed to help you periodically sweep together new actions, review your projects, and re-plan your commitments. The dashboard shows Activities for the default owner: Any activities that are in "In-tray" Map Parts in your maps, that need to be relocated within the relevant Project or Result All your overdue Activities A list of Committed Projects or Results for which no Next Actions have been identified A list of your Committed Projects and Results A list of your Someday/maybe Projects and Results The Sweep and Review Dashboard is available in both Express and Power User modes. See also the section on Reviewing and Refining action plans. Sweep-up Dashboard (Power User) The Power User Sweep-up Dashboard is designed to help you collect and organise unsorted Activities, prior to conducting a review. This Dashboard complements the Power User Review Dashboard below. The dashboard shows Activities for the default owner: Any activities that are in "In-tray" Map Parts in your maps, that need to be relocated within the relevant Project or Result A list of your Committed Projects and Results, with the In-tray topics from each Project A list of your Someday/maybe Projects and Results, with the In-tray topics from each Project The Power User Sweep-up Dashboard is only available in Power User mode. See also the section on Reviewing and Refining action plans. Review Dashboard (Power User) The Review Dashboard is designed to help you periodically review your projects, and re-plan your commitments. The Power User version shows more detail than the simpler Sweep and Review Dashboard. This Dashboard complements the Power User Sweep-up Dashboard and shows Activities for the default owner: All your overdue Activities, sorted by Committed, Someday/maybe, Deadline, non-Deadline and Priority 1 activities A list of Projects or Results for which no Next Actions have been identified, sorted by Committed and Someday/maybe status A list of your Deadlines over the next 7 days A list of your Priority 1 Projects and Results A list of your Committed Projects and Results, highlighting any that contain Someday/maybe Activities that may need clarification A list of your Committed Project that contain Someday/maybe activities. so that you can review their promotion to Committed A list of your Someday/maybe Projects and Results, highlighting any that contain Committed Activities that may need clarification The Power User Review Dashboard is available in both Express and Power User modes. See also the section on Reviewing and Refining action plans. "GTD" Lists Dashboard The GTD Lists Dashboard is designed to be look familiar to users who know David Allen's "GTD" system. It displays activities owned by the default owner: Committed Next Actions for today, organised by Context (@Phone, @Work etc.) "Waiting-For" lists, organised by person (the person you are waiting for) Committed Projects / Subprojects list Someday-Maybe Projects / Subprojects list A list of In-tray topics from maps that you are responsible for, to help you integrate new Activities The "GTD" Lists dashboard is available in Express and Power User modes. Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard The Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard gathers together activities for the current owner, and creates a dashboard with each activity shown only once (a requirement for Outlook synchronisation). It also includes recently completed activities that have not yet been synchronised with Outlook, as well as In-tray topics for adding new tasks received from Outlook, and a list of committed projects. This dashboard is used to synchronise your current tasks with Outlook. Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard (Committed) The Committed Outlook Synchronisation dashboard is almost identical to the regular Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard except that it only includes Committed actions. Meeting Actions Dashboard The Meeting Actions Dashboard is designed to be used by meeting leaders, team leaders or managers, especially if they are the sole user of MindManager and ResultsManager in their team. Instead of listing activities from the viewpoint of a particular individual, it makes a list of all Activities for each person involved in the project or meeting. This includes: For each person referenced in the map, a list of Projects, Results or Actions that they are responsible for, sorted by Committed or Someday/maybe status A list of Projects and Results for which no Next Actions have been defined The Meeting Map dashboard is available in Express and Power User modes. Because there are no date constraints, and all actions (not just Next Actions) are displayed, this Dashboard can grow very large if you create it across all your maps. It is designed to be used to create a map for handing out to the participants of a specific project or meeting, or a group of closely related projects or meetings. As such, you would usually only create it when viewing a specific meeting or project map, and not necessarily from your Map Central map. Tip: you can generate a Dashboard from the perspective of anyone referenced in it. Enable the Dashboard template option to prompt for the "Dashboard owner", and ResultsManager will generate the dashboard from their individual perspective without making any other changes to your configuration. Note that you do not automatically see their other projects, which may not be accessible to you. You will only see activities in the maps that you can access. Calendars Dashboard The Calendars Dashboard displays activities for all dates: All activities with deadlines, organised by week and day All activities with non-deadline (preferred) due dates, organised by week and day Use this for reviewing longer range activities that may not appear in the regular dashboards for some time. The All-time Calendars dashboard is only available in Power User mode. Maintenance Dashboard The Maintenance Dashboard is designed to help you keep all your maps clean and tidy. It displays lists of Projects, Results and Actions organised by Context, Owners, Categories, and Areas You can use the Maintenance Dashboard to find instances of similar but not exactly identical names, and correct them to avoid ambiguity in other Dashboards. Only Activities where Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas are explicitly defined are shown. Activities where this information is inherited inside the map are not displayed, for clarity and brevity. The Maintenance dashboard is only available in Power User mode. Working from your Dashboard map There is a basic law in Physics that says "You can't measure something without changing it", which ResultsManager faithfully observes. Once you have created a Dashboard map, and settled down to deliver your hot list of committed actions, your perspective on what needs to be done and what can be done will almost certainly change. Seeing one list may remind you of something else that needs to be done, or you might realise that you need to do some more preparation before you can start an existing action. ResultsManager Standard Edition and Professional Edition offer different features to help you work with Dashboard maps. ResultsManager Standard Edition ResultsManager Standard edition lets you easily jump back to the original project map from which an Activity came, by launching the Hyperlinks in the Topics in the Dashboard map. As you work through the items in your dashboard, click on the Hyperlink Icon to update the original copy of the Action, Result or Project. Note that the Dashboard map itself is not updated. The usual technique is to delete Topics from the Dashboard map as they are processed or deferred. When the Dashboard map becomes too far out of date, it can be recreated with the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard. In ResultsManager Standard Edition, the options for editing Dashboards are disabled: Dashboard edit and Shared Map options disabled in ResultsManager Standard ResultsManager Professional Edition ResultsManager Professional edition lets you jump back to the original project map from which an Activity came, by clicking on the Hyperlink Icons on the Topics in the Dashboard map. If this is a shared map, you should right-click and choose "Open and lock Shared map" (MindManager X5 and 6 only), which will check for locks before opening the hyperlinked document. You can set an Activity to "complete" status by selecting it and clicking the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Set Complete, or by right-clicking on it and selecting Set Activity Complete from the pop-up menu. ResultsManager will also set the original task in the Project map complete if editing from the Dashboard is enabled. ResultsManager v2 Professional Edition also allows you to make changes to your activities from within the Dashboard map, using the same Edit dialogue and commands used to create your project maps. You do not need to go back to your project maps, make a change, and regenerate the Dashboard. You can modify the Dashboard, and the changes will be written back to the right place in the Project map. This behaviour can be enabled or disabled in the ResultsManager Options dialogue. When you use the Edit or Insert commands from within a Dashboard map, ResultsManager checks to see if it has enough information to work out where the original project maps need changing to keep them up to date. If you modify an existing Activity in the Dashboard map, the same changes are written back to the corresponding Topic in the project map. If you add a new Activity to a Dashboard map, ResultsManager looks for the next available Action, Result or Project to attach this new Activity to. If it finds one, it will add it straight into the project map. If it cannot find any suitable information, it will prompt you for a map to add this new Activity to, and will add it as a Main Topic. When new ideas crop up while you are working with a Dashboard, you might just want to drop them into a temporary map and reorganise them later. You can add new Activities to the Project items in a Dashboard map, and they will be added to the Central Topic of the corresponding project map. Choosing when to send updates back to the Project maps You can also choose when ResultsManager sends changes back to the original project maps. Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options and choose the required Dashboard edit mode: Choosing the Dashboard edit and update mode in ResultsManager Professional Defer updates: You can make edits to the Dashboard map using either the ResultsManager Edit command or using MindManager's own edit features (e.g. changing an Icon, or updating the Percent Complete Icon). No changes are sent to the original maps until you run Actions | Send Dashboard changes, or press F5 if you are using MindManager X5 Pro or Pro 6. (MindManager Pro 6 requires you to select a Topic before pressing F5. Select the Central Topic to refresh the whole map). ResultsManager will then look for all changed Activities and will send the changes in one operation, as well as updating other copies of the same activities in the Dashboard map. Immediate updates: as soon as you click OK on the Edit dialogue, ResultsManager looks up the remote map and sends changes to it. It also updates any other copies of the same activity in the Dashboard map. (It is common for Dashboard maps to contain the same action item in more than one place, e.g. sorted by Date and sorted by Context). Sending Dashboard changes back to Project maps If you are using deferred updates, and have edited some of the Activities in a Dashboard map, you can send them back to the original Project maps on demand. Clicking on the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes lets you choose whether to look for changes in just the selected tree or trees in the map, or in the whole dashboard map: Sending changes to Project maps When you click OK, ResultsManager starts looking for Activities that have been edited since the Dashboard was created. These edits may have been made using the ResultsManager Edit dialogue, or using MindManager's regular features (e.g. adding or removing the Project Icon from a Topic). However, ResultsManager only looks for changes in the information that is displayed in its Edit dialogue, and does not recognise any other changes. For example, if you apply a fill colour to a Topic, then ResultsManager will not detect this as a material change and this Topic will not be sent back to the original project map. ResultsManager displays a progress bar as it scans for changes and sends them to the original maps. You can abort this by clicking Cancel: Sending Dashboard changes in progress Note that not all the changes detected may have been returned to their project maps. You can repeat the operation again to complete the updating of project maps. When would I use deferred updates? When deferred updates are used, you can make multiple edits to the Dashboard map, then send them all in one operation to the original Project maps. This is advantageous when you want to make a lot of changes, e.g. edit everything under one Context, or you are using shared maps, and there is a time delay involved in opening and locking shared maps. This can happen if the maps are on a remote FTP server on the Internet. Under these conditions, you should also disable the automatic closing of shared maps. ResultsManager will then open each shared map only once, and will leave it open in MindManager for you to close manually. This greatly reduces the time spent locking, fetching and saving shared maps on remote servers. The updating system is not completely foolproof, so please be aware of the following: Deleting Topics from the Dashboard map has no effect on the original Project map. To delete a Topic you must return to the original Project map. If you use MindManager's regular features to modify Topics in the Dashboard map (e.g. change the Percent Complete setting in the Task Info task pane), this is not automatically updated back to the project map in real time. Once you have finished making changes this way, you should use the Send Dashboard changes... command to post all changes back to the original project maps. If you are sharing maps with others, it is possible that they have changed the status of an Activity since you created your Dashboard, and you may overwrite "old" information back to the project map together with your "new" changes. In this situation, you may prefer to open and lock any shared maps before making changes in your Dashboard. Deferring updates can have disadvantages. If you make two different changes to separate copies of the same activity Topic in the Dashboard map, then some of these changes will be lost when Send Dashboard changes... command is used. Customising Dashboard maps Dashboard Configuration options Dashboard maps are managed in the Dashboard Options dialogue. You can find this by either Clicking on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options then clicking the "Dashboard Options" button, or Clicking on the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard then clicking the Options button. Dashboard Options dialogue On the left of the dialogue are configuration options that apply to all Dashboards. The right-hand part of this dialogue relates to ResultsManager Professional Edition only and is discussed in Managing Dashboard maps. Click on the headings below for an explanation of the configuration options. Me This is the "default owner" name. You should set this to be your name before using ResultsManager. Your name will then always appear in the most-recently-used list of Owners so that you can select it quickly when editing Activities. It will also be used where the keyword "Me" is used in Dashboard map filters; this lets you quickly filter tasks and projects that you own, ignoring ones that other people are responsible for. Activities with no Owner are mine Enabling this option means that if ResultsManager finds an Activity that has no Owner assigned to it, whether explicitly assigned or inherited from another Activity, it will assume that it belongs to the name entered in the "Me" box. This means that if you are an individual user, and everything in your maps always belongs to you, then you do not need to assign any owners, and all Activities will appear in your Dashboard maps. If you are sharing maps with others, then you should probably not use this option, as you may find yourself responsible for anything that does not belong to someone else. Include Multimaps Enabling this option makes ResultsManager follow all Multimap links within maps when it builds a Dashboard. Each map found is included only once, even if there are multiple links to the same map. Dashboards can thus be extracted from sets of maps that are linked together with Multimap links. It is good practice to have a "Map Central" map that is linked to all the maps you want to include in your frequently used Dashboards. Warn me about missing Multimaps If the "Include Multimaps" option above is enabled, you can ask ResultsManager to warn you about broken Hyperlinks or missing maps. If this option is disabled, ResultsManager will ignore maps that it cannot find. This option is not available if "Include Multimaps" is disabled. Include already completed Activities Enabling this option will cause ResultsManager to include all Activities in the Dashboard, whether they are completed or not. Disabling it will include only Activities that are incomplete. Normally, you would leave this option disabled, as you would not need to continually see all completed activities, unless you need some reassurance that you really are making progress. Enabling this option usually slows down the creation of Dashboard maps. Include extra empty headings in dashboard Enabling this option will cause all headings to appear in the Dashboards, whether they contain information or not. Normally this option is turned off, and any headings (e.g. a particular Category) that do not contain any displayable activities are not shown. Enabling this option would display a Topic for the Category but without listing any activities underneath it. This is normally used only for diagnosing and testing Dashboards, and usually slows down the creation of Dashboard maps. Use Funnel Timeline layout This setting controls whether ResultsManager calculates the next "doable" actions from your project maps. By default this is enabled, and means that ResultsManager interprets maps as project plans laid out using the Funnel Timeline technique, where a subtopic of an activity is regarded as a predecessor to that task. ResultsManager can then decide automatically whether an activity can be started, i.e. is a "Next Action". Disabling this option turns off this inferred connection between Topics, so that ResultsManager only calculates Next Actions using Topic Relationships. This makes ResultsManager compatible with maps imported from Microsoft Project or using the MPX import feature in MindManager. Note, though, that this setting applies to all maps. Automatically inherit Activity settings This option makes ResultsManager transfer key task information from Actions, Results and Projects to lower level Activities, whenever information is missing. For example, assigning a specific Category to a sub-project will mean that all activities in that sub-project are in the same Category, unless a different one is specified for a particular item. This option is normally enabled. Note that Priorities and dates are only inherited by Committed activities. Owners are not inherited across Project or Result boundaries; you must explicitly assign an owner to a Project or Result. Also see Assigning Categories and Areas. Automatic delegation of Activities This option controls whether ResultsManager works with Shared Activities or Delegated Activities. Enabling it will cause ResultsManager to interpret lists of Owners as a delegation list. Disabling this option will cause ResultsManager to interpret lists of Owners as shared activities with joint responsibility. If you have already used ResultManager v1, you should begin with this option disabled for compatibility with existing maps. If you have not used ResultManager v1, we recommend enabling this option and starting out by managing activities based on delegation. Also see Assigning Owners. Roll incomplete / undated Activities over to today Enabling this option causes undated or incomplete & overdue activities to have their start or due dates rolled over to today, so that they appear in the Dashboard. Most users will not want to repeatedly see the same set of undated Activities appear every day, so this is a reminder that they should be given future dates or set to Someday-Maybe to properly manage them. Exclude Topic Notes from Dashboards Large Topic Notes fields can be slow to access in MindManager, and if they are not needed in the Dashboard, ResultsManager can optionally ignore Topic Notes when scanning maps. This speeds up Dashboard creation in some cases. Note: If this option is enabled, then the "Purpose" field in the ResultsManager Edit dialogue is greyed out when editing Activities within Dashboard maps. Any edits made to the Topic Notes will not be posted back to Project maps from a Dashboard map, since the original Notes are not present. Topic pagination in Dashboard Large lists in MindManager maps can sometimes make maps awkward to handle; a Topic with 100 subtopics is not easy to edit or navigate. ResultsManager can automatically paginate large numbers of subtopics. If you find that the lists in your Dashboard maps are too large to be useful, then entering 10 in this setting will paginate into blocks of 10 subtopics at a time, making the map easier to use. Set it to zero to disable pagination (the default value). Managing Dashboard Maps (ResultsManager Professional edition only) Dashboard maps are managed in the Dashboard Options dialogue. You can find this by either Clicking on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options then clicking the "Dashboard Options" button, or Clicking the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard then clicking the Options button Dashboard Options dialogue On the left of the dialogue are configuration options that apply to all Dashboards, and are described in Dashboard Configuration options above. On the right of the dialogue is a list of available Dashboards that you can use. These are the Dashboards that appear in the Dashboard Selection dialogue when you choose a Dashboard to generate. Click the links below for an explanation of the buttons for managing the list of Dashboards. Move Up Moves the currently selected Dashboard up the list, unless it is already the first item. You can define the order in which Dashboards are shown so that your favourite ones are nearer the top of the list when displayed in the Dashboard Selection dialogue. Move Down Moves the currently selected Dashboard down the list, unless it is already the last item. You can define the order in which Dashboards are shown so that your favourite ones are nearer the top of the list when displayed in the Dashboard Selection dialogue. New Inserts a new Dashboard below the currently selected one, and opens the Dashboard Details dialogue so that it can be edited. In the current version, a maximum of 100 Dashboards can be defined. When this button is clicked, ResultsManager checks the currently selected map in MindManager to see whether it is a Dashboard Template map. If it is, then information is copied from the Map Properties into the Dashboard Details dialogue, to simplify the addition of new Dashboard Templates. This is described in Appendix H. Delete Removes the currently selected Dashboard from the list. Note that this does not delete the associated template, source or destination maps but leaves them in place. If you delete all the Dashboard on your system, ResultsManager will automatically restore the default ones the next time this dialogue is launched, or when a Dashboard is created. Modify Opens the Dashboard Details dialogue so that you can edit the currently selected Dashboard. Duplicate Makes a copy of the currently selected Dashboard, and inserts it below the current selection. ResultsManager makes a copy of the template map associated with the selected Dashboard, and prompts you for a Save location for this new map. The Dashboard Details dialogue is then opened so that you can complete the editing for the new Dashboard. In the current version, a maximum of 100 Dashboards can be defined. Manage Master Filters List Clicking this button allows you to maintain the list of Filters that is available to the Add Dashboard Filter command. Predefined filters can be added to or removed from the master filters list. Note that in ResultsManager Professional Edition only, the master Filters list is imported and exported together with the other master lists (Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas) from the main ResultsManager Options dialogue. Managing the master Filters list Editing Dashboard definitions (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Getting your Dashboard maps just right is critical for successful and sustained use of ResultsManager. Your Dashboard maps should tell you just what you need to know, when you need to know it. Tailoring Dashboard maps to your specific needs will pay back the effort many times over. There are two stages in defining a Dashboard: Configuring the information about the Dashboard that appears in the Dashboard Selection dialogue, and Editing the Dashboard template map so that it generates the output you want. The Dashboard Details dialogue The Dashboard Details dialogue is accessed by clicking the "Modify", "New" or "Duplicate" buttons in the Dashboard Options dialogue. Dashboard Details dialogue All dashboards must have a name and a template map associated with them, but the source and destination for a Dashboard is configurable: ResultsManager can "sweep" the currently displayed map to find activities, or it can always sweep a named map regardless of what is open in MindManager at the time ResultsManager can create the Dashboard as a new unsaved map that you can save or delete as you wish, or it can always write the Dashboard to a named map. Click on a link below for an explanation of the controls in this dialogue. Dashboard Name Enter a name for this Dashboard. This is the name that is shown in the Dashboard Selection dialogue. You should be able to identify the Dashboard clearly from its name. A name is required - you cannot save a Dashboard definition with no name. Comments Add a comment to further describe the Dashboard. If you include the text "%me%" (without the quotes) in this text, the default Owner name from the Dashboard Options dialogue will be substituted. This comment is visible in the Dashboard Selection dialogue. Dashboard available in "Express mode" Enabling this option will permit this Dashboard to be used in Express mode. Any Dashboards without this option checked are not accessible in Express mode. In Power User mode, all Dashboards are available. Prompt for Owner when creating Dashboard Dashboards can be generated from the perspective of any of the participants that the project maps contain. If this option is checked, then when this Dashboard is used, it scans to see who is referenced in the maps, then prompts for the Dashboard Owner from the list of participants. The resulting Dashboard will be prepared from the point of view of the selected person, instead of the usual default of the current owner. This is roughly equivalent to changing the default owner name in the ResultsManager settings, but is not a stored change and is offered on Dashboard templates with this option selected. File name (Dashboard template map) You can type a path and filename to a Dashboard template map here. This path must be absolute, not relative, so must begin with a drive letter. It is usually easier to use the Browse button described below. Either way, a Dashboard template map must be defined for this Dashboard definition to be saved. Browse button (Dashboard template map) Clicking the Browse button lets you browse for a template map to use for this Dashboard. Open (Dashboard template map) This button is enabled only if the defined Dashboard Template map is available. If the defined map cannot be found, then the button is disabled. Clicking this button will open the template map for this Dashboard in MindManager, but will leave this dialogue open so that you can continue editing. Number of levels of Parent Project to show This setting controls how many levels of "Ancestor" or "Parent" project are displayed in the Dashboard. When an action or sub-project appears in the Dashboard, its parent project can also be shown, so that you know where this task belongs. Set this value to 1 to see one level of parent project. Sometimes projects are sub-projects of others, so if you need to see not only the parent project but the grandparent project as well, set it to 2, or 3 to see three generations. Sweep map in view when creating Dashboard Enabling this option means that the Dashboard will be built starting with the MindManager map that is in view when the Dashboard Selection dialogue is launched from the Actions menu. Disabling this option lets you define a specific map to use as the starting point for the Dashboard, regardless of what maps are currently open in MindManager. A typical way to use this would be to create a Dashboard that is always generated from your "Map Central" map, so that whatever you are working on, this Dashboard always uses a fixed set of maps. You can then create this Dashboard without finding and opening any maps in MindManager. Remember to change the name of the Dashboard to remind you that it does not use the current map. File name (Source map to sweep) This box is only enabled if the "Sweep map in view when creating Dashboard" option is disabled. You can type a path and filename to a map here. This path must be absolute, not relative, so must begin with a drive letter. It is usually easier to use the Browse button described below. Browse button (Source map to sweep) Clicking the Browse button lets you browse for a fixed source map to sweep for this Dashboard. Open (Source map to sweep) This button is enabled only if the "Sweep map in view when creating Dashboard" option is disabled, and if the currently defined source map exists. Otherwise it is disabled. Clicking this button will open the source map that this Dashboard will use. This dialogue is left open so that you can cancel or save it as required. Create new unsaved map Enabling this option causes ResultsManager to write the generated Dashboard to a new unsaved map. You can then save this map or delete it as you wish. Disabling this option means that the Dashboard will be written to a named map, which is created if it does not exist, or is overwritten if it already exists. Use this option if you always want certain Dashboards to be in the same place. For example, you could configure a Dashboard so that it always writes to "My Weekly Review.mmap" stored in your working folders. Then you can make a link from the My Maps task pane in MindManager, and access this Dashboard whenever you need to by clicking on the link in the Task Pane. You can refresh its contents by going to the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard and selecting this Dashboard. Tidy up map when finished Enabling this option causes ResultsManager to close up all the subtopics of the Dashboard map when it has finished creating it. When viewed, only the Main Topics will initially be visible, and can use MindManager's normal features to expand the part of the map that you want to view. Disabling this option will cause ResultsManager to leave all the levels of detail as they were in the Dashboard template map. This means that you can pre-define which parts of the Dashboard are expanded when dashboards are created, by leaving these parts of the template expanded. To change the levels of detail in the Dashboard maps you will need to edit the associated templates. File name (Destination map to write) This box is only enabled if the "Create new unsaved map" option is disabled. You can type a path and filename to a map here. This path must be absolute, not relative, so must begin with a drive letter. It is usually easier to use the Browse button described below. Browse button (Destination map to write) Clicking the Browse button lets you browse for a fixed destination map to write when generating this Dashboard. This map need not exist already - you can type the name of a new map, or overwrite an existing one. Open (Destination map to write) This button is enabled only if the "Create new unsaved map" option is disabled, and if the currently defined destination map exists. Otherwise it is disabled. Clicking this button will open the destination map that this Dashboard will be written to. This dialogue is left open so that you can cancel or save it as required. OK button The OK button is only available if the Dashboard has been given a name and a template map. If either of these are undefined, the Dashboard definition cannot be saved. Dashboard templates and filters (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Dashboards are generated from template maps that control what information appears in the Dashboard. The template map can contain some fixed information that ResultsManager does not alter, and dynamic "filters" that cause ResultsManager to insert information into the Dashboard. These "filters" are Topics that carry information telling ResultsManager to find and display matching items or from the map or maps that have been swept prior to assembling the Dashboard. Filters can be cascaded, so that the final list of actions or projects is the result of successive filtering. For example, if you wanted to see all the actions you have committed to completing, you would first filter items that you own, then filter only those that are committed, and finally filter only those that are action items (rather than project items). The final result would be a list of your committed action items. A Dashboard template map can contain multiple filters, so that several different types of list are created in the same map. Normally, when ResultsManager expands a filter, it lists all the available headings. For example, if you use the "Priority" filter to organise by priority, then it will insert headings labelled "Priority 1", "Priority 2" and so on. But sometimes you just want a list sorted by priority, without necessarily grouping the different priorities by subheading. You just need to see the Priority 1 items at the top of a single list. Filters can be optionally defined as sort-only filters, that only sort the items under them, and do not insert labelled sub-headings themselves. So the Dashboard template might look more complex than the output it generates, because the sort-only filters are also part of the template. This is part of the template for the "GTD Lists" Dashboard: Part of the Template for the "GTD Lists" Dashboard The Topic styles and colours are set up using normal MindManager features. Filters are marked with a standard Icon that ResultsManager looks for. This Icon tells ResultsManager that the information in this Topic defines a search through the list of Actions, Results and Projects collected from the swept project maps. Reading the above map from the Central Topic outwards, ResultsManager sees the following: "My Committed Projects list" is a Topic that will be copied to the destination Dashboard and will not be modified. "#Owner" is a filter, because it is marked with the Filter Icon . A specific owner name ("%me%") is in the Notes for this Topic, telling ResultsManager to filter only the Results, Actions and Projects for which I am the Owner. All items owned by other people will be ignored. Once we are past this filter, we only have items owned by me, and any further filtering is based on this list only. Because this filter has a hash (#) in front of it, it does not get displayed in the output map - it is a "sort-only" filter, so we won't actually see this Topic in the final map. "Category" is another filter that will select Activities based on their Category, either inherited or actual. In this example, we are using a Category filter to filter out any Activities that are marked as "In-tray" topics in our maps. The Notes for this topic contains "NOT In-tray". We don't want these Activities in our list of projects. The "Project" and "Result" filters each make lists of Projects or Results, and allow through any Activities that they contain. The "#" filter tells ResultsManager not to append any more Activities under here when creating the Dashboard - it just leaves the list of Projects and Results without detailing their Activities. Without this, ResultsManager would list all qualifying Projects, Results, Actions and Next Actions at this point in the map. The other parts of the map work in a similar way. Note that there are two trees under the "#Category" filter - this means that everything under that Topic meets the filtered criteria down to that point, and there is no need to re-filter for "%me%" as the Owner. A filter is constructed of: The magnifying-glass Icon The filter name in the Topic text A hash (#) in front of the filter name if this is a sort-only filter The filter value (if any) in the Topic Notes A Reference table for each filter keyword and special filter values are given in the Appendices. Filter Topics can be constructed manually using regular MindManager editing features, or ResultsManager's Add Dashboard Filter command can insert filters into Dashboard template maps. Filters are not supported on Main Topics. If you create a new Dashboard Template map, it is worth populating the Document Properties as described in Appendix G. This will allow the template to be installed to ResultsManager with the ResultsManager tab | Tools group | Options | Install Template . Adding filters to Dashboard maps (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) ResultsManager provides a utility to speed up the creation of customised Dashboard template maps, by inserting predefined filter Topics into a map. You can create filter Topics in Dashboard templates manually, following the above formats, or you can use the Add Dashboard Filter command to insert filter Topics by selecting from a list. Start by creating a new map and adjusting the style and fixed content to suit. To add a chain of filters to the Dashboard template, select the insert point (the parent Topic for the chain of filters) and click the ResultsManager tab | Tools group | Add Dashboard Filter. Adding a series of Filters to a Dashboard template map Select a predefined filter by clicking on it in the left hand column, then click "Add" to add it to the right hand column. You can modify a filter by editing it while it is selected in the box above the master list on the left. Clicking Add moves it to the right-hand list, which is the list of filters that will be added into the map when the OK button is clicked. You can sort this list with the Move up and Move down buttons, or remove filters from the list with the Remove button. In the above example, we will first filter (invisibly) by my name (#Owner=%me%), then select all Committed projects, then list all Activities items. So the Dashboard will contain a list of my activities in committed projects, grouped together by project. Clicking OK in the above example will create Topics in the current map: Topics created by the Add Dashboard Filter command The filter values are automatically inserted into the Topic Notes. Note that the Add Dashboard Filter command does not read an existing map and allow you to edit it through its dialogue. It will only generate new Topics. If minor alterations are needed, these can be done manually with normal editing techniques. The purpose of the Add Dashboard Filter command is to save time in looking up the exact syntax needed to define a filter Topic in a dashboard template. Reports in Dashboard maps (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Dashboard maps can include dynamic information about their creation process that helps to understand them better, and optimise your dashboards and working maps. When larger numbers of maps are being swept for complex dashboards, it is important to only collect relevant and useful data, and not to sweep maps unnecessarily, for best performance. Reports can be used to show things like the number of maps scanned, which maps, or the date that the dashboard was created. Refer to Appendix F for a complete list of report keywords that can be used. Usage Tips If Dashboards are taking a while to scan, check how many maps and which ones are being scanned by including a report in the Central Topic Notes in the dashboard template map. Block scanning of unnecessary maps by applying the "Exclude from Dashboard" Icon on the Topic containing the Multimap Hyperlink. Linking to folders can easily cause unnecessary scanning of maps. There is limited space in the Comments box on the Dashboard Selection dialogue. Some of the information (e.g. map count) is not available until after the dashboard has been completed, so is not relevant in the Comments box when choosing Dashboards. Synchronising with Outlook Outlook synchronisation overview (ResultsManager Professional edition only) Support for synchronisation with Microsoft® Outlook requires MindManager Pro and is available in ResultsManager Professional Edition from v2.0.6 onwards, when used in Power User mode. ResultsManager does not communicate directly with Outlook. It uses MindManager's built-in connection to Microsoft Outlook, so that project maps and dashboard maps can be synchronised with Outlook. MindManager can maintain synchronisation between a task in a map and a corresponding task in Outlook. If a change is made in either MindManager or Outlook, the information is updated either way at the next synchronisation. ResultsManager supports MindManager's Outlook Synchronisation by creating dashboard maps that are designed to be synchronised with Outlook. You can conveniently synchronise current tasks from your complete portfolio of maps, without visiting and synchronising each map in turn. ResultsManager also allows you to synchronise only selected activities with Outlook, for example by only sending Next Actions (and not all actions), and only sending actions that you own. How the MindManager connection to Outlook works MindManager Pro 7 synchronises tasks with Outlook using 3 commands: MindManager Button | Export | Export Tasks to Microsoft Outlook (if a map is not synchronised) MindManager Button | Import | Import Microsoft Outlook Tasks (if a map is not synchronised) MindManager Button | Export | Synchronise Tasks with Microsoft Outlook (once a map has been imported or exported) MindManager shows the first two commands (Export and Import) if the current map has not been previously synchronised. You can establish a synchronisation by either exporting or importing information in the map. MindManager shows only the third command (Synchronize) if the map has previously been synchronised. You can re-synchronise the map again with this command. When MindManager initially exports or imports tasks to or from Outlook, it stores some "synchronisation data" in the map Topics. This sync data is used on subsequent synchronisations to match up this topic with the corresponding Task in Outlook. The initial import and export sets up this sync data. Once the sync data is established, changes made in either Outlook or MindManager can be resolved, and updates can pass either way at the next synchronisation. Refer to the MindManager documentation for the latest information. How ResultsManager handles synchronisation with Outlook Synchronisation with Outlook pivots around a special dashboard map that is designed for this purpose. The process works as follows: 1. A special Dashboard map is defined that is pre-synchronised with Outlook, and which will list Activities only once, without any duplications. 2. ResultsManager sweeps project maps for Activities and posts them to this special dashboard map. If any of them have existing Outlook Sync data, this is also copied into the dashboard map. 3. MindManager Button | Export | Synchronize Microsoft Outlook Tasks can now be used with this special dashboard. Any tasks that are new will get added to Outlook. Any that are modified will update the corresponding copy in Outlook. Any that are changed in Outlook will be modified in the Dashboard. 4. Dashboard changes are then posted back to the original project maps with the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes. If any new tasks have been inserted by Outlook, these are posted back to your project maps. 5. Further changes to either the Dashboard or the project maps can now be synchronised with Outlook. If the dashboard is regenerated, it can still be synchronised with Outlook because the sync data is reinstated from the project maps. 6. Project maps can be synchronised with Outlook, but care should be taken not to import any new Outlook Tasks into project maps. They should only be imported into the Dashboard, and distributed from there. Getting started with Outlook Synchronisation (ResultsManager Professional edition only) We recommend that you are comfortable with the way that ResultsManager works, before starting to synchronise activities with Outlook. If you already have tasks in Outlook, you should make a copy of your tasks folder so that you can return to your original task list if you have problems with the synchronisation with MindManager. To set up synchronisation with Outlook: Change to Power User mode if you are currently in Express mode. Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode and select Power User mode. If you were already in Power User mode, then click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options to view the Power User mode options. If you just changed to Power User mode, then the options dialogue will open automatically. Enable the three options as shown below: Click OK to save your settings. Open your Map Central map, and click on the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard. Select one of the "Outlook Sync" Dashboards, as these are designed specifically for synchronisation with Outlook: When the Dashboard map is complete, ResultsManager will remind you to Send Dashboard changes after synchronising with Outlook: Now click MindManager Button | Export | Synchronize Microsoft Outlook Tasks. Make sure the option for only exporting Topics that use Task information is selected: (MindManager X5 screen capture) MindManager will now create tasks in Outlook for new tasks in the Dashboard map, and will also create new tasks in the Dashboard map if it finds any new tasks in Outlook. If you had tasks in Outlook that were not already present in the Dashboard, then MindManager adds them back to the Dashboard map on each synchronisation. They get added to the Central Topic by default. If you want to save them in your project maps, then drag the new activities to a Callout Topic that represents a Project or Result, or leave them attached to the Central Topic to have ResultsManager prompt you for a destination project map. You can't leave them lying around in the Dashboard map, as they will get overwritten the next time this Dashboard is regenerated. Important! Each time you synchronise the dashboard map with Outlook, you should then use ResultsManager's Send Dashboard Changes command. This will save the Outlook sync data back into the project maps, so that the next time you synchronise, the same task in Outlook is updated and a new copy is not created. If you forget this step, then you will get multiple copies of the same task when you synchronise again later. How extra information is handled ResultsManager deals with more information than is normally transferred to Outlook using MindManager's synchronisation. ResultsManager uses some special techniques to make as much information as possible available to Outlook. First, MindManager does not pass any Owner information across to Outlook. Outlook's "task owners" are taken from its Contacts list. By contrast, the Owners that MindManager & ResultsManager use are just text names. Currently, these text names are not sent to Outlook nor reconciled with names in Outlook's Contact list. Using ResultsManager to synchronise dashboard maps with Outlook can partially help with this, because ResultsManager's dashboards can be configured to contain only tasks that belong to a certain person. So if you synchronise a normal project map directly with Outlook, it will post all tasks, including any assigned to other people, into your Task List in Outlook. But if you synchronise via a ResultsManager Dashboard map, then only tasks that belong to you will be posted to your Outlook Task list. Second, if you enable the ResultsManager option for storing Contexts and Areas in the Categories, then ResultsManager will make further information available to Outlook. It does this in two ways: by storing information in the Categories field, and by adding extra information in the Categories field when creating dashboards for synchronisation with Outlook. The Context (location) and Area (if defined) will be stored visibly in the Categories field, so that this gets synchronised with Outlook and can be used to view tasks by these properties. Contexts are always prefixed with the at-sign (@), and Areas are prefixed with a caret (^). This allows ResultsManager to distinguish between contexts, areas and regular categories. For example, suppose you create an Activity using ResultsManager, and assign the "phone" Context to the activity: An activity using the "Phone" context When this topic is stored in the map, this context is stored in the Categories field (visible in the Task Info task pane): Context stored in the Categories field, marked with "@" When this activity appears in a Dashboard and is synchronised with Outlook, the Context appears as a category that can be used to sort and display tasks in Outlook: Context appears as a @Category in Outlook The same mechanism also lets you sort tasks by Area in Outlook. Areas assigned in ResultsManager will appear as Outlook categories. For example, if you used an area called "Productivity improvements" in your ResultsManager maps, then you would be able to sort tasks by a category named "^Productivity improvements" in Outlook. You can create new Contexts and Areas in Outlook by prefixing them with "@" and "^". So if you assign a new Category "@Monthly Meeting" in Outlook, then when you synchronise a dashboard map and send the changes back to the project maps, you will create a new context called "Monthly Meeting" that can be used on other activities too. Third, ResultsManager also dynamically creates Parent Activity information to help you identify tasks in Outlook. Suppose you had a project with one telephone call: A project with one action When a Dashboard map is generated, ResultsManager normally shows the "parent project" as a Callout above the Next Action item: ResultsManager displays the Parent Project in a Callout But if this is an Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard, ResultsManager also shows this parent activity as a special Category (prefixed with the tilde character "~"), which then appears in Outlook: Parent Project name also appears as a ~Category in Outlook Note that this information is not read back by ResultsManager when it synchronises dashboards. You cannot change or assign the project membership of a task in Outlook by changing this category. The parent project name always comes from the original project map. How completed tasks are handled Activities may be marked as completed either in MindManager, or in Outlook. At the next synchronisation, the status is transferred to the other side. If you mark a task as complete in Outlook, then the next time you synchronise with MindManager, the corresponding activity will be set as complete in the map. ResultsManager will also remove the internal data that marked this activity as synchronised with Outlook, so that it does not get called back into the dashboard again. If you mark an activity as complete in MindManager, it does not normally appear in Dashboards unless the "Include Completed Items" option is enabled. However, to ensure that the "completed" status gets fed through to Outlook at the next synchronisation, it is necessary for completed Activities to appear in the Outlook Synchronisation dashboard until their new status is sent to Outlook. To support this, ResultsManager automatically includes in the Outlook Synchronisation dashboard any Activity that has Outlook Sync data attached to it, even if it is complete. So the next synchronisation with Outlook will mark the task as complete in Outlook. Then, when sending changes back from the Dashboard to the project map, it "De-synchronises" any activity that is complete. This prevents the same activity re-appearing in the Dashboard the next time it is generated. You must still manually remove completed tasks from your lists in Outlook after synchronisation. MindManager does not have the capability to automatically delete these. If not deleted, they can reappear in the Dashboard maps when you next synchronise. If you delete a completed task in Outlook before synchronisation in the completed state, it will get reinstated in Outlook again from the map. Advanced topics This section contains information for advanced users who are familiar with Outlook and MindManager's synchronisation feature. Also refer to the FAQ section on Outlook. Synchronising Project maps When synchronising Project maps (not dashboard maps) with Outlook, be sure to turn off the option for importing new tasks from Outlook. Otherwise your project map will acquire a copy of everything you are working on, from other projects too. Note that the synchronisation settings in MindManager reset themselves at each use so should be checked every time. Finding homes for new tasks If a new task is added to Outlook, it will appear in the Dashboard map the next time you synchronise. After each synchronisation, you should use the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes to send changed and new activities back to their original project maps. There are two ways for ResultsManager to send newly added tasks back to your project maps: If the newly added task is attached to an existing activity, result or project, then ResultsManager knows where to post it, and will send it to the related project map. If the newly added task is not attached to a known project, result or activity, then ResultsManager will prompt you for the map to add this activity to. It will be added to the central topic of the map you select. When the Outlook Synchronisation finds a previously unsynchronised task in Outlook, it creates a new Main Topic in the dashboard map. You can move this topic to another parent before using the Send Dashboard Changes command, or you can leave it where it is and allow ResultsManager to prompt you for the maps. Creating "Data Entry Points" A "Data Entry Point" is a Project topic in a dashboard map that can have a new task dragged to it, so that when ResultsManager sends Dashboard changes back, it knows which project map to write them to. You can easily create Data Entry Points for new incoming tasks from Outlook. Use an Area called "Data Entry Point" on selected Project or Result topics, where you may want to add new incoming tasks from Outlook at a later date. The default Outlook Synchronisation dashboards include a filter that will display these Results in the dashboard. When you create the dashboard, ResultsManager will create a set of topics that represent the points to which you frequently add new incoming tasks. When a new task appears in your Outlook Sync dashboard (because it has been added in Outlook), you can just drag it to one of the Data Entry Points to tell ResultsManager which Project or Result it belongs to. Then, when you run the Send Dashboard Changes command, ResultsManager will post the new activity to the right points within your set of Project maps. Advanced dashboards If you have a large number of maps, you can use ResultsManager fields to precisely define which activities get synchronised with Outlook. One way to do this would be: Use an Area or Category called "Outlook" (for example) to label projects, Results or Activities that you want explicitly synchronised with Outlook. Remember that this property can be inherited when dashboards are built, so if you set the "Outlook" area on a topic that is the root of a whole Project, then everything in that project will get synchronised. Modify the Outlook Synchronisation dashboard template (or create a new one) to filter items that belong to the specific "Outlook" category or area. The dashboard map will then only contain items that you have labelled for synchronisation with Outlook. You can continue to use other dashboards for everyday work, and use your customised Outlook Synchronisation dashboard to sync a sub-set of your work with Outlook. If you are using shared maps and need to personalise this, use an area or category such as "John's Outlook" to filter items that only you want to extract. Other users can apply different markers if they wish. How ResultsManager deals with shared maps ResultsManager supports the synchronisation of shared maps with Outlook, using MindManager's built-in features. Synchronising shared maps with Outlook requires special handling, as the information stored in a map when it is synchronised with Outlook is tied to a specific Outlook client. Normally, if one user synchronises their map with Outlook, then sends it to someone else, the links between the synchronised Topics in MindManager and the corresponding tasks in Outlook will be meaningless when moved to a different system. ResultsManager's concept for using shared maps is that some of the maps you use will be stored on shared drives, and other people may access them. All users can synchronise shared maps with their individual Outlook clients, but only through a ResultsManager dashboard, and not directly. ResultsManager automatically stores the Outlook Synchronisation data for each individual user in the shared maps, and when a dashboard is built, their personalised sync data is recovered from the map for use in their dashboard. When they synchronise their own dashboard with Outlook, the activities will match up with the previously synchronised copy. So several users may synchronise the same activity to their Outlook clients. If a shared map is directly synchronised with Outlook, without sending it through a Dashboard, then re- synchronisations will only work on the platform where the original synchronisation was made. Re- synchronisations by other users will cause duplication and proliferation of activities. If you are working with shared maps, you should normally avoid directly synchronising them with Outlook. Always generate the Outlook Synchronisation dashboard and synchronise that, then ResultsManager will take care of your personalised links to your Outlook client. Breaking synchronisation with Outlook ResultsManager includes a support utility to help power users experiment with Outlook synchronisation. Please note that this is not intended for regular use, so is not linked to the menu commands. Please also read our disclaimer relating to this software. Click the Tools tab | Macros group | Macros | Desycnhronise Outlook to access a utility that lets you Label or remove Outlook synchronisation data from maps and connected multi-maps Label or remove your own personalised Outlook synchronisation data from shared maps Label or remove personalised Outlook synchronisation data for all users Label topics in maps that have hyperlinks to shared maps (useful in Dashboard maps) Note that the user name and list of shared locations used by this utility is defined independently of ResultsManager's settings. You should ensure that you use the same settings as ResultsManager. You should use this tool with extreme care as the unintentional deletion of Outlook Synchronisation data can only be recovered by manually deleting all corresponding tasks in Outlook and re-synchronising again. It should normally only be used when directed by Gyronix Support. Appendices Appendix A: Glossary of terms Click on the terms below to expand their meaning. If you don't find the particular term you are looking for, please let us know so that we can improve our documentation. Only a few of the basic MindManager terms are mentioned here, so also check the MindManager documentation for things that are MindManager-specific. Action An Action is a piece of work or activity that is part of a Project or Result. In other time management or project management systems, these are sometimes called Tasks or Assignments. An action may not be "doable" yet, as it might depend on other actions being completed first. Activity Activity is the general name for something that defines an outcome and requires some action to complete it. Specific activities may be Projects, Results, Actions or Next Actions. Area An Area is a user-defined classification that can be used to collect together related items that are in different projects. Areas are inherited cumulatively inside maps, so Areas can be nested within other Areas. Central Topic The middle of a MindManager map. There is only one Central Topic per map, and all maps have a Central Topic. By default, ResultsManager assumes that the Central Topic of a map represents a project. Committed activity A Committed activity is something that you have promised to yourself or to someone else. By contrast, something you have not committed to is a "would be nice" or "Someday-Maybe" activity, and can be deferred. ResultsManager helps you keep track of Committed activities. The "Committed" Icon is used to mark Committed activities in maps. Callout A Callout is a special type of Topic in a MindManager map - usually shown as a "speech bubble" connected to a regular Topic. ResultsManager uses Callouts in dashboard maps to show you which project a certain activity belongs to. ResultsManager uses Callouts to show parent projects Refer to the MindManager documentation for more information about Callouts. Category A Category can be used in any way you prefer, but is designed for horizontal classification of Activities, so that they can be grouped across projects. Examples of categories that are independent of projects include "decisions", "deliverables", "questions" and so on. ResultsManager maintains a master list of Categories that can be used to classify Results in any map. Note: Categories are handled differently in MindManager X5 and 6. See Appendix K for details of Categories handling in MindManager 6. Confirmation messages ResultsManager displays confirmation messages for some of its operations, so that you have the chance to cancel before proceeding. You can turn these confirmation messages off in the ResultsManager Options dialogue in Power User mode. Context A Context identifies where an activity can be completed. This horizontal classification helps you organise your day, for example by grouping together things that require a telephone call, or could be done while travelling. ResultsManager maintains a master list of Contexts that can be assigned to Activities in any map. Deadline An activity is a Deadline if it is marked with the Deadline Icon ( ). Only Activities which have due dates set on them can be Deadlines - you can't have a deadline without a date. A Deadline is something that must be done by a specific date, otherwise bad things happen. If you can afford to miss deadlines, then they are not really deadlines. Deadline Activities are displayed separately from non-deadline Activities in the Dashboards so that you can easily see which are the important due dates. Dashboard map A Dashboard map is a map generated by ResultsManager, containing Hyperlinks to Activities in other maps and organised by date, owner, context, project, category, status, priority or any combination of these. It gives a horizontal view of activities across multiple projects. The Dashboard map represents a "snapshot" of all activity, and is designed to help prioritise and plan work for a defined period of time. Also see What is a Dashboard map?. Express mode Express mode is a simpler operating mode for ResultsManager that offers s simpler set of options and input dialogues. Once you are comfortable with using ResultsManager in Express mode, you can move up to Power User mode for additional options and features. Hyperlink A Hyperlink is a shortcut to another document (e.g. another MindManager map) or to a specific Topic in a MindManager map. ResultsManager uses Hyperlinks to discover related maps when building Dashboards, and creates Hyperlinks from Topics in the Dashboard maps back to the original Project maps. A MindManager map accessed from other maps by a Hyperlink is also sometimes called a "Multimap". Filter A Filter is a special Topic in the template maps used for creating Dashboard maps. It selects activities from the complete list collected during the sweep. For example, the "Committed" filter will select activities that are Committed. By building up a series of filters, the Dashboard map can display activities organised to support appropriate decisions. When the Dashboard is finished, you don't see the Filters any more - you only see the information that they have extracted. Icon An Icon is a small image inserted in a Topic in MindManager maps. Some Icons have special meaning for ResultsManager and control its behaviour - for example, the Icon that stops ResultsManager exploring parts of the map or following Hyperlinks. Inheriting of activity settings To use ResultsManager effectively, you do not need to specify every detail of every action item. If you do not specify a particular piece of information (such as the Owner of an activity), then ResultsManager will automatically assume that it is inherited from the parent Topic. So, if you are the owner of every action item in a map, then you only need to assign yourself as the owner of the Central Topic, and this will be inherited by all action items in the map if you don't re-specify another owner somewhere else. Inheritance applies to Owners, Contexts, Categories and Areas for all activities, and to Start & Due dates and Priorities for Committed activities. Local list In addition to selecting Contexts, Owners, Categories or Areas from the Master lists, ResultsManager also lets you choose from just those items in use in the current map - the Local list. So if your project does not span several maps, you can choose from only those attributes that are relevant to the current map. Local lists are created dynamically when you open the ResultsManager edit dialogue. Map Central A Map Central map is a map that only contains Hyperlinks to all the other project or "Bits and Pieces" maps, which contain activities that you are responsible for. See the section on organising your maps. Map Part (MindManager Pro only) Activities may be entered into a map as a Smart Map Part from the Map Parts in the library. When the Smart Map Part is deployed in a map, the Edit dialogue is automatically opened. Master List ResultsManager looks after four Master Lists of Contexts, Owners, Categories and Areas. These lists are available to be used in any map created on the system where ResultsManager is installed. They are stored in the system Registry and may be imported and exported in the ResultsManager Options dialogue. MindManager® MindManager is the business mapping software that ResultsManager uses as its platform. You can purchase MindManager and ResultsManager licenses bundled together from your reseller or Gyronix. You must have MindManager X5, MindManager X5 Pro, MindManager Basic 6 or MindManager Pro 6 to use ResultsManager v2. For a glossary of MindManager-specific terms (e.g. Topic, Relationship and so on) please refer to the MindManager documentation. Multimap Multimap is the term for a MindManager map that is linked to another one with a Hyperlink. Large subjects or volumes of information can be broken up into several Multimaps, making access and navigation easier. ResultsManager will follow Multimap Hyperlinks to discover all action items in all linked maps, unless the link is blocked by a special Icon on the Topic ( ). Next Action A Next Action is something that can be done straight away, i.e. is "doable". Next Actions do not depend on any other tasks that must be completed before they can be started. ResultsManager can work out which are the Next Actions within a Project or Result by using the Funnel Timeline planning technique in MindManager. Owner ResultsManager maintains a master list of Owners that can be assigned responsibility for Activities in a map. This list may contain individuals or named groups, and can be interpreted in two different ways - see Assigning Owners. Pagination When ResultsManager is creating Dashboard maps, it may create large numbers of subtopics on a single Topic. For example, if you have 80 activities that can be done at the office, then there may be 80 subtopics on the "Office" Topic under Contexts. This can be difficult to navigate, so ResultsManager has the option to paginate them into groups for easier handling. This is configured in the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options, in Power User mode. Bits and Pieces map A Bits and Pieces map is a map that contains activities that don't belong anywhere else. You will need at least one of these - some users also use a separate map for collecting research and "interesting" items. See the section on organising your maps. Power User mode Power User mode offers all the ResultsManager features and options for advanced use. Users should start with Express mode and then move up to Power User mode when familiar with the basic concepts and use of ResultsManager. Project A Project identifies a group of actions or sub-projects that belong together, and will usually have a sequence or project plan that specified their completion order. ResultsManager determines whether an activity is a Project from the settings on the Topic, or by what kind of Topic it is. Also see Project or Next Action?. Projects are the major elements to keep track of in the Getting Things Done method. Project Map A Project Map is a map that contains the activities for at least one project. It is good practice to have one map per project, then you can archive and share maps with others. See the section on organising your maps. Result A Result is a smaller scale achievement within a Project, that contributes to the overall project objective. Grouping actions together under Results helps identify the next action to take to reach the Result without having to re-think the project plan. For example, if you had a project to purchase a new car, selecting the make and model would be an important milestone in that project, and you could class this as a Result. If you prefer the term "Subproject" to "Result", there is an option in the ResultsManager Options in Power User mode that lets you use this term instead. ResultsManager ResultsManager from Gyronix is an Add-in for Mindjet's MindManager X5, X5 Pro, MindManager Basic 6 or MindManager Pro 6 software. ResultsManager requires MindManager to be present as its platform, and extends MindManager from a brainstorming and capture tool into a system for tracking and delivering activities. ResultsMerlin ResultsMerlin from Gyronix is the configuration Wizard for Gyronix ResultsManager. It runs as a standalone programme and can be launched from the Windows Start menu or from within MindManager. ResultsMerlin provides step-by-step configuration and setup of ResultsManager. Shared drive or map A shared map is a map that you and other people access. It might be the notes from a meeting, or a project plan containing action items for several people. Shared maps are stored on shared drives, such as a network drive. ResultsManager Professional edition keeps track of shared drives and will observe interlocks when accessing shared maps, to avoid accidental overwriting while someone else is editing a shared map. Someday-Maybe An Activity that is not Committed - something you might do one day, but is not a key project or action. ResultsManager marks Someday-Maybe topics with the "Hourglass" icon ( ) in maps. Subproject An alternative term for a Result. You can elect to see Results labelled as Subprojects in the ResultsManager Options dialogue, in Power User mode only. Template dashboard map Dashboard maps are built from a template map that defines the style, the contents and the filters used. These are regular MindManager maps, and are stored by default in the "My Dashboards" folder under MindManager's default map folder. Dashboard template maps are not necessarily MindManager templates; they can be, but do not have to be. Topic, subtopic, parent Topic A Topic is a "branch" in a MindManager map. An Activity is a special kind of Topic that has been marked with task information, indicating that it is something to be done, as opposed to just information. A "subtopic" is a child branch of a parent. Funnel Timeline A "Funnel Timeline" is a way of using a MindManager map to represent the flow of activities in a project. Outcomes and objectives are nearest the centre of the map, and the further away an activity is from the centre, the earlier it is required in a project. As you move further through your project, it "funnels" down towards the single outcome. The process is described in the section on Visualising your Project. Funnel Timelines were previously called "Tunnel Timelines" or "left to right planning" in earlier versions of the documentation, but the principle is otherwise the same. Wizard See "ResultsMerlin" above. Appendix B: MindManager Essentials To use ResultsManager effectively, you do not need to be a MindManager Black Belt - but you do need to be able to create and edit maps without the technology getting in the way of your thinking. We recommend that you are comfortable with the following basic features in MindManager. If you already know these, then this section is not for you. If you are new to MindManager, then at least try these a couple of times until you can do them without referring to the Help file. (Reading Help files is usually a final act of utter desperation anyway). The animated tutorials in MindManager are highly recommended too. The list below looks worse than it actually is. The quickest way to learn MindManager is to use it. The following should take between five and ten minutes. Of course, this is only a fraction of MindManager's capabilities, but is enough to get you productive with ResultsManager. MindManager essential skill Hints and tips Creating, saving and closing map documents Selecting Topics Click the MindManager Button then click New to start a new map Click the MindManager Button then click Save to choose a location for a new map and save it Click the MindManager Button then click Close to close the current map If you have more than one map open, click the tabs attached to map window to switch between them Click on a Topic to select it A blue border appears around the selected Topic Ctrl+Click on other Topics to add them to the selection Adding Topics to a map Select the Central Topic or any other Topic Press the INS key to insert a new subtopic Adding Main Topics Double-click in the background where you want the new Main Topic Deleting Topics Renaming Topics Select any Topic (except the Central Topic) Press the DEL key to delete it You can't delete the Central Topic Select any Topic, then start typing The text you type will replace the current Topic text When you are done, just click in the map background to deselect the Topic and commit the new text MindManager essential skill Editing Topic text Hints and tips Select any Topic Click on it once again to enter "edit" mode, or press F2 to select all the text Position the cursor in the text and make changes Click away from the Topic or press F2 to close "edit" mode Moving Topics Click and hold on a Topic, then drag it to Adding Icons to Topics another part of the map The red preview marker shows where it will drop when the mouse button is released Note that subtopics get moved too if you move a whole tree Click on a Topic to select it, click the Home tab and click Icon Markers Click on the required Icon from the drop-down selection Removing Icons from Topics Right-click on the Icon image in the Topic, and select Remove Adding Hyperlinks to Topics Click on a Topic to select it, click the Home tab and click Hyperlink Click the Existing File or Web page button if not already selected Click the file Browse button to browse for a file Click the folder browse button to link to a folder Launching a Hyperlink Click on the Hyperlink Icon in the Topic. The Icon will depend on the type of the linked file. For MindManager maps, it is Adding Notes to Topics Press Ctrl+T to view the Notes pane Click on a Topic to select it. The Notes for Changing the level of detail in view Just view the part you are working on the selected Topic can now be edited in the Notes pane When you click on a different Topic, its notes are displayed in the Notes pane instead Only relevant for Topics that have subtopics! Select a Topic and press Ctrl+D a few times until you see the required level of subtopics, or Click on the or blobs at the end of Topic to expand or hide subtopics Select a Topic and press F3 to focus on it MindManager essential skill Pan and Zoom the map Maps quickly grow bigger than the screen Hints and tips Click and hold in the map background until the pointer changes to a hand Move the mouse to pan the whole map Click on the View tab then use the Zoom buttons and out View Callout Topics You will find it useful to view and hide Callout Topics when working with ResultsManager Dashboard maps in the View ribbon to zoom in Click the View tab Click Show/Hide Click on Callouts to enable or disable the display of Callouts In MindManager 7, there is no way to add this command to the Quick Access toolbar Appendix C: Menu commands and shortcuts MindManager Pro 7 The MindManager Pro 7 menus and keyboard shortcuts are different to MindManager 6, with the introduction of the Ribbon menus. The ResultsManager commands work in the same way, but are accessed differently. ResultsManager for MindManager 7 has some additional commands that are not present in the MindManager X5 or 6 versions. Tab/Group or Menu ResultsManager tab | Activity group ResultsManager command What it does Edit Activity... Edits each of the currently selected Activity Topics in turn. If multiple Topics are selected, they are edited in the order in which they were selected. Keyboard: Alt+E, Y Home tab | ResultsManager group ResultsManager tab | Activity group Insert Activity Keyboard: Alt+E, I Insert tab | ResultsManager group ResultsManager tab | Activity group Set Complete Keyboard: Alt+E, C Home tab | ResultsManager group ResultsManager tab | Activity group Exclude Keyboard: Alt+E, AX ResultsManager tab | Activity group Activity Inserts and Edits a new Activity as a subtopic of the currently selected Topic. If there is no map open, a new map is started. If nothing is selected, a new Activity is added as a new Main Topic. Sets the currently selected Activity or Activities to 100% Complete status and initiates logging (if enabled). Toggles the Exclude from Dashboard icon on the selected Topic(s). Toggles the Percent Complete icon on the selected Topic(s). Keyboard: Alt+E, AA ResultsManager tab | Activity group Someday Keyboard: Alt+E, AS ResultsManager tab | Activity group Project Keyboard: Alt+E, AP ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group Create Dashboard Keyboard: Alt+E, D Home tab | ResultsManager group Cycles through the Someday/Maybe icon, the Committed icon or neither icon on the selected Topic(s). Also sets the 0% complete icon. Cycles through the Project icon, Result/Subproject icon, or neither icon on the selected Topic(s). Also sets the 0% compete icon. Displays the available Dashboard templates and lets you Select a Dashboard to generate. You can also access the Dashboard Options through this command. Tab/Group or Menu ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group ResultsManager command What it does Send Changes Looks for changed items in the current Dashboard map and sends them to the original project maps. Only available in ResultsManager Pro. Keyboard: Alt+E, S ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group Open Template Keyboard: Alt+E, P ResultsManager tab | Tools group MultiMap Checker Keyboard: Alt+E, K Tools tab | ResultsManager group ResultsManager tab | Tools group Install Template Keyboard: Alt+E, I Tools tab | ResultsManager group If the current document is a Dashboard map, open the associated Dashboard Template map. Checks the Multimap links (to maps or folders) that ResultsManager will follow, to check for broken links in your scanned set of maps. Only available in ResultsManager Pro. If the current map is a valid ResultsManager Dashboard Template, adds this map to the Dashboard selection in ResultsManager. ResultsManager tab | Tools group Add Dashboard Filter Displays the Filter Picker dialogue so that chains of Keyboard: Alt+E, F Filters can be inserted into the current map when building Dashboards. Only available in ResultsManager Pro. ResultsManager tab | Options group User Mode Switches between Express and Power User modes. Keyboard: Alt+E, U ResultsManager tab | Options group Options | ResultsManager Options Tools tab | ResultsManager group Keyboard: Alt+E, O, R ResultsManager tab | Options group Options | Customise ResultsManager Tab Keyboard: Alt+E, O, T ResultsManager tab | Options group ResultsMerlin Keyboard: Alt+E, R ResultsManager tab | Help group Allows the order of command Groups in the ResultsManager tab to be customised to suit individual preferences Launches the ResultsMerlin Wizard so that you can choose which Wizard to run ResultsManager Help Displays this help file. Keyboard: Alt+E, H Tools tab | ResultsManager group Displays the ResultsManager Options dialogue, where changes to ResultsManager's configuration are made. You can also access the Dashboard Options through this command. Tab/Group or Menu ResultsManager tab | Help group ResultsManager command What it does Demonstration Opens the Demonstration map and launches the Help in the corresponding section. Keyboard: Alt+E, M ResultsManager tab | Help group Implementation map Keyboard: Alt+E, N ResultsManager tab | Product group About ResultsManager Keyboard: Alt+E, A Topic context menu Edit Activity... (Right-click on a Topic) Keyboard: Alt+E, Y Opens the ResultsManager Implementation map and launches the Help in the corresponding section. Display the current version number and view or enter the License key. You can also view the Release Notes map, check for updates, and access purchasing & support information. Edits the current Topic, converting it to an Activity. Topic context menu Insert new Activity... Inserts and Edits a new (Right-click on a Topic) Activity as a subtopic of the Keyboard: Alt+E, I current Topic. Topic context menu Set Activity Complete Sets this Activity to 100% (Right-click on a Topic) compete and initiates logging Keyboard: Alt+E, C (if enabled). Appendix D: The List Picker Dialogue The List Picker Dialogue is the same for all list types in ResultsManager. It is used when selecting items for lists in the Edit dialogue, and also for managing the contents of the Master lists. A typical List Picker dialogue The List Picker shows two lists: the source on the left, and the destination on the right. There are three basic actions: You can add an item from the source list on the left to the current selection on the right by selecting it and clicking Add, or by double-clicking on it. You can add a new item (that does not exist in the source list) by typing it into the box at the top of the source list and clicking Add. This creates a brand new item. You can remove an item from the destination list on the right by selecting it and clicking Remove. It gets returned to the source list in case you change your mind. (Power User mode only) When editing the Owners list, you can also sort the right-hand list with the up and down buttons. Other lists are automatically sorted into alphabetical order, but the order of the Owners list is important if you are using ResultsManager to keep track of delegated activities. (Power User mode only) You can choose whether to display items from the master list (available to all maps) or just the current map, if you want to work with a list for just the current project, for example. Appendix E: Dashboard Filters This appendix contains details of all the filters supported in ResultsManager Dashboards. Any specific value associated with a filter can have "NOT " (in capitals, with a following space) placed in front of it to invert the logic. So a Context filter with a value of "Office" would return all activities with this context, and a value of "NOT Office" would return all Activities with any context except Office. Filter values in the Notes may have a comment appended to them for clarity. Text beginning with "Comment:" is ignored. The default Dashboard templates provided with ResultsManager have comments explaining the action of the filters. For a description of how dashboards work and how to enter filters, refer to the section on Dashboard Templates and Filters. "Project" & "SuperProject" filters Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Project Returns only the first generation of Activities that belong directly to this Project (blank) Lists all Projects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each Project name Filters by a specific Project NOT Project name Filters everything except the specified project SuperProject Returns all generations of Activities, including those belonging to sub-projects of this Project "Result" and "SuperResult" filters U Lists all uncommitted (Someday-Maybe) projects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each C Lists all committed projects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each A- Lists all projects that currently have no Committed Actions (use the SuperProject filter for best accuracy) X- Lists all Projects that currently have no Committed Next Actions (use the SuperProject filter for best accuracy) UA Lists all Projects that have Someday/Maybe Activities (use the SuperProject filter for best accuracy) D List all Projects that are marked with a Deadline * Cancels all other preceding filters Filter name Filter Value Result (or Subproject) Returns only the first generation of Activities that belong directly to this Result or Subproject (blank) SuperResult Returns all generations of Activities, including those belonging to sub-projects of this Result/ Subproject "Plan" and "SuperPlan" filters What gets selected Lists all Results/Subprojects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each Result/Subproject Filters by a specific Result/ name Subproject NOT Result name Filters everything except the specified Result/Subproject U Lists all uncommitted (Someday/Maybe) (Deprecated: use Results/Subprojects by "NOT C") alphabetically sorted name then filters by each C Lists all committed Results/Subprojects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each A- Lists all Results/Subprojects that currently have no Committed Actions (use the SuperResult filter for best accuracy) X- Lists all Results/Subprojects that currently have no Committed Next Actions (use the SuperResult filter for best accuracy) UA Lists all Results/Subprojects that have Someday/Maybe Activities (use the SuperResult filter for best accuracy) D List all Results/Subprojects that are marked as having a Deadline * Cancels all other preceding filters Filter name Filter Value Plan Returns only the first generation of Activities that belong directly to this Project or Result/Subproject (blank) SuperPlan Returns all generations of Activities, including those belonging to sub-projects of this Project or Result/Subproject Projects and Results/subprojects are both classified as "Plans" and can be handled together with the Plan filter "Context" filter What gets selected Lists all Projects and Results/Subprojects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each Project or Filters by a specific Project or Result/subproject Result/subproject name NOT Project or Result name Filters everything except the specified Project or Result/subproject U Lists all uncommitted (Someday/Maybe) Projects or (Deprecated: use Results/subprojects by "NOT C") alphabetically sorted name then filters by each C Lists all committed Projects or Results/subprojects by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each A- Lists all Projects or Results/subprojects that currently have no Committed Actions (use the SuperPlan filter for best accuracy) X- Lists all Projects or Results/subprojects that currently have no Committed Next Actions (use the SuperPlan filter for best accuracy) UA Lists all Projects or Results/subprojects that have Someday/Maybe Activities (use the SuperPlan filter for best accuracy) D List all Projects or Results/subprojects that are marked as having a Deadline * Cancels all other preceding filters Filter name Filter Value Context (blank) Context name What gets selected Lists all Contexts by alphabetically sorted name then filters by each Filters by specific Context NOT Context name Filters everything except the specified Context * Context* As above Filter name Filter Value Area (blank) Cancels all other preceding filters Only returns Activities where the Context is explicitly used, not inherited "Area" filter Area name NOT Area name * Area* As above What gets selected Selects all Areas by alphabetically sorted name Selects a specific Area Selects everything except the specified Area Cancels all other preceding filters Only returns Activities where the Area is explicitly used, not inherited "Category" filter Filter name Filter Value Category (blank) Selects all Categories by alphabetically sorted name Category name Selects a specific Category NOT Category name Selects everything except a specified Category * Cancels all other preceding filters Category* "Priority" filter As above What gets selected Only returns Activities where the Category is explicitly used, not inherited Filter name Filter Value Priority (blank) 0...9 NOT 2 (or any number 0..9) * Priority* As above Filter name Filter Value Date (blank) What gets selected Selects all Priorities from 1 - 9 followed by "None" Selects a specific priority, where 0 means "No Priority" Selects everything except Priority 2 Cancels all other preceding filters Only returns Activities where the Priority is explicitly used, not inherited "Date" filter Date* "StartDate" filter What gets selected Selects all days where Activities have Start or Due dates 22/4/04 (or valid date on your system) Selects Activities which have either a matching Start date or Due date Y Selects Activities that have an explicit Start date or a Due date N Selects Activities that do not have an explicit Start date or Due Date (undated Activities) As above Only allows activities where an explicit date has been defined, not derived from a constraint Filter name Filter Value What gets selected StartDate (blank) Selects all days where activities have a start date 22/4/04 (or valid date on your system) Selects a specific start date 7 Selects the dates of the next 7 (or a number > 0) days (including today) in ascending order from today's date -7 Select the dates of the (or a number < 0) preceding 7 days (including today) in ascending date order N (or 00:00:00, deprecated) StartDate* "DueDate" filter Selects tasks or projects that have no start date assigned to them or inherited from a parent task or project Y Selects tasks or projects that have a Start date defined NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not startable today or yesterday. Only 1 and -1 can be used. As above Only allows Activities where an explicit Start Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint Filter name Filter Value DueDate (blank) 22/4/04 (or valid date on your system) What gets selected Selects all days where activities are due (scheduled to complete) Selects a specific due date 7 Selects the dates of the next 7 (or a number > 0) days (including today) in ascending order from today's date -7 Selects the dates of the (or a number < 0) preceding 7 days (including today) in ascending date order, then filters by each N (or 00:00:00, deprecated) Y DueDate* Selects tasks or projects that have no due date assigned to them or inherited from a parent task or project Selects tasks or projects that have a due date assigned NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not due today or yesterday. Only 1 and -1 can be used. As above Only allows Activities where an explicit Due Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint "StartWeek" filter Filter name Filter Value StartWeek (blank) 19/04/04 (or valid date on your system) What gets selected Selects all weeks where activities have a start date Selects a specific week commencing on this date 2 Selects the next 2 weeks (or a number > 0) (including this week) in ascending order -2 Selects the previous 2 weeks (or a number < 0) (including this week) in ascending order NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not startable this week or last week. Only 1 and -1 can be used Filter name Filter Value StartWeek* As above What gets selected Only allows Activities where an explicit Start Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint "DueWeek" filter Filter name Filter Value What gets selected DueWeek (blank) Selects all weeks where activities have due dates 19/04/04 (or valid date on your system) Selects a specific week commencing on this date 2 Selects the next 2 weeks (or a number > 0) (including this week) in ascending order -2 Selects the previous 2 weeks (or a number < 0) (including this week) in ascending order DueWeek* NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not due this week or last week. Only 1 and -1 can be used As above Only allows Activities where an explicit Due Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint "StartMonth" filter Filter name Filter Value StartMonth (blank) 1/04/04 (or valid date on your system) What gets selected Selects all calendar months where activities have start dates Selects a specific month commencing on this date 2 Selects the next 2 months (or a number > 0) (including this month) in ascending order -2 Selects the previous 2 months (or a number < 0) (including this month) in ascending order NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not starting this month or last month. Only 1 and -1 can be used Filter name Filter Value StartMonth* As above What gets selected Only allows Activities where an explicit Start Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint "DueMonth" filter Filter name Filter Value DueMonth (blank) 1/04/04 (or valid date on your system) What gets selected Selects all calendar months where activities have due dates Selects a specific month commencing on this date 2 Selects the next 2 months (or a number > 0) (including this month) in ascending order -2 Selects the previous 2 months (or a number < 0) (including this month) in ascending order DueMonth* NOT 1 or NOT -1 Selects activities that are not due this month or last month. Only 1 and -1 can be used As above Only allows Activities where an explicit Due Date has been defined, not derived from a constraint "Overdue" filter Filter name Filter Value Overdue (blank) "Status" filter What gets selected Selects overdue Activities first, then not-overdue Activities N (or 0, deprecated) Selects Activities that are not overdue today (Due date has not passed) Y (or 1, deprecated) Selects Activities that are overdue today (Due date has passed) Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Status (blank) Selects each of the percent-complete ranges (from 0% to 100%) in ascending order. (Note that completed tasks are not displayed if disabled in the Dashboard Options). 0..100 Selects a specific percent-complete value. Legal values are 0, 10, 25, 35, 50, 65, 75, 90, and 100. NOT 100 (or any value 0..100) Selects everything except 100% complete Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Complete (blank) Selects incomplete activities first, then complete Activities (Used in Outlook Synchronisation dashboards) N (or 0, deprecated) Selects incomplete Activities (Activities with a percent-complete value less than 100) Y (or 1, deprecated) Selects complete Activities (Activities with a percent-complete value of 100). Requires the option for including Completed actions in Dashboards to be enabled Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Party (blank) Selects the people who have any association with an Activity, either as an Owner or as a Partner Party name Selects all the Activities that the specified person has direct or indirect involvement with %me% Selects all Activities where the default Dashboard owner is a Party "Complete" Filter "Party" filter (People with a direct or indirect association with actions or projects) Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Party* As above Filter name Filter Value Owner (blank) Selects the people who have executive responsibility for an Activity, in alphabetical order. This filter should be used if you are using the "Shared Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Owner name Selects a specific Owner. This filter should be used if you are using the "Shared Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Only returns Activities where the Party name is explicitly used, not inherited "Owner" filter (Executive responsibility for actions or projects) What gets selected NOT Owner name Selects everything except the specified Owner %me% NOT %me% "ActivityOwner" filter Selects the Owner defined as "Me" in the Dashboard Options. This filter should be used if you are using the "Shared Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Selects everything not owned by Me Filter name Filter Value ActivityOwner (blank) Selects all Owners who are the current owners of Next Actions, Actions, Results or Projects, in alphabetical order. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme*. Also see Assigning Owners. Owner name Selects a specific Owner where they are the current owner of activities. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. (Current sole owner of an activity) What gets selected NOT Owner name Selects all Activity owners except the named one %me% NOT %me% Selects the Owner defined as "Me" in the Dashboard Options, where this Owner is the current owner of activities. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Selects all Activity owners except Me * If this filter is used with the "Automatic Delegation" option disabled, ResultsManager will automatically substitute the "Owner" filter instead. "ActivityManager" filter Filter name Filter Value ActivityManager (blank) Selects all Owners who are the current managers of activities, in alphabetical order. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme*. Also see Assigning Owners. Owner name Selects a specific Owner where they are the current manager of activities. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. (Owner who has delegated an activity to an "ActivityProvider") What gets selected NOT Owner name Selects all Activity managers except the named one %me% NOT %me% Selects the Owner defined as "Me" in the Dashboard Options, where this Owner is the current manager of activities. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Selects all Activity managers except Me * If this filter is used with the "Automatic Delegation" option disabled, ResultsManager will automatically substitute the "Owner" filter instead. "ActivityProvider" filter Filter name Filter Value ActivityProvider (blank) Selects all Owners who are the current providers of activities delegated to them, in alphabetical order. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme*. Also see Assigning Owners. Owner name Selects a specific Owner where they are the current provider of activities delegated to them. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. (Owner who has had an Activity delegated to them by an "ActivityManager") What gets selected NOT Owner name Selects all Activity Providers except the named one %me% NOT %me% Selects the Owner defined as "Me" in the Dashboard Options, where this Owner is the current provider of activities delegated to them. This filter should only be used if you are using the "Delegated Ownership" scheme. Also see Assigning Owners. Selects all Activity Providers except Me * If this filter is used with the "Automatic Delegation" option disabled, ResultsManager will automatically substitute the "Owner" filter instead. "Partner" filter Filter name Filter Value Partner (blank) (People who are indirectly referenced in Activities) Partner name What gets selected Selects the people who have an indirect association with an Activity, by being mentioned in the Owner list with @ in their name Selects all the Activities that the specified Partner has indirect involvement with %me% Selects all Activities where the last filtered Party is a Partner Y Selects Activities which have a Partner (where the last filtered Party is the ActivityOwner) N Selects Activities which do not have a Partner (where the last filtered Party is the ActivityOwner) "Committed" filter Filter name Filter Value Committed (blank) Committed* What gets selected Selects "Committed / Must" then "Someday-Maybe" activities N (or 0, deprecated) Selects uncommitted ("Someday-Maybe") activities Y (or 1, deprecated) Selects Committed activities As above Only returns Activities where the Committed or Someday/maybe marker is explicitly used, not inherited "Deadline" filter Filter name Filter Value Deadline (blank) Selects activities with Deadlines first, then activities without deadlines N (or 0, deprecated) Selects no-Deadline ("Bring-Forward" file) activities Y (or 1, deprecated) Selects activities that are marked with the Deadline Icon "Activity" filter What gets selected Filter name Filter Value What gets selected Activity (blank) Selects Next Actions, Actions, Results and Projects X Selects "Next Action" activities A Selects "Action" activities, which includes all "Next Actions" R Selects "Result" activities * P Selects "Project" activities * ActivityManager Selects Activities where the last filtered Party is the ActivityManager ActivityProvider Selects Activities where the last filtered Party is the ActivityProvider ActivityOwner Selects Activities where the last filtered Party is the ActivityOwner Partner Selects Activities where the last filtered Party is a Partner NOT X Selects everything except Next Actions ** * Note that these filters are not the same as the separate "Project" and "Result" filters. The Activity filter will only list specific activities of the selected type. The "Project" and "Result" filters will allow through any kind of activity (Project, Result, Action or Next Action) that belong to a specific Project or Result. ** Can also use NOT A, NOT R etc. in the same way Blank filter Filter name Filter Value (blank) (blank) What gets selected Blank filter - does not select anything below it. Use when listing just Project or Result names without detailing any activities below them. Appendix F: Dashboard Report Keywords Refer to the section on Reports in Dashboard Maps for an overview of using report keywords in Dashboard maps. Keywords are case-sensitive and must be used exactly as shown, including the % characters. If they are not matched exactly, then no substitution is made when the Dashboard is generated. Keyword Usable locations Substitution made when Dashboard is generated %me% 1, 2 Name entered in "Me" box in the Dashboard Options dialogue %toptext% 2 The name of the Topic or Central Topic where the dashboard scan was started %mapnames% 2 List of the names of the map documents scanned for this Dashboard %mapfullnames% 2 List of the full paths and names of the map documents scanned for this Dashboard %activities% 2 Total number of Projects, Results, Actions and Next Actions found %topics% 2 Total number of Topics visited in all the scanned maps %maps% 2 Total number of maps scanned %today% 1, 2 Today's date in short date format %time% 1, 2 Time now (hh:mm) %templatename% 1, 2 The name of the template map used to create this Dashboard %templatefullname% 1, 2 The full path and name of the template map used to create this Dashboard Keywords can be included in the text used in the following locations: [1] The comment that describes a Dashboard, visible in the Dashboard Selection dialogue, [2] The Central Topic text in the Dashboard template map, and [2] The Central Topic Notes text in the Dashboard template map. If these keywords are used anywhere else, they are not substituted when the Dashboard is generated. Examples "%topics% Topics found in %maps% maps" would be rendered as "3192 Topics found in 38 maps" "Dashboard for %me% %today%" would be rendered as "Dashboard for John Smith 31/12/04" Appendix G: Dashboard Template Properties MindManager maps can carry information that identifies then as ResultsManager Dashboard Templates. This information is stored in the map Properties accessed via File | Properties... when the map is open and selected. The "Keywords" property must be set to "Dashboard" for ResultsManager to interpret and assign the other properties to the Dashboard Details dialogue. This is done when the "New" button is clicked in the Dashboard Settings dialogue, and a suitable map is open and selected in MindManager. File Property Subject ResultsManager interpretation Used as the Dashboard Name Keywords Required to be set to "Dashboard" for ResultsManager to interpret the other fields Comments Used as the Dashboard Description Comment contains All other fields Function "~0", "~1", "~2" or "~3" Controls the number of levels of parent project displayed in callouts, from 0 to 3 "~T" Tidies up the dashboard map when complete "~E" Lists this template in the dashboards list in Express Mode Ignored by ResultsManager Document Properties interpreted by ResultsManager If the "Keywords" property is valid, then the other properties are used to initialise the Dashboard Details dialogue, and the path to the map is used as the source map path. This saves time when configuring a new dashboard template, and means that the template can be installed with the ResultsManager tab | Tools group | Install Template. Appendix H: System Requirements ResultsManager v2 is compatible with: MindManager Pro 7 build 7.0.429 onwards MindManager Pro 6 RC1-build 6.0.634 onwards MindManager Basic 6 RC1-build 6.0.634 onwards MindManager X5 Pro from build 5.1.220 onwards MindManager X5 from build 5.1.220 onwards ResultsManager should only be installed after MindManager is installed, otherwise some features may not be correctly configured. You can check your version of ResultsManager and its compatibility with MindManager by clicking the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager. You can also update your copy of ResultsManager from this dialogue. To update your version of MindManager, click the Tools tab | Product group | Updates while connected to the Internet. MindManager will download the latest update and install it. Other versions of MindManager are not supported by this version of ResultsManager. Appendix J: Installing and uninstalling When ResultsManager is installed, it automatically installs itself for all users. This is done by creating registry entries in HKLM, and relying on MindManager to copy these to HKCU. Although ResultsManager is an extension to MindManager software, it appears in the Add/Remove Programs dialogue as a separate programme and can be separately uninstalled. If you are re-installing ResultsManager, the installer can make a backup copy of the maps in the default Dashboards folder. This is useful if you have modified the default Dashboard templates, to avoid losing your modifications. You can allow the installer to make backup copies of your modified Dashboard templates before replacing them. Before you install again, you should retrieve your modified Dashboard template maps and re-apply the changes to the new Dashboards, or replace the new Dashboards with your modified versions. Please consult the Release Notes map and this documentation to determine whether your customisations are still valid. Previous filter behaviour will be preserved as far as possible but there may be some changes that require you to review your customised dashboards. To uninstall ResultsManager, do the following: Open the Control Panel on your system Select Add/Remove Programs Locate "Gyronix ResultsManager" in the list and click Add/Remove Note that if you have modified any Dashboard templates, these will be left behind after ResultsManager is removed. Uninstalling ResultsManager normally removes ResultsMerlin and the ResultsManager Ribbon Add-in (installed automatically for MindManager 7). You may need to refresh or redisplay the Add/Remove Programs dialogue to confirm that they have been uninstalled. If they remain behind, they can be manually uninstalled from the Add/Remove Programs dialogue. Appendix K: MindManager 6 and Categories From MindManager 6 onwards, the support for Categories as part of the Task Info task pane was discontinued. MindManager 6.0.664 (Service Pack 0) and above introduced legacy support for Task Categories information used by MindManager X5 and ResultsManager. This is implemented with Text Markers in the Map Markers set of a map, by creating a "Categories" marker group. However, the use of Text Markers has certain limitations. The limitations of using Text Markers in a "Categories" Marker Group in MindManager 6.0.664 & above include the following: If a new Map Marker set is applied to a map, existing Category information will be lost unless current label values exist in the Categories group in the new Map Marker set (which is not guaranteed) If a Topic containing Category information coded in Text Markers is copied from one map to another, then the "Categories" Marker Group may not be created in the destination map, causing loss of Categories information Map Parts containing the Categories Text Marker Group do not cause the Categories group to be created, causing loss of Categories information If a map that has been edited once with MindManager 6 is edited again with MindManager X5 Pro, then any changes to the Categories data will not be reflected the next time the map is edited in MindManager 6. To maintain the same functions of ResultsManager on MindManager X5 and 6, ResultsManager provides ongoing support for Task Categories, and will attempt to keep Categories and Text Marker information synchronised. Categories can still be entered through the ResultsManager Edit dialogue. ResultsManager also includes two workarounds to handle these issues: A backup of the Categories information is stored in a custom attribute in each Topic. If the original Categories data is lost for any reason, ResultsManager will recover the data from the last backup copy. This fix is transparent in use, but does means that wherever possible, you should use the ResultsManager Edit dialogue to edit activities if you want to ensure that Categories data is preserved. A new utility is included with ResultsManager for MindManager 6 and 7 to help restore lost Categories information. If you are missing your expected Categories in either the Dashboard maps, the on-screen display of Text Markers, or the ResultsManager Edit dialogue, then open the Project map that you suspect may have lost data, and click the Tools tab | Macros group | Macros | Repair Categories Data. ResultsManager will attempt to recover and repair missing Categories data and will allow you to make manual corrections where it detects a problem. Normally, you would only need to use this utility once, unless some later event causes loss of Categories data again. Frequently Asked Questions Installation and Licensing FAQ Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. What is the difference between ResultsManager v2 Standard Edition and Professional Edition? ResultsManager v2 Standard and Professional Editions are compared here. Whenever I click on an OK button, the License dialogue appears ResultsManager is asking for a license key to proceed ResultsManager is trying to tell you that your free trial period has expired, and either a license key has not been entered, or an incorrect key has been entered. Click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | Purchase license to purchase a license key for ResultsManager, or check that you have entered your license key exactly as supplied, with all punctuation and capitalisation correct. The capital letter "O" and the number zero "0" can be easily confused, for example. See also Purchasing a License. How do I purchase a license key? Refer to the section on Purchasing License keys. Do I need to re-install a licensed version when I purchase? No. There is only one installation version of ResultsManager; without a license key, it works for 28 days and then prompts you for a license key when you use it. To reactivate it, you only need to enter a license key. No new download is required. Some of the buttons and options are disabled If you are using ResultsManager Standard, some of the features are not enabled. ResultsManager determines whether to provide Standard Edition or Professional Edition functionality as follows: If a valid ResultsManager Standard license key is entered, Standard Edition mode is enabled. The buttons and selectors for ResultsManager Professional are greyed out. If a valid ResultsManager Professional license key is entered, additional Professional Edition functions are enabled. If no valid license key has been entered, and the 28-day trial period has not yet expired, ResultsManager works in Professional Edition mode. If no valid license key has been entered, and the 28-day trial has expired, then ResultsManager still claims to be the Professional Edition, but the OK buttons are disabled. You can still enter a license key in the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | Enter Key. Which edition of ResultsManager do I have? Standard Edition or Professional Edition are controlled by the license key. Click on the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager to check whether you are using the ResultsManager Standard Edition or ResultsManager Pro Edition: Help | About ResultsManager: Standard Edition Help | About ResultsManager: Professional Edition Where do I enter the License key? Click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager to open the About dialogue: Help | About ResultsManager Then click on Enter Key and enter your license key exactly as delivered. The text "Limited license, x days left" tells you that ResultsManager is operating in trial mode. Entering the License key Nothing happened when I entered my License key. Did it work? ResultsManager does not change "on the fly" from trial to licensed operation. It must restart to change to licensed mode. When you enter a license key, the license dialogue closes. Click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | Enter key to check whether the license key was accepted. If it has been entered correctly, the dialogue will say "Licensed version": License key correctly entered If the license key was not correctly entered, the dialogue will still say "Limited license - X days left". You should check that you have entered the key exactly as supplied, as it is case-sensitive. Can I upgrade from ResultsManager Standard to ResultsManager Pro? Yes, you can upgrade from ResultsManager v2 Standard to ResultsManager v2 Professional Edition by entering a valid ResultsManager Pro license key. You should check that any Options that refer to ResultsManager Pro only are correctly configured after entering your license key. Do I need to use MindManager X5 Pro to use ResultsManager? No, ResultsManager v2 will also work with MindManager X5 or 6. However we recommend MindManager X5 Pro or MindManager Pro 6, as these have many benefits if you are serious about capturing and visualising your most important information, such as integration with Microsoft® Office. ResultsManager is showing a "Compatibility warning" message. What should I do? Compatibility warning message If ResultsManager detects that you are using a version of MindManager that is either not supported (because it is too old), or not tested (because it is too new), it will display a Compatibility Warning message when you use it. Refer to the section on Keeping up to date. Can ResultsManager be used on a server? ResultsManager is not currently licensed for server use. It is designed for installation and use on a single user's machine. This may be supported in a future version. Please contact us if you need to run ResultsManager on a server. Where are the Dashboard maps installed? Currently, the Dashboard and example maps are installed in a subfolder called "My Dashboards", in the default maps folder configured in MindManager. So if you have configured your default map folder (in the MindManager button | MindManager Options) to be "C:\My Documents", then the dashboard maps will be in "C:\My Documents\My Dashboards". If you change the default maps folder after installing ResultsManager, then you should re-install ResultsManager. Do I lose my settings if I re-install ResultsManager? No. Uninstalling ResultsManager only removes the information that lets MindManager find it. It does not remove any of the option settings. When you re-install ResultsManager, it will check to see if you have edited any of the Dashboard maps, and will prompt before overwriting ones that you have customised. However, you should always make a backup of your master lists and any files you have customised before uninstalling or re-installing. Should I have read the "Read Me First" file? The Read Me First file contains information that might not be in the full documentation. If you encounter a problem, it's always worth checking the RMF to see if any newer information is available, especially known issues. You can read the RMF file after installation by clicking the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map. Editing Activities FAQ Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. There is a lot of detail to enter for an Activity! It will take me less time to just do it! First - congratulations; you have just re-invented David Allen's 2-minute rule from "Getting Things Done". If something will take less than two minutes to do, and you can do it right now, then just go ahead and do it instead of putting it on a list. However, remember that you don't need to fill out every field of every form. You can put in as much or as little as you wish, and ResultsManager will cope. The information entered about Activities is designed to help you review and access them later, when you need to. So if you are never going to review your activities by Area, then you don't need to put anything in the Area box when creating an Activity. ResultsManager also helps a lot by automatically inheriting information that is not defined. So the simplest way to create action items is to write the defaults just once in the Central Topic of a map, e.g. "Office" for the Context, and your name for the Owner. Then anything in the map that does not have a different context or owner will default to the ones in the Central Topic. So you can add Activities and only enter the name of the Activity, and they will appear in your Dashboards. How do I switch between Express mode and Power User mode? Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode to switch between Express and Power User modes. When you change modes, ResultsManager automatically displays the Options for that mode. Can I use Hyperlinks on Actions, Projects or Results? You can use Hyperlinks on Activity Topics in your project maps, but these Hyperlinks do not appear in the Dashboard copies of these Topics. The Topic Hyperlinks in Dashboard maps are reserved for linking to the original Project map, so that you can quickly return to the right place in the middle of a project map from the Dashboard. If you edit the Hyperlinks in the Dashboard map, ResultsManager may attempt to update the wrong Topic if you press F5 (MindManager Pro only) or use the Send Dashboard Changes command. Why is the "Purpose" text box sometimes greyed out? ResultsManager uses the Topic Notes feature in MindManager to store the Purpose for Actions, Projects and Results. The first thing to check is whether you have disabled the option to include Topic Notes in Dashboard maps. If you have, and if you are editing a Dashboard map, then the Purpose text box is greyed out since the original Topic Notes are not available in the Dashboard map. To edit the Topic Notes, click on the hyperlink in the Dashboard map and edit them in the original Project map. If this does not apply, then the other possibility is that ResultsManager cannot edit the current Notes. Topic Notes in MindManager can contain rich text features like bullet points, bold text, colours, Hyperlinks and so on. However, the ResultsManager edit dialogue will only support plain text in the current version. To avoid accidental loss of important information from the Notes (e.g. Hyperlinks), ResultsManager will only permit this text to be edited if it is plain text, and does not contain any rich text features. So if the Edit dialogue looks like this: Editing of Notes blocked because they contain rich text .. then this is because the Notes for this Topic contain features that ResultsManager cannot edit. You can edit these Notes using regular Topic Notes pane in MindManager - see the MindManager Essentials section. Tip: sometimes MindManager thinks that Notes are Rich Text even when you haven't used any features such as bullets or Hyperlinks. The workaround is to open the Notes window, click in it, and press Ctrl+A to select all the text. Then press Ctrl+Space to clear the style formats. Make sure you do this in your original project maps, and not the Dashboard maps, otherwise it will only reappear again. This usually clears any problem with editing text in the ResultsManager window. I get an error message "Dashboard editing is not enabled" If you get the error message "Dashboard editing is not enabled" when trying to edit Topics in a Dashboard map, there are two causes: You are using ResultsManager Standard Edition. Editing from Dashboard maps is only supported in the Professional Edition. Check which edition you are using with the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager. You are using the Professional Edition, but Dashboard editing is not enabled in the Options. Click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options, activate dashboard editing, then click OK. Does ResultsManager support recurring activities? Currently there is no automated support for recurring activities (e.g. something that happens on the same day every week or month). However, it is easy to keep track of recurring activities; as you complete them, simply move their start or due date back by a week or a month, and leave their status as incomplete. For example, you could add weekly and monthly reviews as regular activities. Can I track Activities that take less than an hour? Currently, MindManager does not allow minutes or fractions of an hour to be used in the Duration field. You can use a Context to label activities that will only take a few minutes see Tips and Tricks. How do I change an Owner name, Area, Category or Context? Currently there is no utility that will search all your maps and make a change to an Owner name, a Context, a Category or an Area. This is under consideration for a future version. If you need to change an existing name, then the easiest way to do this is to run create the Maintenance Dashboard, select all the activities that use the field to be changed, and edit them in the Maintenance Dashboard. The block edit feature in Power User mode will help with this. Then send the changes back from the Maintenance Dashboard to the original project maps. This is quicker than searching the individual project maps, or waiting for the name to appear in the regular dashboard maps. The Smart Map Part is not working (MindManager Pro only) When the "Activity" Smart Map Part is deployed in a map, the Edit dialogue should automatically open. However, if you install a MindManager Service Pack, you may find that the Smart Map Part stops working. This is a known issue. The workaround is to re-install ResultsManager so that it re-registers its Smart Map Part with MindManager again. There are no choices in the "Progress made" selection Under certain conditions, the choices available in the "Progress made" selector in the Activity Edit dialogue can disappear: No choices in the "Progress made" selection The cause of this is the lack of Map Markers in the "Task Complete (%)" group. The possible causes are The markers could have been deleted manually (which would be unusual), or It might be the result of applying a Map Marker set which does not contain these markers, or It is a known side-effect of creating new maps in MindManager X5 by breaking them off another map with the File | Send To | MindManager (as new Map) command. Some versions of MindManager lose the Map Markers of the parent map, or It may also happen if a MindManager 2002 map is opened with MindManager X5. The solution in all cases is to re-instate the Map Markers that represent percent complete for tasks, either by hand in the Map Markers task pane, or by applying another Map Marker scheme from the Template Organizer. Refer to the MindManager documentation for further information. What should I do with Completed activities? Typically, users want to keep the information about completed activities in case it is needed again, but they do not want it filling up their maps. Some solutions to this are: Archive a dated copy of the map from time to time, and delete completed items in the current version. Use the Map Marker filters to hide completed activities in the map. To do this: o Set Filtering so that selected topics are hidden o Check the "Task Complete" marker in the Map Markers task pane o Click the Filter/Select button and select all completed tasks o Click the Filter button to hide all completed tasks and their subtopics. Refer to the MindManager documentation for more information. Should I only have one Project per map? The fundamental rule is that a project cannot span more than one map, because you can't draw relationships (dependencies) to a task in a different map. For practical reasons, when sharing maps with others, it is often better to keep to one project in a map, so you can just share or send a single project. If ResultsManager does not find a "project" topic when it looks upwards from task topics (towards the central topic), it will assume that the central topic defines the project. If you want it to appear explicitly in the list of projects in dashboards, then it must also be a task (with a percent-complete icon on it). If you don't want it to be listed as a proper project, don't put a task icon on it. ResultsManager will not consider the central topic to be a project unless you have other action items in the map that are not under an explicit Project. You can have multiple projects in a single map by assigning the Project icon to any topic. You can even have projects "within" projects. ResultsManager will recognise them as projects if they have a percent-complete icon and the ResultsManager project icon on them. Dashboards FAQ Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. I get a message "No Activities found" when creating a Dashboard Try the following: Check you have not unintentionally disabled the ResultsManager Option for using Multimap links. This will prevent ResultsManager scanning linked maps. Click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options to check this. Check you have not incorrectly used the blocking Icon to block access to trees or Multimap links that contain activities. Check you do have some Activities in your map or maps, marked with one of the Task Complete Icons, through to . ResultsManager will only pick up Activities marked with Task Icons, and will ignore everything else. ResultsManager cannot find my Dashboard templates This can happen if you move the "My Dashboards" folder from its original location relative to MindManager's default documents folder. Ensure that the Dashboard and demonstration maps are in a folder called "My Dashboards" in the default documents folder configured in the MindManager options. Activities are missing from the Dashboard Check that you have specified some Activities in your map or maps, marked with one of the "incomplete" Task Icons, (new task) through to (90% complete). ResultsManager will normally only display incomplete Activities, and will ignore everything else. Check that you have entered your name in the box labelled "Me" in the ResultsManager Options dialogue, and this name matches the one used in the maps. Check that you have enabled the option "Activities with no Owner are mine" in the ResultsManager Options dialogue. Check that you have assigned yourself as the Owner of activities. The simplest way to ensure that all Activities in a map are yours are to select the Central Topic of a map, click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity, and select yourself as the Owner. This will be inherited by all other activities in the map, unless you define another owner on certain activities. Check that you have not accidentally left your name as the demonstration user name after using the demonstration maps. Check you have not disabled hyperlinks in the ResultsManager Options dialogue. Check you are not relying on Hyperlinks to other MindManager maps in the Topic Notes. ResultsManager only follows Multimap hyperlinks in the Topic, not the Notes. If you suspect that you are missing Activities from the Dashboards, you can troubleshoot it in two ways: Change to Power User mode and generate the Maintenance Dashboard from the same map. This will show exactly what information ResultsManager is picking up, without filtering things out. Look for activities assigned to incorrectly spelled names, or activities with no owner. The Notes in the central topic of a Dashboard map contain a list of the maps visited by ResultsManager. Check that it is sweeping the maps you expected it to. If some maps are missing, check that they have valid hyperlinks, and that hyperlinks are not blocked with the "Exclude from Dashboard" icon ( ). I excluded a map from the Dashboard, but it was still included If you used the "Exclude from Dashboard" icon ( ) to exclude a map from the dashboard, but its Activities are still included, then look for another link to the same map from elsewhere. The icon only disables an individual hyperlink, and the linked map can still be scanned if it is accessible through another unblocked hyperlink. Look in the Central Topic Notes in the dashboard map. The maps that have been scanned are listed, and the indentation shows you which parent map they were first referenced in. Look for the map that you wanted to exclude, and then look at the line above - this will be the map that contains the unblocked hyperlink. The Dashboard map is incomplete If MindManager encounters an internal error during the current session, even an error unconnected with ResultsManager, the transaction event may not fire and the Dashboard map will be left unpopulated. The solution is to close and restart MindManager, and create the dashboard again. If you see this error repeatedly, please contact us. How do I display things that I am doing for other people in the Dashboard? To make activities that have been delegated to you appear in the "Relationship Central" sections in the Dashboards, populate the Owner of the task as follows: Their name; Your name and check that you have enabled the "Automatic Delegation" dashboard option. ResultsManager will then show this activity in the Relationship Central sections of Dashboards as something that someone else is waiting for from you. How do I display things that I have delegated in the Dashboard? To make activities that have you have delegated appear in the "Relationship Central" sections in the Dashboards, populate the Owner of the task as follows: Your name; Their name and check that you have enabled the "Automatic Delegation" dashboard option. ResultsManager will then show this activity in the "Relationship Central" sections in the Dashboards as something that you are waiting for from someone else. I made some changes in the Dashboard, but the original project maps were not updated Sometimes, you make an edit to a Dashboard map (e.g. mark an activity as complete), but the next time you recreate this dashboard, the same activity is still shown as incomplete. This can be caused by a number of possibilities, shown in order of likelihood: 1. You used MindManager's normal edit commands (e.g. right-clicking on an Icon to change it), and forgot to run the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes after making changes to the Dashboard. 2. You made changes to an original Project map, but when you closed it, you did not save changes. This is easily done, especially if the map was opened automatically. 3. You made a change in the Dashboard using MindManager's normal edit commands, and you also made a different change to another copy of the same Activity in the dashboard. One of the changes will get overwritten by the other. ResultsManager does not synchronise multiple copies of the same Activity. 4. You made changes in the Dashboard, and you also made a change to the same activity in the original project map. Changes sent from the dashboard will overwrite changes made in the project map. 5. You are deferring the sending of changes, and forgot to run the Send Dashboard changes command after making changes to the Dashboard. 6. You are using shared maps, and the project map was already in use by someone else when ResultsManager tried to update it. You should have seen a warning message on the screen during the update process. 7. The changes were made to the original project map, but some error condition caused MindManager to close prematurely (heaven forbid!) and the changes were lost. Tip: it's a good habit to always run the Send Dashboard changes command before closing a Dashboard map. This will ensure that all changes are sent to the original project maps. The Dashboard map is taking a long time to create ResultsManager Dashboards are not created instantaneously - they can take up to a few minutes for large numbers of projects and maps. The factors that balance this out include: ResultsManager is not really designed for minute-by-minute refresh. Typically, you might generate your daily dashboards a couple of times a day You can work within your Dashboard maps and make modifications directly in them (edit activities and add new ones) without regenerating the dashboard or returning to the project maps. The original project maps get synchronised You can have several projects in one map. There is an overhead in opening and scanning each map Simpler dashboards are faster to create. You can create custom dashboards that list just the information you need for the range of use of the dashboard. There is no particular advantage in generating a dashboard that contains the next month's work every hour, for example .. and last but not necessarily least, the manual alternative is not really an option! It would take hours to create the same lists by hand, especially where projects are dynamic. Tips for speeding up Dashboard generation include: Dashboard creation might run more quickly if you cancel it, close MindManager (saving your maps), restart MindManager and try again. Sometimes MindManager gets tired and needs a fresh start. Try enabling Power User mode, then enabling pagination of Topics in the Dashboard Options (click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options | Dashboard Options). When large numbers of subtopics are added to a single Topic, MindManager can become slow to respond. Using pagination in Dashboard map will help improve performance. The option for showing empty headings in Dashboard maps can significantly slow down their creation by adding a lot of extra Topics to the Dashboard map. Turn this option off unless you really require it for diagnosis purposes. Try excluding Topic Notes from the Dashboard. Extensive Topic Notes can be very slow for MindManager to access. There is an option in the Dashboard Settings dialogue that ignores Topics Notes when building Dashboards. (This means you cannot edit them from the Dashboard map, though). Dated Activities are appearing in the calendar before they are due This can happen when a dependent activity has an earlier date. For example, if you have set a date of 10th September for "Complete report", and you have accidentally set a date of 25th September for the predecessor activity "Research info for report", then ResultsManager will bring the second activity forward to 10th September. Otherwise, you might only see something when it is too late and its date has passed. Activities are shown as prioritised in the Dashboard, when they have no Priority setting ResultsManager will automatically inherit Priorities from a parent Activity, where the parent either has higher priority. The logic behind this is that you risk losing sight of a high-priority item if the next action is not also the same priority level. Sorting in the Dashboard does not seem to be working If you use two successive sort-only filters in the Dashboard, the results might not be what you expected or wanted. For example, if you sort by priority, then sort by Committed / uncommitted, the resulting list will not have all the Committed items grouped together. A list can only really be sorted by one attribute at a time. The workaround is to use a displayed filter instead of sort-only filter, so that the groupings are explicit. How does Express Mode affect the Dashboard maps? When you use Express mode, the following option settings are automatically used, even if they are set differently in Power User mode: You are always prompted for permission to add new items to Master lists Confirmation messages are not suppressed Shared maps are automatically closed (Professional Edition only) Edit in Dashboards is enabled, with immediate updates (Professional Edition only) Warnings are issued for missing Multimaps Completed Activities are not included Empty Headings are not shown Funnel Timeline layout is enabled Activity settings are automatically inherited Automatic delegation of Activities is enabled Topic Pagination in dashboard maps is disabled (assumed zero) Where did the display of Parent item names go? It was a useful feature in Dashboards In ResultManager v1, the names of parent items could be prepended to task names in the Dashboard map, so that you could see where the task belonged. In ResultsManager v2, this is handled by adding Callout Topics to the Activities, for several reasons: Activities can now be edited from within the Dashboard map. This means that all their properties, including their text, must be identical to the original copy, so that editing does not introduce unintended changes. Callouts can be turned on and off in MindManager, so that Dashboard maps do not look too overloaded with detail. More than one generation of parent Result or Project can be shown, with Callouts on the Callouts. Parent Results and Projects shown in Callout Topics If you are not seeing the parent Result or Project Callouts in your Dashboard map, then either they are disabled in the Dashboard Details dialogue for this Dashboard, or you have Callout Topics hidden from view in MindManager (View | Show/Hide | Callouts). The latter is more likely, as this setting is remembered by each map, and is turned off by default in the Dashboards. I changed from "Result" to "Subproject" but I still see "Result" in some dashboards The option in Power User Mode to refer to Results as "Subprojects" only affects ResultsManager's own dialogues. Any fixed text in the Dashboard templates is not automatically edited. You can modify these texts by hand, by editing the Dashboard Templates. What does ResultsManager do with password-protected maps? If ResultsManager encounters a password-protected map while scanning for the Dashboard, it will prompt you for the password. If you cancel the password entry, this map will be excluded from the Dashboard. ResultsManager and 'GTD' FAQ Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. Must I be an expert in "Getting Things Done" to use ResultsManager? No. ResultsManager can be used without any knowledge of David Allen's "Getting Things Done". We recommend GTD as a powerful way to organise your information and commitments. ResultsManager gives you a way to use MindManager in this process. ResultsManager also helps you to use MindManager to implement other well-known methods. Will I learn the "Getting Things Done" process by using ResultsManager? No. We do not aim to teach the "Getting Things Done" process with ResultsManager, and recommend David Allen's books, seminars and other media. Refer to www.davidco.com for full details. I already use "Getting Things Done". Are there any benefits in using ResultsManager? Yes. MindManager and ResultsManager will help you to easily visualise projects and identify your key areas of focus. ResultsManager also lets you use GTD as a collaborative system, by creating individual dashboards for different users, from pools of shared maps or projects. Many people who use GTD have jobs where they must think, plan and take decisions. MindManager is a valuable tool for these activities, and ResultsManager extends its capabilities so that activities can be systematically tracked and shared. Is there a book I can read about "Getting Things Done"? Yes: David Allen's book "Getting Things Done" is published by Piatkus and is available via Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com. You can also download Chapter 1 as a free preview from the Gyronix web site at www.gyronix.com/GTD.php. GTD uses the term "Subprojects". Why doesn't ResultsManager do the same? "GTD" is just one of the solutions that ResultsManager delivers. It can be used for non-GTD applications, or as a document tracking system, issue database or more. So not all the terms we use are exclusively GTD-compliant. If you prefer to use "Subproject" instead of "Result", change to Power User mode and click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options. There is an option that will display "Subproject" in the dialogues. Microsoft® Outlook and PDAs FAQ Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. Does ResultsManager support Microsoft® Outlook? In the current versions, ResultsManager can integrate with Microsoft® Outlook through MindManager's link to Outlook (MindManager Pro editions only). You can synchronise ResultsManager activities in specifically-designed Dashboard maps using MindManager Button | Export | Synchronize Microsoft Outlook Tasks. Note that Outlook does not receive information about Contexts or Areas, and does not discriminate between Projects, Results or Actions. Does ResultsManager integrate with NetCentric's GTD Add-in for Outlook? Not directly. Currently, ResultsManager uses MindManager's built-in synchronisation with Microsoft Outlook. This only accesses common Outlook fields and does not interact with any special data used by the "GTD" Add-in. Solutions to this are under review. How can I turn an e-mail into an Activity? New action items often arrive in the form of e-mails. If you have MindManager Pro, you can select the mail in Outlook and click the toolbar button labelled "Export Selected items to MindManager". This will create a new Topic under the currently selected Topic. You can then click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity to turn this into an actionable item that ResultsManager can track. I already use Outlook for tracking my action items. What advantages does ResultsManager offer? ResultsManager allows you to visualise projects and automatically keep track of Next Actions. Visualising projects lets you focus on outcomes and achievements, which are more difficult to see when working exclusively with lists. You can also embed action items in documents such as brainstorm captures, meeting minutes, keeping them in the context of other information. In a future version of ResultsManager, we will provide more sophisticated integration with Outlook, allowing you to use Outlook for distribution of Activities by e-mail, and keeping the Task list synchronised with your activities. Can I import my Outlook Tasks into ResultsManager? If you are using MindManager Pro, you can use MindManager Button | Import | Import Microsoft Outlook Tasks to import Outlook tasks into a MindManager map. Task and category information is preserved, and you can then reorganise the map into projects and edit the activities further with ResultsManager. ResultsManager can then create a dashboard from this map. Can I synchronise a Dashboard map with Outlook? Yes, but the dashboard map must meet the following requirements: The dashboard template must be pre-synchronised with Outlook, otherwise the only thing that MindManager can do is re-export tasks to Outlook again. This causes duplication of existing tasks, because MindManager does not recognise the existing sync information in a task. The dashboard map must contain each task only once. Most dashboard maps will show a task more than once. For example, a next action might appear in the Calendar section, and also under the Contexts lists. If a newly-added task appears twice in a dashboard map, then MindManager will create two copies of it in Outlook at the next synchronisation. Dashboard maps that are designed for synchronisation with Outlook must always be designed so that each task appears once only. Can I synchronise an individual Project map with Outlook? Yes, but make sure that you disable the option for importing new tasks from Outlook, otherwise you will import everything else into your project map as well: Copyright © Mindjet LLC At the time of writing, MindManager does not remember these settings between uses, so you must re-establish them each time. Note that if you synchronise an individual project map with Outlook, you will not get the parent project name appearing as a ~Category value. This information is only created when ResultsManager creates a Dashboard map. I get a message about Outlook Synchronisation not enabled (ResultsManager Professional Edition only) Generating an Outlook Sync Dashboard without enabling support This happens if you try to generate one of the Outlook Synchronisation dashboards without first enabling the support for Outlook Synchronisation in the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options. Outlook complains about security when I try to synchronise it with MindManager Some versions of Outlook will display a warning message when another programme tries to access it. This is because it is common for viruses to use Outlook as a means of sending e-mails without the user's knowledge. Copyright © Microsoft Corporation To allow synchronisation to complete, check the "Allow access" box and click Yes. This can also be configured in Outlook's security settings. If this warning appears when you have not requested synchronisation with MindManager, then please ensure that there are no Gyronix email addresses in your address book, because we already receive enough virus emails and don't need any more. Tasks are duplicated in Outlook Tasks will be duplicated in Outlook if you forget to use the Send Dashboard Changes command after synchronising a Dashboard map. (This command is at the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes). When MindManager synchronises a map with Outlook, it writes special information to the Topics to record that fact that the task is now synchronised with Outlook. When synchronising a Dashboard map, this information is written into the Dashboard map. To transfer this information back to the project maps for use next time, changes must be sent back from the Dashboard map. Otherwise, the next time the dashboard is generated, the same tasks will appear to be unsynchronised with Outlook, and will be recreated in the Outlook task list, duplicating their previous entries. To clean up after this has happened, do the following: Close the current Dashboard map. In Outlook, delete both copies of all tasks that are duplicated. You may lose a little information, if you have updated tasks in Outlook but not synchronised them with MindManager. Regenerate the Outlook Synchronisation Dashboard map, and click MindManager Button | Export | Synchronize Microsoft Outlook Tasks. If MindManager complains that tasks have been deleted in Outlook, choose the option to have them restored to Outlook from MindManager. Finally, the most important part: run the Send Dashboard Changes command. Now the fact that these tasks are synchronised with Outlook will be recorded in the original project maps too, and the activities will not be duplicated in Outlook at the next synchronisation. Tasks get duplicated in the Committed dashboard Outlook has no mechanism for marking tasks as Committed or Someday-Maybe. This means that if you add a new task to Outlook, ResultsManager will regard it as a Someday-Maybe task under all conditions. If you are exclusively using the Committed dashboard for synchronising only Committed tasks with Outlook, then any new Someday-Maybe task should be deleted from Outlook once it has been synchronised with ResultsManager and the changes sent back to a project map. Otherwise, the task will be recreated in MindManager again, as it will not appear in subsequent dashboards since is it not Committed. Can I break the synchronisation between a map and Outlook? MindManager does not include a command for breaking Outlook synchronisation. However, the ResultsManager installation includes a utility to help manage maps that are synchronised with Outlook. What data gets synchronised between MindManager maps and Outlook tasks? Task information Synchronisation behaviour (via ResultsManager Dashboard map) Task name / subject Synchronised (plain text only) Task Notes Synchronised (plain text only) Task Owner(s) Not synchronised Start date Synchronised: is set to match the Due date if no Start date is defined Due date Synchronised: is set to match the Start date if no Due date is defined Task Percent complete Synchronised Percent complete Priority Categories Synchronised Synchronised, but "No Priority" gets converted to Priority 2 on a round trip Synchronised Context Synchronised via @Categories (ResultsManager option) Area Synchronised via ^Categories (ResultsManager option) "Committed" marker Action / Result / Project marker Hyperlink Parent Result or Project name Not synchronised Not synchronised: all activities appear as tasks in Outlook Not synchronised Visible in the ~Categories (ResultsManager option) but not synchronised both ways Other Outlook fields (e.g. Status, Contacts, Private flag) are not synchronised. I synchronised a dashboard map with Outlook, and it said that some tasks had changed on both sides MindManager's synchronisation with Outlook sometimes reports that a task has changed on both sides simultaneously, even when it hasn't. This is a known issue and is under investigation. After synchronising with Microsoft Outlook, my Activities are set to Priority 2 When MindManager synchronises tasks with Outlook, the Priority setting is transferred as follows: MindManager priority 3 or below corresponds to "Low Priority" in Outlook MindManager priority 2, or no priority, corresponds to "Normal Priority" in Outlook MindManager priority 1 corresponds to "High Priority" in Outlook This means that activities with no priority in MindManager will eventually become Priority 2 when synchronised with Outlook more than once. This is a known issue with MindManager's Outlook synchronisation feature. Can I send a Dashboard map to a PDA? A Dashboard map is no different to any other map created by MindManager. You can send it to a PDA using MindManager Mobile, so that you have your latest action items with you at all times. Alternatively you may be able to synchronise information on your PDA with Microsoft Outlook. The following data is synchronised between MindManager desktop and MindManager Mobile editions: Topic text Topic text Bold setting Topic text colour setting Topic text fill colour setting Topic notes (but no rich text markup, e.g. hyperlinks or text formatting) Priority setting numerical value Percent-complete numerical value Stock Icons, but not custom Icons. This means that the ResultsManager Project and Result icons are not synchronised, but other icons are. Other FAQs Click on the questions below to display the answers. If you don't see your question here, also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map, or contact us. What is the difference between "Express" and "Power User" modes? Express Mode has simpler dialogues and fewer options. Power User mode has more choices in the dialogues and options: Power User Mode enables access to the following features: Specifying the Start date when editing Activities Specifying Result activity types when editing Activities Specifying Committed or Someday-Maybe status when editing Activities Specifying Areas when editing Activities Specifying Categories when editing Activities Access to all Dashboards (not just the Express Mode dashboards) Extra support for MindManager's synchronisation with Microsoft Outlook Generation of dashboards from selected parts of a map Editing of multiple activities in blocks Optional disabling of Automatic inheriting of task information Optional disabling of automatic delegation of activities Optional suppression of extra messages and warnings Pagination of activities in the Dashboard maps My recently used maps list in the File menu is scrambled MindManager keeps track of recently used maps, and displays a list in the File menu so that you can reopen the latest ones without browsing. Unfortunately, when ResultsManager visits a series of maps during the creation of a Dashboard map, MindManager remembers these instead and overwrites your recently used list with the maps that ResultsManager has accessed. So each time you generate a Dashboard with ResultsManager, the recently used maps list is effectively trashed. The workaround is to make sure that you have links in the "My Maps" task pane for maps that you use frequently, so that you don't need to rely on the recently used list in the File menu. Refer to the MindManager documentation for details of using the My Maps task pane. When I press F1 for help, MindManager help appears as well This is a known issue that we hope to resolve in a future version. Just close the MindManager help window to see the ResultsManager help window. Can ResultsManager be used together with MiniProject from MindManuals.com? Yes. To use it with MiniProject, you should Disable the option for Automatic Delegation, and Disable the option for Automatic Inheritance as MiniProject does not understand either of these features. You should explicitly assign owners and categories as required per task, then MiniProject can be used to calculate schedules for project networks, and ResultsManager will use the dates that MiniProject calculates in its dashboards. MiniProject is less useful for scheduling Dashboards as they contain little information about the logic of projects (predecessors and successors), and usually only contain next actions. Can ResultsManager be used together with other Project Management applications? Yes. The primary difference between the way that ResultsManager normally interprets maps, and the way that other project-management tools understand MindManager maps is that ResultsManager uses the "Funnel Timeline" layout. This can be turned off so that ResultsManager does not calculate next actions from the subtopics of an activity. Change to Power User mode, click the ResultsManager tab | Options group | Options | ResultsManager Options | Dashboard Options and disable the "Funnel Timeline" option. ResultsManager will now behave as follows: Sub-topics of an activity are not its predecessors Activities at the other end of incoming Relationships are still task predecessors ResultsManager will not bring back dates of predecessors to match a deadline, allowing topics to be defined as "rolled up" or summary activities. ResultsManager has stolen some of my Icons! In addition to its own custom Icons for Projects and Results , ResultsManager also uses some of the stock MindManager Icons for its own purposes. These are: The "Meeting" Icon The "Hourglass" Icon , which ResultsManager renames as "Committed", , which ResultsManager renames as "Someday-Maybe" The "Exclamation mark" icon , which ResultsManager renames to "Deadline" The "No entry" Icon , which ResultsManager renames as "Exclude from Dashboard", and The "Magnifying Glass" Icon , which ResultsManager renames as "Dashboard Filter" When the Edit or Dashboard commands are used, ResultsManager steals these Icons and renames them if they are already in use in your map. You will find them in the Map Markers set after using the Edit or Dashboard commands. If you have already used these icons for other purposes in your maps, you will need to reassign them to avoid confusion. The Map Markers task pane in MindManager makes this easy. ResultsManager will not open some maps because "lock files" exist If you are using Shared maps in ResultsManager Professional Edition, ResultsManager will not open maps where a lock file already exists, because another user could already be editing it. If this is not correct, i.e. if a lock file has been left behind by an early termination of MindManager, or by failure to use the command File | Close and unlock shared map (when using private lock files, with MindManager X5 and 6 only), then the solution will depend on the locking scheme you are using: If you are using normal MindManager lock files, then the likely cause of orphaned lock files is that MindManager terminated unexpectedly in a previous session. Sometimes it does not clean up old lock files, so you will need to find and delete an existing lock file. Lock files are in the same folder as the map, are named "~$mapname.mmap.~$lock" and are hidden files. They normally contain the name of the user who created the lock file. If you are using ResultsManager's private locking scheme, the lock file will be in the same folder as the map, and will be named "mapname.mmap__lock.txt". These file contain the user name of the person who created the lock file, and the date it was created. You can either delete it manually, or simply open the map using the normal Open command in MindManager (which does not observe ResultsManager's private lock file), and then close it with the command File | Close and unlock shared map. (MindManager X5 and 6 only). ResultsManager does not check that the lock file is released by the same user who created it. None of the above applies if you are using ResultsManager Standard, or if you are not using any shared locations. The keyboard shortcuts do not work reliably (MindManager X5 and 6 only). For the keyboard shortcuts to work, the required command must be visible in the MindManager menu. This may not be the case if you have MindManager configured to only show the most recently used commands. To ensure that the keyboard shortcuts always work, click Tools | Customize | Options and check the option "Always show full menu". Try the demonstration maps ResultsManager includes a small set of demonstration maps that you can experiment with. This lets you try out some of the features before you start capturing and reorganising your own activities. But do note that other people's action items are far less interesting than your own - you will connect with ResultsManager quicker by creating your maps containing your actions and projects. The ResultsManager Wizard (ResultsMerlin) will personalise the demonstration maps for you by creating activities owned by your colleagues, and assigning current dates. Click on the ResultsManager tab | Help group | ResultsMerlin and select the Express Wizard. Answer the questions up to the point where ResultsMerlin asks you if you want to create a Map Central map. o If you have not done this yet, or if you want to overwrite your existing Map Central, answer "Yes", and ResultsMerlin will automatically include the personalised demonstration maps. o If you have already created a Map Central map and don't want to overwrite, then answer "No", and ResultsMerlin will allow you to create the demonstration maps separately. Answer "Yes" when it asks you if you want it to personalise the demonstration maps. When ResultsMerlin has finished, click the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard, select the Daily Actions Dashboard (Express User), and click OK. ResultsManager will sweep the maps connected to Map Central and will create a dashboard so that you can decide what you need to do today from these fictional projects. Daily Actions dashboard created from the Demo maps You can also try the other Dashboards on the demonstration maps, to see how different dashboards create different perspectives and analyses. You will need to change to "Power User mode" in the ResultsManager tab | Options group | User Mode to see more dashboards listed under the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Create Dashboard . With the Dashboard map in view, click the "Outline" button in the Action bar in MindManager to work in Outline mode: Dashboard map viewed in Outline mode If you accidentally trash your demonstration maps, you can recreate them by running the Wizard again at the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin | Express Setup Wizard. Tips and Tricks If you have some tips and tricks for using ResultsManager, we'd love to hear them. Use the ResultsManager Template map to start new projects To start a new Project map, click File | New | Open Organizer... | MindManager | Gyronix Templates | ResultsManager template (MindManager X5) File | New | From Styles and Templates... | Map Templates | Resultsmanager Template Map (MindManager 6) Note: the first time you use this in MindManager 6, the template will not be listed in your favourite map templates. To add it, click Add Map Template and browse to ...\ENU\Templates\Gyronix Templates\ then select ResultsManager Template Map.mmat and click Open. This template contains useful advice for organising and developing Project maps, and a link to an article explaining how it works. ResultsManager Project map template Use "In-tray" maps and Map Parts Often, you just want to add something quickly to your maps without trying to find the perfect location. Create an In-tray map using the template at File | New | Open Organizer... | MindManager | Gyronix Templates | ResultsManager In-tray (MindManager X5) File | New | From Styles and Templates... | Map Templates | Resultsmanager In-tray (MindManager 6) Note: the first time you use this in MindManager 6, the template will not be listed in your favourite map templates. To add it, click Add Map Template and browse to ...\ENU\Templates\Gyronix Templates\ then select ResultsManager In-tray.mmat and click Open. Link it to your Map Central and create a shortcut to it in the My Maps task pane, and you will never be more than one click away from having somewhere to quickly add a new idea. You should empty out the In-tray map during your review process. You can also use the In-tray technique within a map, as a place to hold undeveloped ideas that need some more work before they are integrated into the main map. Click the Map Parts task pane tab and open the "Gyronix" folder. Drag the In-tray map part into your map and use it to quickly add new ideas and notes that are relevant to this map. In-trap map part deployed in a map Like the In-tray map, you should clean up the In-tray map parts in your map during your review process. To support this, the In-tray map and Map Part are both assigned to the Categories "In-Tray*" and "Process", and will be listed in the "Sweep and Review Dashboard" and the "Sweep-up Dashboard" so that you are reminded to move them to the appropriate Project map as part of your review process. Use Outline view in MindManager for Dashboards Your to-do lists will look more like lists in Outline view in MindManager. Click on the Outline button in the Action bar to view a Dashboard map as an outline that you can expand and collapse. You can use the ResultsManager commands to edit or even insert new actions in Outline view. Using Categories Use Categories to distinguish between different sizes of project, so that you can review the right types of project often enough but not too often. For example, if you created Categories called "Major Projects" and "Minor Projects", then you could configure your review dashboards so that you reviewed minor projects weekly, and all projects monthly. Using Contexts Contexts are a powerful way to manage your time. Use them to identify: Activities that you can do in a few minutes, so that you can easily pick out a couple of short activities if you don't want to start something big just before lunch. Add "Quick" to your master list of Contexts and use it for anything that will take less than ten minutes. Things that you don't even want to think about until the next weekly or monthly review. Add "Weekly Review" and "Monthly Review" to your master lists of Contexts and use them to defer consideration of a new idea or opportunity until the next review. (You could use a bring-forward or tickler file date for the same purpose, but this is quicker). Using contact details in the Topic Notes Often, a Project or Result will involve making contact with a client or a service provider over a limited period of time. You might not add them to your PDA or Outlook Contacts folder, but you will want their details to hand each time you work on their activities. Put their contact details in the Topic Notes of the Project or Result that relates to them, then you will be able to see it in the Dashboard maps. Configure ResultsManager to add at least one generation of parent project or result to the activities in the Dashboard maps, then the Topic Notes for the project or result will always be in view for any of the activities in that project or result, and you can either hover over or click on the Notes Icon in the Callout Topic to access their details. Linking back to Map Central from Project maps If you use Hyperlinks back to your "Map Central" map from project maps, or Hyperlinks to higher-level project maps to aid navigation, then use the "Exclude from Dashboard" Icon ( ) to prevent ResultsManager finding its way back to Map Central. This will allow you to create Dashboards from selected projects or just a part of your overall workload. Otherwise, ResultsManager will follow the Hyperlinks back to Map Central, and the Dashboard will contain all activities no matter where you start. Don't use a Hyperlink to another map on the Central Topic of a map, as you can't block this without blocking the whole map to ResultsManager. Use a Context for things you are waiting for Define a Context, e.g. "Waiting For" for things that you are waiting for from others, if you don't want to put their name into your map. A different way to use Percent Complete Many tasks are not things that are big enough to be measured in terms of quarter-done, half done and so on. Try using the Percent-Complete to indicate the various steps a task might take instead. You can change the legends in the Map Markers for this. For example, a typical task that involves requesting something from someone else might go through these steps: New (not started) Reviewed and planned Requested (e.g. if you sent a question to someone) Acknowledged (e.g. when they accept your request) In Progress (they or you are working on it) Completed Only add Owners you will use frequently Only add the names of your most frequent contacts to your master Owners list. Otherwise, your list will be full of names of people that have only been used once. Use the option in the list picker dialogue to choose names from the current map when adding activities. Use a "Someone else" Owner Sometimes, you want to put actions on your "Waiting For" list without assigning them to particular people. For example, you might be waiting for a special offer on something you want to buy, or waiting for some good weather for an outdoors project. If you include an anonymous person called "Someone else" in your list of Owners, you can make them responsible for this kind of activity, so that it appears on your Waiting For lists in your dashboards. Use Owners, Contexts, Categories and Areas consistently If you are sharing maps with other people, then agree a set of Owner names, Contexts, Categories and Areas that are the same in everyone's map. This applies particularly to names; if they spell your name differently in maps that they edit, these Activities might not appear in your dashboard. Don't use commas in Owner names Try to avoid using commas in Owner names, e.g. "Smith, John". Although it is more convenient to have names alphabetically sorted by surname, MindManager uses commas as separators in the Resources field, and you will find that surnames and first names are separately listed in the Map Markers pane. Use multi-select to edit several Activities Use MindManager's multi-select features to select several Activities, then edit all of them in ResultsManager. Click on a Topic, then Ctrl+Click on others so there are several selected, then click the ResultsManager tab | Activity group | Edit Activity. ResultsManager Standard Edition will let you edit each one in turn, without having to reopen the Edit dialogue each time. ResultsManager Professional Edition will give you the choice of editing all the selected activities together, or editing each one in turn. Always run Actions | Send Dashboard changes before closing Dashboard maps It's a good habit to always run the Send Dashboard changes command before closing a Dashboard map. This will ensure that all changes are sent to the original project maps. (This command is at the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes). Customise your Dashboard maps for speed and performance Large Dashboard maps take longer to generate. Make sure that you are not scanning unnecessary maps, or old projects that you don't need to track any more. Disable hyperlinks to redundant maps with the icon. Check in the Notes of the Central Topic of Dashboard maps to see which maps it is scanning, and disable links to the unnecessary ones. If the Dashboard maps that you use frequently contain information you never look at, then delete it from the original Dashboard template. This will speed up the generation of Dashboards by only capturing the information you really need to take decisions or actions. Use the "Save and Add" and "Save and Insert" buttons in the Edit dialogue The Save and Add and Save and Insert buttons in the Activity Edit dialogue (Power User mode) make it very quick to enter a short list of actions that will be executed in sequence. 1. Insert an activity that represents the outcome of a short sequence of actions (i.e. a list). Add the word "(list)" in brackets at the end. Click the Save and Insert button. 2. Add the activity that is the first step, and click the Save and Add button to add the next. 3. Repeat 2 for all the steps in this list. 4. Click the OK button on the last step. Use the "Exclude from Dashboard" icon when updating from the Dashboard When you are carrying out a review from your dashboard maps, you can block off further scanning of specific projects by adding the "Exclude from Dashboard" icon ( ) to the Dashboard map, then clicking the ResultsManager tab | Dashboard group | Send Changes. This lets you quickly block further inclusion of old or unwanted projects or sub-projects. Other Stuff About Gyronix Gyronix The Old Dairy Eggpie Lane Weald Sevenoaks, Kent TN14 6NP United Kingdom Web: www.gyronix.com Sales +44 (0)1732 744499 or [email protected] Support +44 (0)1732 744498 or [email protected] Gyronix specialise in the application of MindManager software to everyday business issues, helping you to achieve a real return on investment through practical processes. Effective integration of any software tool into working patterns is a real part of the total cost of ownership, and Gyronix' experience can shorten this phase significantly. ResultsManager is part of the Gyronix Dynamic Planning System, a series of productivity tools and techniques designed for power users of Mindjet's MindManager® software. Please contact us to discuss tailored in-house seminars and MindManager-based solutions for business. Keeping up to date To check whether you have the latest version of ResultsManager, click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager, then click the Check for updates on-line button: Checking for the latest version of ResultsManager This will take you to the Gyronix web site. The page will tell you whether a newer version has been made available since you installed ResultsManager. You can also update MindManager with the Tools tab | Product group | Updates. Note that if you update to a newer version of MindManager by installing a Service Pack, two things may happen: You may need to re-install ResultsManager. Some editions of MindManager will delete information about previously installed Add-ins when Service Packs are installed. The new version of MindManager may have been released later than your version of ResultsManager. If this occurs, ResultsManager will display a warning message when you use it, advising you to update ResultsManager to ensure you are working with a version that has been tested with your new version of MindManager. Click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | Check for Updates on-line to get the latest version. Obtaining Support If ResultsMerlin (the ResultsManager Wizard) is installed, simply click on the ResultsManager tab | Options group | ResultsMerlin and select the Purchase & Support Wizard to get information about finding answers. ResultsMerlin will give you links to support and help resources, and will gather information that will help us to help you if you need to escalate a problem to your supplier or Gyronix. Before requesting support, please ensure that you are using the latest version of ResultsManager. Click the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | Check for updates on-line to check that you are up to date, and download & install the latest version if necessary. Also try the ResultsManager tab | Product group | About ResultsManager | View Release Notes Map to see if your problem is a known issue that is not in the main documentation. Please provide the following information when requesting support: o Your edition and version of MindManager (from the About MindManager o o o o o dialogue) Your version of ResultsManager (from the About ResultsManager dialogue) Your ResultsManager license key A description of the problem and when it occurs What you expected to happen, and what actually happened Screen shots pasted into an e-mail can also be very helpful Anything that you can tell us that will help us reproduce the issue will help us to help you. Please be as detailed as you can - descriptions such as "it doesn't do what I expected" don't let us help you very quickly! Disclaimers This ResultsManager documentation should not be regarded as a definitive reference on MindManager software. Information in this documentation about MindManager features may be superseded by newer releases of MindManager. If the ResultsManager documentation appears to give incorrect information about MindManager features, you should give higher priority to the MindManager documentation. It is possible that a feature has changed in MindManager since the ResultsManager documentation was last updated. The "DeSynchronise" utility for breaking Outlook Synchronisation between MindManager maps and Outlook relies on information that is not part of the published software interface for MindManager. Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that this utility operates correctly, it can be affected by unpublished changes to MindManager's internal mechanics, so Gyronix are unable to warrant correct operation. Specific terms and conditions for use are displayed when the utility is launched, and these terms are accepted by using it. While Gyronix make every effort to deliver high quality software and support, ResultsManager relies on the correct operation of Mindjet's MindManager software as its platform. Gyronix are unable to solve issues arising directly from MindManager. Gyronix reserve the right to change the way that ResultsManager works. Sometimes the documentation may lag behind minor updates. If you see discrepancies between the documentation and the software, please let us know. No official endorsement of MindManager or ResultsManager by The David Allen Company or its associates is implied. "GTD" and "Getting Things Done" are trademarks of David Allen Company and all rights are acknowledged. "GTD" is defined at www.davidco.com/what_is_gtd.php. The continued support for Categories in ResultsManager is not officially endorsed by Mindjet and does not commit Mindjet to ensure this workaround is sustainable in future versions of MindManager. If you contact Mindjet about Categories in MindManager 6, they will explain that they are replaced by Text Markers. ResultsManager License Agreement This is the license agreement that you clicked "I Accept" to when you installed ResultsManager. Presumably you won't need to read it again, but here it is anyway. PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION LICENSE AND WARRANTY Provided the User agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this Licence, on payment or waiver of the Subscription Fee the User will be granted the right to access the Licensed Material on the terms and conditions of this Licence. The terms of this License do not affect the User's statutory rights. 1. DEFINITIONS In this Licence, the following words and expressions shall have the following meanings: o 'Commercial Re-Use': External use for the purposes of monetary reward by means of the sale re-sale transfer loan hire or other form of exploitation of the Licensed Material o 'Effective Date': The date of full payment or waiver of the Subscription Fee o 'Licensor': The owner of Intellectual Property included in the software, who has licensed Gyronix to publish it o 'Subscription Fee': The one-off fee payable by the User in consideration of the grant to the User of the rights given by this Licence. The Subscription Fee may be waived without waiving any of the terms of this License o 'Licensed Material': All parts of the licensed software, whether or not protected by a User Identifier and Password o 'Gyronix Software': The self-contained package of software and information downloaded from the Gyronix Website, Affiliate's Website, or on media distributed by Gyronix or its partners or Affiliates. A subscription license for Gyronix Software does not include a license for any associated software (e.g. MindManager software). o 'Person': Any person firm company or legally constituted institution or organization or other legal entity o 'User': The original purchaser of the Subscription License 2. 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The Licensed Material is owned by Gyronix and/or its licensors, and is protected by International Copyright Law. 2.3 The User shall not use of the whole or any part or parts of the Licensed Material for any Commercial Re-Use or transfer transmit reproduce loan to any third party the Licensed Material except to the extent necessary to exercise the rights granted by this Licence. 2.4 The User shall not translate, reverse engineer, decompile, disassemble, modify or patch the Gyronix Software executable files in any way, nor cause or allow this to take place. 2.5 The User shall not install the Gyronix Software on a server system capable of multiple simultaneous use and shall not permit its simultaneous use on more than one system. 3. DURATION OF LICENSE This Licence shall commence on the Effective Date and shall continue for as long as the User has a current Subscription. In the case of Lifetime subscriptions this shall be for as long as the user makes personal use of the Licensed Material. 4. OBLIGATIONS OF GYRONIX Gyronix shall: 4.1 use all reasonable endeavours to ensure that the Gyronix Servers have sufficient capacity bandwidth and rate of connectivity to provide the User with a quality of service comparable with the current standards in the World Wide Web online information provision industry; and 4.2 provide to the User all information necessary to access the Licensed Material online; and 4.3 use all reasonable endeavours to restore access to the Licensed Material so soon as possible in the event of an interruption or suspension of availability. 5. OBLIGATIONS OF THE USER The User shall: 5.1 obtain at the User's cost all equipment and software together with all relevant software licences and expertise necessary to access and use the Licensed Material; and 5.2 keep the User Identifier and Password allocated to them by Gyronix confidential and not divulge them to any Person; and 5.3 seek independent professional advice on any matters that could cause loss or damage, and not rely exclusively on any implied expertise in the materials supplied by Gyronix 6. GYRONIX WARRANTIES 6.1 Gyronix warrants that all downloadable files or media provided by Gyronix are free from defects in material and workmanship, assuming normal use, for a period of 90 days from the date of purchase. 6.2 Gyronix warrants that the Gyronix Software will perform substantially in compliance with the descriptions supplied, taking into consideration that the actual use to which the Gyronix Software is put is outside the control of Gyronix. If the User is dissatisfied with the Gyronix Software, the User may return the product with evidence of purchase for a refund within 30 days from the Effective Date. In no event will such a refund exceed the Subscription Fee paid by the User. 6.3 Gyronix warrants that it has the right to license the rights granted to the User under this Licence. 6.4 The warranty set out in Clause 6 is in lieu of all warranties terms and conditions whether implied by or arising under statute or common law custom trade usage or course of dealing between the parties or otherwise all of which are hereby excluded to the fullest extent permitted by law. The Licensed Material is provided on an 'as is' and 'as available' basis and accordingly Gyronix does not give any warranty express or implied or make any representation: 6.4.1 that the Licensed Material will be suitable for any particular requirement of the User or for any particular use by the User; or 6.4.2 that Gyronix' online services will operate error free or without interruption or that any errors will be corrected; or 6.4.3 that the Licensed Material is complete, free of errors, accurate, or up to date; or 6.4.4 that any references to other materials which are outside the control of Gyronix (e.g. website addresses or other publications) will be available, relevant or as described at the time of publication 7. EXCLUSION AND LIMITATION OF GYRONIX' LIABILITY 7.1 Gyronix' entire liability to the User in the event of a breach by Gyronix of their warranty or of any other breach of this Agreement shall be to refund the Subscription Fee paid by the User. 7.2 Under no circumstances will Gyronix be liable for damages whether for loss of profits loss of business or of anticipated savings loss of goodwill loss of reputation loss or corruption of data (whether of the Licensed Material or of other data and whether caused by processing or transmission of it) or for any other type of special indirect incidental or consequential loss or damage. 8. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION The terms and conditions of this Licence are governed by English law and the English courts shall have jurisdiction. Copyright & Trademarks ResultsManager software and documentation is Copyright© Gyronix, 2003 - 2007. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from Gyronix. o ResultManager™, ResultsManager™, ResultsMerlin™, GyroQ™ and o o o o GyroActivator™ are trademarks of Gyronix MindManager® is a registered trademark of Mindjet LLC "GTD" and "Getting Things Done" are trademarks of The David Allen Company Microsoft® Outlook is a trade mark of Microsoft Corporation MiniProject™ and DecisionMill™ are trademarks of MindManuals.com Ltd All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners and are acknowledged. Index -AA: Glossary of terms 129 About "Getting Things Done" 19 Add Activities 35 Adding filters to Dashboard maps 115 Advanced topics 126 Assigning Categories and Areas 77 Assigning Contexts 70 Assigning Owners 73 -BB: MindManager Essentials 136 -CC: Menu commands and shortcuts Choose where to use ResultsManager 23 Committed or Someday-maybe? 63 Configuring the Settings 59 Copyright 206 Create a Dashboard 42 Creating a Dashboard 14 Creating and using Dashboards 176 -DDashboard configuration options 101 Dashboard templates and filters 113 De-activating Activities 80 Default Dashboard maps 92 Disclaimers 202 -EE: Dashboard Filters 143 Editing Activities 171 Editing Dashboard definitions 108 Editing multiple Activities 82 Entering Activities 12 -FF: Dashboard Report Keywords 159 Finishing the Edit 81 Frequently Asked Questions -GG. Dashboard Template Properties Generating Dashboard maps 89 Get in control of MindManager 22 Getting Started 7 Getting started in Express mode 10 Getting started with Outlook Synchronisation 121 -HH: System Requirements 162 How completed tasks are handled 125 How do you plan your day? 20 How extra information is handled 123 How ResultsManager handles synchronisation with Outlook 120 How the MindManager connection to Outlook works 119 -IInserting a new Activity Installation and Licensing 165 -JJ: Installing and uninstalling 163 -KK: MindManager 6 and Categories 164 Keeping up to date 200 -MManaging Dashboard maps 105 Microsoft® Outlook and PDAs 183 -OObtaining support 201 Other questions 189 Other Stuff Outlook synchronisation overview 118 -PPerformance 176, 194 Priority, Duration and Status 69 Project, Result or Next Action? 61 Purchasing License Keys 50 -RRegenerating Dashboard maps 91 Reports in Dashboard maps 117 ResultsManager and 'GTD' 181 ResultsManager License Agreement 203 ResultsManager Standard and Professional compared 48 Review the Implementation Plan 27 -SSetting activities as Lists 79 Setting start and due dates 64 Setting up your Master Lists 29 Speed 176, 194 -TTake Action 44 Tell ResultsManager who you are 25 Terminology Basics 24 The Edit dialogue The List Dialogue 142 Tips and Tricks Try the demonstration maps 192 -WWhat is a Dashboard map? 85 What is Express mode? 9 What is Power User mode? 51 What is ResultsManager? 5 What's new in ResultsManager v2? Working from your Dashboard 16 Working with Dashboard maps 85