![]() ![]() Category– Select an icon used for your type of task (I used □ for my 9 to 5 job, □ for my business, and □ for personal).Due Date – Every task should be given a due date when created (if viewing in the Today & Past Due filter, each new task will automatically add today for the due date). ![]() Name (untitled) – The name of your task.Every week I go through and move unfinished tasks ahead if possible so I can streamline my working time during the week, and note tasks that took me longer than expected Notion’s default and expanded view inside ⛰️ Daily Tasks Exploring the fields inside the database It’s allowed me to always be able to switch back/forth between the All Tasks filter (stressful, but necessary) to the Today & Past Due filter, so I only see what needs to be done today. Keeping track of my tasks from multiple categories and being able to filter them using Notion has been a dream. See my Notion Resources page for templates, guides, resources and more. If all you want is a solid task manager this Notion page/database template works perfectly on its own since it doesn’t rely on any relational databases This post is going to cover my ⛰️ Daily Tasks exclusively since it’s so powerful and fundamental to my day-to-day activities. The first thing I wanted to do with Notion was to build a to-do list for organizing and managing my day job ( □), business tasks ( □), and personal to-do’s ( □), in one place. The best way to describe Notion is by picturing Excel and Evernote merged together with a gorgeous user interface. I’ve been using Notion for about a year now and can honestly say it’s been the best thing for me in terms of keeping track of tasks, goal management, and so much more. ![]()
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