Author Assistant 101: The Best Tool I Use to Collaborate with My Author
Hi, guys! Amy here, dreaming of all the tacos I'll be eating tomorrow on Cinco de Mayo. š®
Like Iāve said before, I spend most of my days in the elastic waistband heaven of yoga pants.
Itās a great time to be alive, folks.
As an author assistant (or a āvirtual assistantā as some might say), I can work remotely as long as I have a Wi-Fi/4G connection. My office has been a coffee shop, countless waiting rooms, lake shores, mountain tops, and even the beautiful parking lot of a 7-Eleven (glamorous is the life I lead).
āBut, Amy,ā you ask, āhow do you and J.T. stay on the same page if youāre working in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven and sheās (hopefully) not?ā
Fair question, dear reader. The simple answer is: the Internet is a magical thing.
The long answer?
During our tenure, J.T. and I have tried several organization tools and project management systems, programs of all sizes and stripes. Some were bare bones, some super robust. There's only one we still use.
I ā¤ļø you, Wunderlist.
Wunderlist is a cloud-based task manager that keeps our entire business running. Thankfully, it's not too robustāweāre not spending all our time organizing tasks without doing them (a problem with other platforms weāve used).
So why do J.T. and I use Wunderlist? A few reasons:
1. Wunderlist gives a birdās-eye view of every single project. At a glance, we can see each of our weekly and monthly to-doās, look at each projectās workflow, or refer to our database of easy-to-access team information.
2. It updates in real time. When J.T. or I add to the list, Wunderlist will send a notification to the other user so everybody stays on the same page.
3. It doesnāt give us data fatigue. Wunderlist has three levels of organization, which mirrors our workflow setup: Project ā> Tasks ā> Sub-tasks. After two years of working together, weāve discovered three levels of organization is perfect for us. Anything more, and we lose things.
This is how J.T. and I use Wunderlist as Author and Author Assistant.
We divide our business like so:
1. Weekly tasks (for each of us)
2. Monthly tasks (for each of us)
3. Reminders/Database (good for information to keep handy)
4. Staff Meeting Agenda
5. Project To-Doās and Workflows
As we go through our weeks, J.T. and I will dump items that arenāt time-sensitive and would be easier to discuss in person at our next Staff Meeting. During our Staff Meeting, J.T. and I go through the agenda weāve curated in Wunderlist. As we talk through each bullet, we can drag the item to the appropriate personās task list. After we plow through our agenda, we go through each task list and workflow, ensuring weāre on track to reach our deadlines.
Since we put our meeting agenda in Wunderlist, fewer things slip through the cracks. If one of us is traveling and we have to meet via FaceTime, the format of our meetings is the same. And if either of us moves to a villa in Europe (a girl can dream š°), J.T. and I can still conduct business the same way. Again I say: the Internet is magic.
Here are a few of my favorite Wunderlist features (I sound like a used car salesman, but I donāt careāthis is how much I love this thing):
1. The notifications I mentioned earlierāyou can receive an alert when someone else has added or changed an item
2. Star your high-priority items so they donāt get lost in the shuffle
3. See your starred tasks and projects due today or this weekāall at once.
Bottom line, folksāWunderlist is flexible, provides a birds-eye or granular view of your business, whichever you need. J.T. and I plan to keep this in our arsenal forever and ever.
Do you use Wunderlist? Which organizational tools are your favorites? Which ones should we try? Tell us in the comments!