

Your tags, née contexts, can now double up or triple up, so you can have an item that is both “Office” and “Today”, or “Home” and “Quick”. This is most people’s first workflow question about OmniFocus 3. What tags are worth adding to my contexts? The Top Ten Workflow Questions To Ask Now that OmniFocus 3 is On Your Mac 1. Or, at least, how you can have less than 13 overdue items at once. Look critically about how you’re organizing your work, how you could do better work, and how you too can find your garden utopia of productivity. Pull things apart, try some new approaches on for size. Yes, summer is over, fall has fallen, and it is an excellent time to ask some hard questions and shake up your task management.

What we need instead is OmniFocus 3, a tasty beverage, and the willingness to blow up our old workflows. It’s all right, we can get through this together.


Together, these three changes make OmniFocus 3 so much more flexible that it’s time to take a long, critical look at your workflow. This makes it more likely to be a place you can spend most of your day. OmniFocus Pro’s perspective editor now lets you configure some incredibly useful views.
#MU OMNIFOCUS FOR MAC JUST STOPPED WORKING UPDATE#
While this update offers a number of UI updates and features, the soul of the release is that it now supports a cornucopia of new workflows that weren’t previously possible to set up in OmniFocus 2. That’s why I am redonkulously excited that OmniFocus 3 is now on the Mac. Sure, the iOS version is great for capturing and occasionally checking off tasks, but the Mac is the altar at which I plan, organize, and execute my work. If you’re like me, you depend on OmniFocus for Mac. It assumes you’re familiar with OmniFocus, the whiz-bang task manager for iOS and the Mac. This article was originally written for Inside OmniFocus.
