If you've been following the site for a while, you know that I've been a MailChimp user since ... well, since the very beginning of my online adventure. Over time, though, things have started to get difficult. I mean, MailChimp is still cool and all, but sending my emails for free has become rather troublesome. Here's the entire story.
I've been doing some research lately, trying to find non-obvious marketing tactics and see how I can apply them to my business. Compiling this post took a lot of work, but I'm happy to finally share it with you today.
When you look at it, a to-do list shouldn't have a big learning curve. You should just be able to use it right away because in the grand scheme of things, the to-do list itself is not important. It's the tasks that are listed on it that are important.
A productivity tool does come handy. That's for sure. But which one to use? This is the question we'll answer today. Let's have a look at all 5 tools, their strong and weak sides, their purpose, their level of simplicity, their ease of use, their feature-richness, their GTD-friendliness, and their (assumed) target group of users.
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