What is Contexts?
In task management, contexts are labels or cues that describe the situation, tool, location, energy level, or person required to complete a task. They let you filter and batch actions so you do the right work at the right time and place.
The concept of a context comes from productivity systems like Getting Things Done but has broadened: a context can be a physical location (home, office, grocery store), a tool or channel (phone, computer, email), a time window (morning, commute), an energy or focus requirement (deep work, quick task), or the person involved (partner, manager). Contexts can be explicit tags you add yourself or inferred automatically by smart tools from your words, schedule and habits. Rather than only organizing tasks by project or deadline, contexts help you see which tasks are actually doable right now given where you are, what you have with you, and how much attention you can give.
Usage example
Instead of scrolling a long list, you filter to the 'Phone' context and knock out all call-based tasks; or you mark 'Pick up prescription' with the 'Errands/On-the-way' context so it appears while you’re out.
Practical application
Contexts reduce decision fatigue by narrowing options to what’s actionable in the moment. They enable batching (do all phone calls at once), smarter scheduling (push errands to commute windows), and better notifications (alert you only when a task’s context matches your situation). For neurodivergent and busy users, contexts create predictable scaffolding—minimising overwhelm by turning a noisy brain-dump into clear, situationally relevant next actions. Modern AI can further help by detecting probable contexts from voice or calendar data and recommending the best next task based on where you are and what you’ve done.
FAQ
How are contexts different from projects or tags?
Projects describe multi-step outcomes (e.g., 'Tax Return'), while contexts describe the conditions needed to do a task (e.g., 'Computer', 'Errands'). Tags can overlap with contexts, but contexts are specifically about when, where, or how a task is doable.
How many contexts should I use?
Keep it small and practical—start with 6–10 meaningful contexts (like Phone, Home, Work, Errands, Low-Energy). Too many contexts recreate the same clutter they’re meant to solve.
Can contexts be detected automatically?
Yes. Modern tools can infer context from your words, calendar, location, and device usage. Automatic inference speeds capture and keeps tagging low-friction, though you may still want the option to edit or override.
Do contexts help people with ADHD or high distractibility?
Yes. Contexts make choices smaller and more concrete (do this now or later), which reduces overwhelm. Coupled with reminders and small, achievable suggestions, they support momentum and routine without heavy planning overhead.
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