I’m a professional organizer and I routinely give time-management advice to my clients who want it. But, as regular readers of this blog know, managing my genealogy research time is a work in progress for me. I struggle with staying focused, knowing what to work on and combating overwhelm.
That changed a little on Saturday. I was fortunate to be in the audience at the Genealogy Society of Southern Illinois’s annual conference. The speaker was D. Joshua Taylor, professional genealogist and truly organized person. Joshua has been doing genealogy research since he was 10 years old and had his first professional clients while he was in high school. He is the president of the Federation of Genealogical Societies and the director of family history for FindMyPast.com. He is paid to do genealogy research for others, but he still works on his own genealogy research on a regular basis.
Joshua gave four talks at the GSSI conference, all of them terrific. He’s clearly a very thorough researcher; I was very impressed with the tenacity that came through in his talks. He leaves no stone unturned in his research.
While all four talks were really valuable, one talk that really blew me away. It was The Modern Genealogist: Timesaving Tips for Every Researcher, in which he outlined how he stays happy and focused while exploring his roots. Here were my big takeaways:
- He works on only 1 to 3 projects/problems at a time, along 3 to 5 extended projects (brick walls).
- If he comes across something else he wants to check out, he just adds it to his project list to work on in the future. (The discipline of that amazes me.)
- For each research project, he sets a manageable goal and commits to a finished product, putting the research into some sort of meaningful form. I love that he knows what success looks like, in advance.
- He plans each research session before he starts.
- He writes a mini-research report for each research session, even when he’s doing it for his own research.
- He reviews his research log every month or two to see what he’s missed and what he can apply to other families.
One benefit to working on just a few projects at a time, he said, is that you have a fighting chance of completing them. “I would rather leave behind 3 to 5 completed projects than 50 started, but not completed, projects,” he said. I was impressed that such a young man (I think he’s about 30, if that) thinks about his legacy–that’s probably a byproduct of being a genealogist, isn’t it?
When I got home from the conference, I immediately identified the three projects I’m allowing myself to focus on at this time. It’s been absolutely liberating–I don’t have to try to figure out what to work, which makes it much easier to get started. I will keep you posted how this all plays out, but I’m feeling very good about following Joshua’s excellent advice.
One other mind-blowing revelation at the conference was that Joshua and I are cousins. I’m going to repeat that, because it’s so amazing. Joshua and I are cousins. Our common ancestors are my third great grandparents, Joseph Price (1820-1904) and Mary Puffenbarger (1823-1896). (It’s Mary’s grave that I used aluminum foil to read in my blog post Reading hard-to-read gravestones.) How did I discover that? Like many good genealogy lecturers, Joshua used his own research in examples. In his very first talk of the day, he mentioned Joseph and Mary, much to my excitement. Joseph Price is one of Joshua’s brick walls, so it’s conceivable that I might, at some point, be able to give him a hand. That would be a dream come true!
Hazel Thornton says
How fun is that? That you are related! Good advice, thanks.
Janine Adams says
I know, it was a real thrill!
Vickie Sheridan says
He was an amazing speaker with lots of practical ideas. I was rereading my notes today and now I need to choose 3 problems! So many to choose from! It is still so amazing that you are related….so cool. Enjoyed our talks this weekend!
Janine Adams says
Vickie, I’m so grateful to you for telling me about the GSSI conference last year. It was great to spend time with you!!
Leslie says
Thanks! Today I really needed that.
Janine Adams says
You’re welcome, Leslie! Thanks for your comment.
Marion says
That makes total sense and wish I had applied this to my research over the last 6+ years! It will certainly be being applied from now on starting with my session today! Thank you!
Janine Adams says
You’re welcome, Marion. Thanks for commenting!
K says
So you’re saying you have a professional researcher…in fact the prez of the Federation…fully invested in your personal ancestry?!? Girl, you have it made on that line.
Janine Adams says
Oh my gosh, I was so excited when I pinpointed, early on in his talk, that we were related! There’s a brick wall for him on that line and I would be so incredibly gratified if somehow I were able to help him too!
Anne says
Thanks for sharing this summary of his presentation! I appreciate you sharing these tips for those of us who couldn’t attend in person. I’ve heard D. Joshua Taylor speak at the New York State Conference, and he is a great presenter. That’s so exciting that you are related!
Janine Adams says
You are welcome! I agree that Josh is a great speaker–I’d listen to him again in a heartbeat.
Kathy S. says
I heard him speak in the spring at our local genealogy conference, and he gave the same presentation, which was great. The hard part is actually doing what he suggests! I was working on some research last night and realized how many “open” projects I’ve got right now. Ridiculous! But, how do you decide which ones to put aside? That’s tough.