How Adobe Principal Designer Khoi Vinh Gets Things Done
Khoi Vinh doesn't believe in coffee
After 25 years in digital design, Khoi Vinh is still pushing creative boundaries. As a Principal Designer at Adobe, he was named one of Fast Companyās 100 Most Creative People in Business in 2019 for his pioneering work bringing voice interface tools to designers. Before Adobe, Khoi served as Design Director at both the New York Times and Etsy. Heās also a huge movie buff (he watched no less than 201 movies in 2018) who writes about film, technology, and design on his long-running personal blog, subtraction.com. His most recent creative endeavor: Hosting the design storytelling podcast Wireframe, a collaboration by Adobe and Gimlet Creative.Ā Ā Ā
Khoi also happens to be one of the earliest adopters of Todoist, writing about the app back in 2007 when it was still just a single-platform app built by a one-man ācompanyā. Today he lives in Brooklyn, New York with his wife, daughter (age 9), and twin sons (ages 6). He still uses Todoist.
In this productivity profile, Khoi walks us through his typical workday including a morning routine without breakfast or coffee, his strategies for carving out time for ādeep workā as a manager (āyou have to get craftyā), and how heās managed to build a 614-day streak of completing at least 6 Todoist tasks per day.Ā
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Early rise & RSS, hold the coffee
I wake up as late as I can, which is rarely later than 6:30 am. I have young kids, but even before the kids came along, I had a dog, so Iāve been waking up before 6:00 am for so long that my body often just wakes me for no reason at, say, 5:00 am, which is what happened today.
I often spend a bit of time catching up on various blogs and news sites via Fiery Feeds, an app on my iPad. Itās a bit archaic to still use RSS, but it works very well for me. I can stay current with certain sources I value and it keeps me off of social media. I try to spend as little time on social media as I can.
I get about ten minutes to myself and then my wife and I get my three kids dressed, fed, ready for school, and out the door. Their school is not in our neighborhood, so that means we take a short bus ride to the subway. It makes for long mornings.
I stopped eating breakfast about a year ago. I found that I didnāt really need it, and it gives me some time back in the morning. I also do not drink coffee. Except for a brief flirtation with it when I was in my early twenties, Iāve never found it to be particularly enjoyable or necessary. I guess Iām lucky that I have enough natural energy to never feel the need for coffee, but I also just think coffee is a total scam that weāve fooled ourselves into believing is an essential staple.
Catching up on the commute
After I drop off my kids at school itās a short walk back to the subway, which I take from Brooklyn into Manhattan where Adobeās offices are. Iām usually listening to podcasts as I walk, and when I get on the train I switch to music while I start reading on my phone. Usually I read the latest issue of The New Yorker when it comes out on Monday mornings. After a day or two when Iāve finished that, I switch to books or, occasionally, reading something on my constantly growing but infrequently visited Instapaper backlog.
I like to get off the subway a stop or two before my destination and walk the rest of the way while listening to podcasts. Iām a big fan of podcasts by the wayāin fact, the work Iāve done as host on āWireframe,ā which is a show where we tell deep narratives about the world of design, is some of the stuff Iām proudest of lately.
Productivity wise, I often add new tasks to Todoist in the mornings, because a lot of them seem to occur to me during that part of the day. I try to capture them as soon as I think of them. If itās not a convenient moment, Iāll sometimes actually mentally āwrite them outā so that I can remember them more easily when I do get a chance to add them. That could happen anytime between waking up and sitting down at my desk at the office, and always on my iPhone.
Khoi's to-do list on Todoist for iOS.
Opting for the office
Adobe does make it easy to work from home, but I try not to do that more than once a week because I find the face time with people in the officeāand the more reliable wifi ā makes my job a lot easier. However, if I have a day where Iād just be on video calls all day anyway (there are a lot of video calls in a company where teams are spread all over the globe) I tend to work from home. Itās also not unusual that Iāll have conference calls that are scheduled for late afternoon Pacific time which means early evening in New York, so Iāll either stay home all day or leave the office early and do those from home, so that I can be around for my family instead of commuting home at 8:00 pm or 9:00 pm. My mornings at home are not much different from the office except that Iām such a neat freak that I usually canāt get started on work until Iāve cleaned up all the dishes and mess from breakfast first.
Unless I have meetings elsewhereāwhich is about half of the timeāI get to the office between 8:30 am and 9:00 am. Thatās really nice because itās very quiet; not only are most people not in the New York office yet, but itās at least two or three hours before Adobeās west coast offices wake up. So Iām often very productive at that time.
The very first thing I do when I sit down to work is review all of my tasks in Todoist. I create a task for everything in Todoist, so I usually have at least two dozen items that Iām looking at for any seven-day period. It also means that every morning there are tasks that I didnāt accomplish from the previous day. Thatās never concerned me, because whatās important to me is that theyāre visible and in my line of sight. Rather than being obsessive about finishing everything, Iāll reschedule those tasks, move them to today or to further out, to a more realistic point in time for me to tackle them
Khoi's Next 7 Days view on Todoist for Mac
My days are predictable in that thereās usually some combination of lots of meetings and running around town, but rarely in a recognizable pattern. And then thereās all the travel I do, too, whether itās to Adobeās San Francisco office or to some conference or to visit some customer, I end up traveling quite a bit. My calendar is basically an intricate puzzle.
I lead the design team building Adobe XD, our new design/prototyping/collaboration tool for people who make apps, websites, and all kinds of digital products. So I talk a lot with the designers on that team and check in on their progress. I also spend a lot of time with the XD leadership teamāthe business management, product management, engineering management, marketing management teams, basically. And when Iām not in the office, Iām meeting customersāother designers!āwhich is the funnest part of the job. Getting to hang out with people who are interested in my passion, design, and who are diving super deep into various aspects of it that Iām often just barely familiar with is incredibly fun.
Iām a heavy, heavy Todoist user. I open Todoist countless times a dayāon my iPhone, my iPad, and my Mac. My approach is to capture everything I want to do. As soon as I think of it, I add a task and assign a due date.
I literally couldnāt do my job or even manage all the business of being a fully functioning parent and spouseāschool, playdates, anniversaries, date nights, housework, home contractors, whateverāwithout Todoist.
Keeping productivity simple
I donāt really have a productivity method. All I do is capture tasks, assign a date to them, then try to cross them off as I get them done. When I donāt get something done on its due date, I move it forward. Thatās it. I find it works great.
I look for blocks of time on my calendar that I can cordon off for ādeep workā. Sometimes Iāll move around meetings to create longer contiguous blocks, and then Iāll create a meeting called āDo Not Bookā or, if I suspect someone will ignore that, Iāll name it something like āCollaboration Sessionā or āResearch Review.ā You have to get crafty.
Khoi blocks out time on his calendar for deep work.
For me, getting focused is about making the time. If I can clear my schedule, and I can sit down at my deskāpreferably in my home officeāI have no trouble focusing. Occasionally, I get more distracted than I would like by news headlines or social media, but Iāve been steadily weaning myself off the latter for a few years and now its not a real problem. I just need a block of time, some headphones, and all my stuff. When you have so little focus time, itās easier to concentrate when you get it.
When I get into a deep work mode, I usually listen to music. But my musical tastes are quite unfashionable, Iām afraid. Itās usually pretty drone-y or atonal, or itās in the ballpark of some long disgraced trends, like psych rock or glam or whatever. Basically, I just sort of like what I like and have no idea whatās popular with the young people todayāor with anyone, to be honest.
Aside from lunch, I rarely take breaks. Thereās just too much to do during the day, sadly. Iām also trying to optimize for my time at home with my family. So Iād rather power through and finish all of my commitments for the day an hour earlier than I would if I took a bunch of breaks. That extra hour with my wife and kids is invaluable compared to the break time.
Balancing profession and parenthoodĀ
I sometimes leave work earlier, but usually Iām out by 6:00 or 7:00. It is helpful for me to stay loosely up to date on email until about 9:00 at night, because things are still happening on the west coast and I can be more efficient the next day if I get them sorted out as they happen. But I donāt often find myself with a huge chunk of labor to be lifted after dinner.
I want to do a good job at work and really make a difference at Adobe, at what weāre building and making life a little bit better for our customers. At the same time, I want to have a happy home life and be there for my wife and be a very present dad to my kids. So, I do strive for a balance and itās just hard. For the most part I make it work. The times it doesnāt is when I have to travel, which is too often for my taste, but less often than I know a lot of people in tech have to go on the road. So overall, I feel pretty balancedāand lucky.
Powering down with family and film
My kids have an evening routine, and Iām kind of beholden to it. Bedtime starts at 7:00 pmātheoretically but as they get older that slips more and more frequentlyāand it often takes them a while to fall asleep. So on nights when Iām on bedtime duty my time is not my own until 8:00 pm or sometimes as late as 9:00 pm or 9:30 pm. After that, my wife and I spend some time together, either eating late if we didnāt manage to get dinner in beforehand, catching up with each othersā lives, or watching a movie together..
Iām a massive movie fan. I just like watching anything and everything. I like new movies and Iām fascinated by movie historyāanything that came before, even if it was just a decade ago. I also log everything I watch over at Letterboxd, and then write monthly round-ups of what I saw on my blog.
Khoi keeps track of all the movies he watched on Letterboxd.
My wife tends to fall asleep a little before I do, so I end the night catching up on various bits of work or personal business on my iPad before turning in around 11:00 pm or so.
If I remember, Iāll do one last review of my Todoist tasks to make sure that I havenāt forgotten something to add or neglected to check off something I finished. Iāve become kind of ridiculously enamored with Todoistās Karma system which keeps a running record of my total completed tasks. Iāve got a running streak of almost six hundred consecutive days of completing at least six or more tasks per day in Todoist.
Khoi's 614-day task goal streak and counting...
I want to make sure I get credit for every one of them because Iām this close to reaching the nextāand highestāākarma level,ā which apparently less than 1% of Todoist users have ever achieved, from what I understand. I think thatās somewhere around 16,000 or so completed tasks in Todoist. So yeah itās all a bit silly because thereās really no reward for getting to that highest tier (is there?) but hey itās working for me, so I canāt complain.
I usually get to sleep too late.
Update: Since the writing of this profile, Khoi has reached the final karma level, Enlightened. As of publish, his daily task goal streak continues at 625 days.
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Becky Kane
Editor, Doist
