Todoist For Google Calendar



  1. Todoist Calendar View
  2. Todoist Google Home

Notion helps me break down each goal, then I can move those tasks into Todoist for scheduling. I usually throw all the tasks into Todoist first, then go down the list and set due dates for them. Each of my Todoist projects is synced to a matching calendar (in GCal). For example, all the tasks in my 'school' project are synced to my school calendar. Google Calendar is one such service. Google Calendar is the most popular calendar service and, if you are a Todoist user, integrating Todoist with Google Calendar allows you to bi-directionally sync your Todoist tasks with your Google Calendar. This guide will teach you how to do it quickly and easily.

ToDoist + Google Calendar Integration SetuP

3/20/2018

This tutorial shows you how to set up the two way sync between ToDoist and Google Calendar. This works great as an online planner calendar.
For years I've been looking for a system that works the way that this does! Finally, a software has met this major productivity need. The calendar layout allows a clean to do list layout spaced out by time like the half-hour by half-hour bullet journal type planners I used to use. With this digital version though, it's accessible everywhere (no forgetting my notebook!) and it's easy to move things around.
If you don't want to watch the video, below are the key steps to making this work.

STEP-BY-STEP TODOIST INTEGRATION WITH GOOGLE:

First log into your Todoist account. You DO need to have a premium account to have access to this feature.

As much as I would love it if Todoist paid me to say that... they don't.
​It's still one of the best purchases I've made online and now my employer pays for a business account that includes Premium features.

In the top right, you'll find your menu. It looks like a gear.
Under this menu, click on the settings. It also looks like a gear.
Now, down at the bottom of another menu you'll find the Integrations tab. Not the gear this time.
You'll see different integration options on this page, but the only one we're concerned with is Google Calendar. The others are pretty cool too, but don't offer the 2-way updates that Google + Todoist does. Click the connect button.
Another page will pop up and prompt you to sign in with your Google Account. If you don't have one, then this would be a good time to create one. (It's 2018, how do you not have a Google account yet?)
This will allow Google to communicate with Todoist and for Todoist to communicate with Google. Make sure you're signing in with the account linked to the Google Calendar you want to use!
Once the sync happens-- which can take a few minutes if your internet is slower-- the menu shown below will pop up.
The 'Pick a calendar' question is asking where Todoist should send tasks. Google Calendar allows you to compile multiple 'calendars' into one dashboard. In the example below, prioritydigitalservicesprod@gmail.com is the base calendar attached to that account. You may see other options there as well.
​I find it best to select Todoist (new) to create a separate calendar for your to do list. That way you can toggle it off and on at will.
The rest of the settings are best to keep at the default option. You can always come back and change these later.
The bottom one is very important. You need to tell Google what to do when it receives tasks without a due time. I select 'should be synced as all day events'.
Once you hit connect, you can go over to Google and should see it populated with tasks. This assumes you've put tasks into Todoist already.
If your tasks don't have specific due times set to them, the calendar will look like the screenshot below. This isn't very useful as it doesn't sort them any different and you can't move them around.
Go back over to Todoist and assign due times. This is a good habit to get into with EVERY TASK. These shouldn't be the actual time that task is due, but rather when you plan on doing it.
Simply typing in 'at __:__PM' will assign the task a due time. Make sure to hit save!
Now your calendar should start looking a little more filled out. You'll notice that you can click and drag tasks around on your calendar and it will automatically update those tasks in both Todoist and Google. Careful to let each movement save before moving onto the next one.
I keep all my tasks that I'm not going to get to this week in the Saturday column. That way at the end of the week, I can zoom out to the Month view of Google Calendar and pull tasks from Saturday to the next Sunday. Then I go back to the week view and can plan out the week from those tasks in the Sunday column.

There's a lot of tricks to getting the most out of Todoist. This integration setup should get you on the right path.
Setting specific due times instead of having vague ideas of what you're going to do in a day is a huge step in the right direction. Although some days are more productive than others, my productivity has skyrocketed since I started using this system.
Comment down below if you have any questions I can help with. Thanks for reading.

Leave a Reply.

  • Hi guys, this may be somewhat a weird question but I'd love to know if it's possible. I have 3 calendars in my google account linked to projects in Todoist, one of which is an appointments and availability schedule type thing that automatically creates Todoist tasks based on my scheduling software (currently Setmore), which also uses Google 2-Way sync.
  • So, if you’ve set an event in Google Calendar, it can be added to a task list on Todoist, and a task with a due date on Todoist can be directly added to the calendar.

Todoist Calendar View

Todoist For Google CalendarTodoist

Todoist Google Home

ToDoist + Google Calendar Integration SetuP

3/20/2018

This tutorial shows you how to set up the two way sync between ToDoist and Google Calendar. This works great as an online planner calendar.
For years I've been looking for a system that works the way that this does! Finally, a software has met this major productivity need. The calendar layout allows a clean to do list layout spaced out by time like the half-hour by half-hour bullet journal type planners I used to use. With this digital version though, it's accessible everywhere (no forgetting my notebook!) and it's easy to move things around.
If you don't want to watch the video, below are the key steps to making this work.

STEP-BY-STEP TODOIST INTEGRATION WITH GOOGLE:

First log into your Todoist account. You DO need to have a premium account to have access to this feature.

As much as I would love it if Todoist paid me to say that... they don't.
​It's still one of the best purchases I've made online and now my employer pays for a business account that includes Premium features.

In the top right, you'll find your menu. It looks like a gear.
Under this menu, click on the settings. It also looks like a gear.
Now, down at the bottom of another menu you'll find the Integrations tab. Not the gear this time.
You'll see different integration options on this page, but the only one we're concerned with is Google Calendar. The others are pretty cool too, but don't offer the 2-way updates that Google + Todoist does. Click the connect button.
Another page will pop up and prompt you to sign in with your Google Account. If you don't have one, then this would be a good time to create one. (It's 2018, how do you not have a Google account yet?)
This will allow Google to communicate with Todoist and for Todoist to communicate with Google. Make sure you're signing in with the account linked to the Google Calendar you want to use!
Once the sync happens-- which can take a few minutes if your internet is slower-- the menu shown below will pop up.
The 'Pick a calendar' question is asking where Todoist should send tasks. Google Calendar allows you to compile multiple 'calendars' into one dashboard. In the example below, prioritydigitalservicesprod@gmail.com is the base calendar attached to that account. You may see other options there as well.
​I find it best to select Todoist (new) to create a separate calendar for your to do list. That way you can toggle it off and on at will.
The rest of the settings are best to keep at the default option. You can always come back and change these later.
The bottom one is very important. You need to tell Google what to do when it receives tasks without a due time. I select 'should be synced as all day events'.
Once you hit connect, you can go over to Google and should see it populated with tasks. This assumes you've put tasks into Todoist already.
If your tasks don't have specific due times set to them, the calendar will look like the screenshot below. This isn't very useful as it doesn't sort them any different and you can't move them around.
Go back over to Todoist and assign due times. This is a good habit to get into with EVERY TASK. These shouldn't be the actual time that task is due, but rather when you plan on doing it.
Simply typing in 'at __:__PM' will assign the task a due time. Make sure to hit save!
Now your calendar should start looking a little more filled out. You'll notice that you can click and drag tasks around on your calendar and it will automatically update those tasks in both Todoist and Google. Careful to let each movement save before moving onto the next one.
I keep all my tasks that I'm not going to get to this week in the Saturday column. That way at the end of the week, I can zoom out to the Month view of Google Calendar and pull tasks from Saturday to the next Sunday. Then I go back to the week view and can plan out the week from those tasks in the Sunday column.

There's a lot of tricks to getting the most out of Todoist. This integration setup should get you on the right path.
Setting specific due times instead of having vague ideas of what you're going to do in a day is a huge step in the right direction. Although some days are more productive than others, my productivity has skyrocketed since I started using this system.
Comment down below if you have any questions I can help with. Thanks for reading.

Leave a Reply.

Create Google Calendar events for Todoist items. Have Google calendar events created whenever you add a Todoist item. You will need to select a project and calendar to sync.