Archive for February 26th, 2008

Five Steps to Excellent Checklists

Checklists are useful for checking that you don’t miss anything in a repeated extended process. This can be anything from maintenance windows to database installations. It is not necessary that it must be an enterprise-wide checklist; checklists are useful for us as administrators as well.

To create an excellent checklist, follow these steps:

  • Create a suitable title for each major step or category. When all the checklist items are done, then this category (or step) will be completed.
  • Separate each section from the next with whitespace. This keeps items clear and separated so they won’t mix in your mind when you read them.
  • Create a bar of some sort to highlight the title. This will further separate the various sections, and will make the title stand out.
  • Create a list of all actions to perform. These are actual steps - actions to do - and not nebulous unspecified things to get done.
  • Test the checklist. If this checklist will be used repeatedly, then try it out. Take notes as you use it. Since the checklist is best used on paper, use a paper version to take notes on and transfer the results to the actual list later.

Add comment 26 February 2008


David Douthitt

David is an experienced UNIX and Linux system administrator, a former Linux distribution maintainer, and author of two books ("Advanced Topics in System Administration" and "GNU Screen: A Comprehensive Manual"). View David Douthitt's profile on LinkedIn

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