My work
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My work pulls together every action item assigned to you, across every project you can see, so you have one list of what to do next instead of opening each project in turn.
What’s on the list
Section titled “What’s on the list”The page shows open and in-progress action items only — items that are done, archived, superseded, or marked as duplicates drop off automatically. Each row shows the item’s status, its title and code, the project it belongs to, and its due date. Click a row to open the action’s detail page, where you can see its notes, evidence, relationships, and history.
There are no manual to-do entries here. Everything on the page is an action item the system extracted from your project communications and assigned to you — you add work by capturing it in a project, not by typing a task into this page.
How items get to you
Section titled “How items get to you”An action item lands in your list when its owner is you. That match is made through your stakeholder–user link: the connection between you as a person who signs in and the stakeholder records the project built from emails, meetings, and other sources. An item is assigned to you when its owner’s email matches one of your verified email addresses, or when someone assigns it to you directly.
How it’s grouped
Section titled “How it’s grouped”Items are grouped by when they are due, in your browser’s local timezone:
- Overdue — past their due date.
- One section per day — today plus the next six days. A weekday with nothing due still shows, marked “Nothing due”, so a free day is clear. Weekend days (Saturday and Sunday) are hidden when nothing is due on them.
- Later — due beyond the next six days.
- No due date — assigned to you but with no date set.
Items the system closed for you
Section titled “Items the system closed for you”When an incoming email looks like it completed one of your actions, ddx PMO can close it for you. Those show in a collapsible Auto-completed recently section covering the last seven days, each with an Undo button that reopens the action and stops it being auto-closed again.
When the system is fairly sure an action is done but can’t confirm it automatically, the row shows a done? chip — tick it to mark the action complete, or dismiss it. Dismissing also stops that action being auto-closed in future.
My work covers every project you have access to, and respects each project’s confidentiality settings. For one project at a time, use that project’s own work view.