Getting Things Done (GTD) is a proven productivity system built on one simple premise: capture everything, process it systematically, and trust your system so your mind is free to focus. This article explains the core GTD process and how to apply it consistently.
Purpose #
GTD eliminates the mental overhead of trying to remember everything and decide what to do next in the moment. When everything is captured and processed through a trusted system, you reduce stress, increase focus, and make meaningful progress on what actually matters.
When to Use This #
Use GTD as your daily and weekly operating system. The daily processing routine keeps your inbox clear and your next actions current. The weekly review keeps your projects and longer-term goals on track. Use it whenever you feel overwhelmed by the volume of things on your plate or unsure what to work on next.
Step 1 — Capture Everything Into One Inbox #
Everything that needs your attention goes into a single inbox — emails, random requests, brain flashes, formal requests, new ideas, future plans. The inbox is not where things live permanently; it’s a collection point you process regularly. Keep one inbox, not many. Fragmented capture systems create fragmented attention.
Step 2 — Process Your Inbox Daily #
Each item in your inbox gets a decision made about it. Work through items one at a time and ask: Is this actionable?
If Not Actionable #
- Trash — Delete or discard it immediately if it has no future value.
- Someday/Maybe — Park it for future consideration. Review this list weekly.
- Reference — File it in a system you can find it again. Review weekly to keep it current.
If Actionable #
- Less than 2 minutes? — Do it immediately. Don’t defer small tasks that take longer to record than to complete.
- Multi-step project? — Create a project plan and identify the very next physical action required.
- Delegate it — Assign it to someone else with a clear deadline. Move it to your “Waiting For” list and schedule a follow-up on your calendar.
- Schedule it — Book it on your calendar if it must happen at a specific time.
- Add to Next Actions — If it’s a single action with no fixed time, add it to your Next Actions list.
Step 3 — Weekly Review #
The weekly review is what keeps GTD working over time. Without it, the system degrades. Block 30–60 minutes every week to:
- Process any remaining inbox items
- Review all active project plans and update next actions
- Review your calendar for the week ahead
- Review your Next Actions list and Waiting For list
- Review your Someday/Maybe list — promote anything ready to move forward
- Clear your head of anything new that hasn’t been captured yet
The Goal-Setting Hierarchy #
GTD works best when it’s connected to a clear sense of purpose and direction. Use this hierarchy to keep daily actions aligned with long-term intent:
- Long-term vision — Set annually. What are you trying to build or become?
- Long-term goals — Set annually to achieve your vision.
- Short-term goals — Set monthly to work toward long-term goals.
- Strategies — Established weekly to meet short-term goals.
- Tactics — Developed daily to execute strategies.
The Three GTD Daily Habits #
- Process your inbox daily — Don’t let items accumulate without a decision.
- Review Next Actions and your calendar throughout the day — Always know what you’re working on next.
- Review Project Plans weekly — Keep longer-term work moving forward.
Best Practices #
- One inbox, not many. Consolidate email, physical paper, notes, and requests into a single capture point.
- Never skip the weekly review. The system works only when it’s current. A stale GTD system is worse than no system — you’ll stop trusting it.
- Next actions must be physical actions. “Discuss project” is not a next action. “Call Sarah re: project brief” is. Vague tasks create hesitation.
- Do the two-minute tasks immediately. Recording a 90-second task wastes more time than doing it.
Common Mistakes #
- Using GTD as a capturing system but not processing daily. An unprocessed inbox is just a more organized pile of stress.
- Writing project names instead of next actions. “Website redesign” is a project. “Email developer with brief” is a next action.
- Skipping the weekly review because it feels like overhead. The review is the system — everything else is just input.
- Too many trusted systems. Sticky notes, email flags, a notebook, and a task app are four inboxes, not one. Pick one and commit.