“Having a clear action outline prevents procrastination due to imagined complexity.”
— David Allen, Getting Things Done
Most of the tasks people keep on their to-do lists are undoable.
In other words, they’re a bunch of commitments with no clear vision of what being “done” actually looks like.
That’s a huge problem.
Your brain is naturally designed to help you figure out how to do things, but only if you know what the endpoint looks like.
For example, there’s a BIG difference between creating a list of tasks that looks like this…
Versus creating a list of tasks that looks like this…
The first list includes a bunch of things, but nothing more. No action-words. No specificity.
Sure, seeing the word “study” might trigger your mind to study… But for how long? Where? When? And for what?
The second list includes a clear, specific, and actionable set of tasks.
You know exactly what needs to happen. You know when you’ll be doing it. And you know exactly what “done” looks like.
Everything you’re working on should have a very clear stopping point – a point where you know you’re done.
If you don’t know what that point looks like, you’ll find it very difficult to make any progress at all.
💡 Find this exercise in your Part 1. Workbook
Now it’s your turn…
In our next lesson, I’ll show you how to use the GTD methodology to simplify how you organize and accomplish the outcomes you wrote above. See you then.