Article 6J8PN Make a Better To-Do List With the 1-3-5 Method

Make a Better To-Do List With the 1-3-5 Method

by
Lindsey Ellefson
from LifeHacker on (#6J8PN)

No matter what kind of productivity goals you have and which techniques you plan to use to get it all done, you still probably start with a to-do list. Learning to formulate a solid to-do list is the key first step to being productive, since you need it to move on to other planning stages, like using the Eisenhower matrix to prioritize tasks or Kanban to organize them. Try using the 1-3-5 rule for a while and see how this to-do list system works for you.

What is the 1-3-5 rule of productivity?

The 1-3-5 rule acknowledges that in a typical day, you just don't have time to do it all. What you do reasonably have time for is one major task, three medium-sized tasks, and five little ones.

These can be related or they can be separate. For instance, a big task might be going to meet with your financial advisor, which is unrelated to your three mid-sized tasks: grocery shopping, preparing for a meeting at work, and picking up a gift for a friend's birthday. Small tasks can be anything from answering emails to laying out your clothes for the week, depending on what you consider large, medium, and small, but they're usually things that require less thought, resources, and time.

Used another way, the rule can also apply to major tasks and involve batching them into smaller groups. Say you're planning a vacation. The 1-3-5 rule can help you break up everything you need to do. The big task can be booking flights and hotel accommodations. Three medium tasks might be getting tickets to whatever you'll be doing while you're at the destination, shopping for what you'll need, and securing a pet sitter. Little tasks can be anything from setting an OOO to emailing your travel partners the itinerary.

How to use the 1-3-5 rule to be productive

Start each day with a brain dump, writing down every single thing you have to do for the day in no order other than how fast you remember them. You'll prioritize them later. Once everything is down on the paper, make note of anything especially timely. Here's where a knowledge of that Eisenhower matrix, which helps you prioritize responsibilities by urgency and importance, is going to be useful. From that group, identify one big task, three medium ones, and five little ones. That's your to-do list for the day. If you struggle with what might be "big" or "small," think about what it would take to get each done. Emails that take just a few seconds don't require a lot of time, so they can be small. Cleaning the kitchen could be "medium" or "big" depending on how much needs to be cleaned, how many products and resources you need, and how much time it'll take. A project that is due in two weeks could be "medium," but if that same project is due tomorrow, the urgency makes it "big." These are subjective classifications based on your own resource allocation.

Acknowledging upfront that you can't and won't get it all done in a single day helps you stay focused on what you can and will do, rather than stressing about the remainder that you're saving for tomorrow.It's helpful to see everything written out or represented visually, so try using a physical planner, like this one:

Daily Planner Undated, Asten To Do List $9.99 at Amazon amazon-prime.svg Shop Now hero-image.fill.size_autoxauto.v1723674127.jpg hero-image.fill.size_autoxauto.v1723674127.jpg Shop Now $9.99 at Amazon amazon-prime.svg

Next, block out time in your calendar for each task, whether you do it in that planner or on a digital calendar. Use time blocking, or the technique of giving every single thing you need to do in a day a designated time on your calendar, and consider giving yourself just a smidge less time than you think you need for everything, to defeat Parkinson's law, which is the idea that you'll waste time if you give yourself too long to do anything. Once you've laid out your day, start with that big task. Known as eating the frog," the big-task-first approach will give you a sense of accomplishment on completion, propelling you forward into those mid- and smaller-sized tasks. Plus, it stands to reason that the major responsibility will take the most time and resources, so knocking it out first ensures you have the time and resources it needs.

Finally, be flexible. Unexpected assignments or duties crop up all the time and may not be easily categorized into the 1-3-5 boxes. You may also not finish one of your tasks for the day. The goal here isn't to beat yourself up or be super strict. Rather, it's to help you feel less overwhelmed by the sheer volume of things you need to do, prioritize them, and get a good amount done every day. If something doesn't get taken care of, make sure to stick it back on the list the next day and keep going.

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