7 tiny hacks that can improve your to-do list
We’ve all been there. You sit down with a cup of coffee, ready to tackle the day, only to stare at a to-do list that looks more like a random collection of thoughts than a strategy for success.
It might look something like this:
* Make an allergist appointment
* Buy razors
* Retile kitchen floor
* Throw out compost!!!
* Figure out meal prepping
It’s hard to know where to start. Is the compost urgent? Is tiling the floor a priority for right now? The mix of quick five-minute jobs and massive, multi-day projects creates a mental bottleneck that leads to procrastination.
If your list feels "all over the place," it might be time for a makeover. I recently spoke with time management experts, including Angel Trinidad, founder of Passion Planner, and Oliver Burkeman, author of *Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals*, about how to create action items that are actually clear, short, and doable.
Here are seven surprising and useful tips to transform your to-do list from a source of stress into a tool for success.
1. The Two-Minute Rule
If a task takes less than two minutes to complete, do not write it down. Just do it immediately.
"It's not worth the bandwidth to write it down, remember it, and do it," says Trinidad. Replying to a quick email or hanging up your coat are tasks that take longer to track than to finish. Knock them out right then and there to keep your list uncluttered.
2. Automate the Recurring
Are you writing "buy dog food" every two weeks? If you find yourself jotting down the same chore repeatedly, find a way to automate it.
Sign up for a subscription service for household essentials or set up auto-pay for bills. "That can leave space on your list for more important tasks," Trinidad notes. Save your mental energy for things that actually require your decision-making power.
3. Break Big Tasks into Chunks
One of the biggest mistakes we make is being too vague. People aren't specific enough when they write down items, which leads to inaction.
For example, "Retile kitchen floor" is not a to-do item; it’s a project packed with dozens of steps. "We don't get them done because we're not expressing them in a doable form," Burkeman explains. Instead, break that monster project down into action items like "call hardware store for an estimate" or "pick out tile samples."
4. The "Five Whys" Strategy
How do you decide what actually matters? Burkeman suggests a trick called the "Five Whys." Take a task and ask yourself *why* you want to do it. Then ask *why* again, at least five times.
For example:
* *Why do I want to retile my kitchen floor?* To make my apartment look better.
* *Why?* Because a beautiful space makes me feel more at peace.
"Eventually you get to something that feels like a bedrock value of your life," Burkeman says. If you can't connect a task to a deeper value, it might be a "zombie project" that you can easily abandon.
5. Paper vs. Digital: Pick Your Fighter
The medium matters. Paper planners offer a physical constraint—there is only so much space on a page. If you get overwhelmed by endless scrolling, the limited space of a notebook can force you to narrow down your true priorities.
On the flip side, digital tools like Asana, Todoist, or even your phone’s notes app are searchable and easily rearrangeable. You won't lose them, and you can move tasks around as schedules change. Choose the format that best suits your anxiety level and workflow.
6. Try Time Boxing
Writing a list isn't enough; you need to assign tasks a home in your schedule. This method, known as time boxing, involves looking at your day and assigning specific hours to specific tasks.
For example:
* 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.: Write novel
* 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.: Grocery shop
* 3:30 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.: Drop off dry cleaning
"That kind of awareness gets you thinking, am I spending my time in a way that makes sense for me?" says Trinidad. It prevents you from overestimating how much you can realistically tackle in a single day.
7. Don’t Forget Your Big Life Goals
Your to-do list shouldn't just be a graveyard for mundane chores like laundry and emails. It can also be a map for your dream life.
Trinidad suggests asking yourself: "Who do I want to be? What do I want to experience? What do I want to have?"
If you want to be more present in your body, put "Run a 5K" on the list. If you want to give back, add "Volunteer once a week." Just remember to apply Tip #3: break those massive life goals down into small, doable tasks.
A to-do list should work for you, not against you. By applying these strategies, you can clear the clutter and focus on what actually moves the needle in your life.
