ABCDE Method (Brian Tracy)
Task prioritization technique from Brian Tracy's Eat That Frog system that categorizes tasks into five levels—A (must do), B (should do), C (nice to do), D (delegate), and E (eliminate)—to focus energy on highest-impact activities.
Last updated: 2026-03-20 07:40
Overview
The ABCDE Method is a prioritization technique taught by Brian Tracy in his book "Eat That Frog!" It provides a simple framework for categorizing tasks by importance and deciding what deserves your attention.
The Five Categories
A Tasks - Must Do:
- Serious consequences if not completed
- Critical to your goals and success
- Your "frogs" that must be eaten
- Do these first, before anything else
B Tasks - Should Do:
- Mild consequences if not done
- Important but not critical
- Can be delegated or delayed if necessary
- Address after all A tasks complete
C Tasks - Nice To Do:
- No real consequences if left undone
- Pleasant but not impactful
- Coffee with colleagues, optional meetings
- Do only after all A and B tasks done
D Tasks - Delegate:
- Can be done by someone else
- Not the best use of your time
- Train others or outsource
- Free yourself for higher-value work
E Tasks - Eliminate:
- No longer necessary or relevant
- Waste of time that adds no value
- Stop doing entirely
- Biggest time-savers when identified
How to Apply
- List all tasks for the day/week
- Assign each an A, B, C, D, or E letter
- Number A tasks by priority (A-1, A-2, A-3)
- Start with A-1 and work through sequentially
- Never do B tasks while A tasks remain
Key Rules
- Never do a B task when an A task is available
- Delegate all D tasks or they become your tasks
- Eliminate E tasks immediately to free up mental space
- If everything is an A, you're not prioritizing—re-evaluate
Benefits
- Provides clear decision framework for task selection
- Prevents working on low-value activities
- Encourages delegation and elimination
- Focuses energy on highest-impact work
- Reduces overwhelm by creating clear hierarchy
Common Mistakes
- Marking too many tasks as "A" priority
- Avoiding hard A tasks by doing easier C tasks
- Not regularly re-evaluating task categories
- Failing to actually eliminate E tasks
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