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Action Method

Productivity system created by Behance founder Scott Belsky that organizes projects into Action Steps, Backburner Items, and References. Emphasizes bias toward action by breaking everything into concrete next steps, ensuring projects move forward rather than remaining aspirational.

Last updated: 2026-03-14 15:50

Overview

The Action Method is a productivity system developed by Scott Belsky, founder of Behance, designed to transform ideas into action by organizing all projects into three core elements: Action Steps, Backburner Items, and References.

Core Components

Action Steps

Definition: Concrete, specific tasks that move projects forward

Characteristics:

Examples:

Not Action Steps:

Backburner Items

Definition: Ideas or items to address later

Purpose:

Examples:

References

Definition: Supporting materials, information, and resources

Types:

Purpose: Everything you might need but isn't an action

Key Principles

Everything is a Project

The Action Method treats all work as projects:

Bias Toward Action

Philosophy: Ideas mean nothing without execution

Implementation:

Rule: If a project has no action steps, it's dead

Action Steps Drive Progress

How to Use the Action Method

Step 1: Organize by Project

  1. List all active projects
  2. Create project "spaces" for each
  3. Include work and personal projects
  4. Keep projects manageable in size

Step 2: Break Down to Actions

For each project:

  1. What's the very next physical action?
  2. Create action step starting with verb
  3. Make it specific and completable
  4. Assign to someone (often yourself)
  5. Add deadline if time-sensitive

Step 3: Capture Backburner Items

Step 4: Store References

Step 5: Regular Review

Daily:

Weekly:

Meeting Protocol

During Meetings

  1. Capture action steps as discussed
  2. Assign each action to specific person
  3. Set deadlines collaboratively
  4. Don't leave without actions identified

After Meetings

  1. Share action steps with attendees
  2. Add action steps to your system
  3. Reference notes as needed
  4. Follow up on commitments

Benefits

Clarity

Momentum

Reduced Overwhelm

Accountability

Common Mistakes

Vague Action Steps

Problem: "Work on website" isn't actionable Solution: "Draft homepage copy for website"

Too Many Active Projects

Problem: Spread thin across dozens of projects Solution: Limit active projects, move others to backburner

Actions Without Projects

Problem: Scattered to-do list items Solution: Associate every action with a project

Neglecting Backburner Review

Problem: Good ideas forgotten Solution: Weekly backburner review

Tools for Action Method

Digital Options

Analog Option

Integration with Other Methods

With GTD

With Agile

Ideal For

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