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Eisenhower Matrix

Priority management framework dividing tasks into four quadrants based on urgency and importance: Do First (urgent+important), Schedule (important+not urgent), Delegate (urgent+not important), Eliminate (neither).

Last updated: 2026-03-21 05:48

The Eisenhower Matrix

A decision-making framework for prioritizing tasks based on two dimensions: urgency and importance. Named after President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who said "What is important is seldom urgent and what is urgent is seldom important."

The Four Quadrants

Quadrant 1: Do First (Urgent + Important)

Characteristics:

Action: Do immediately

Examples:

Goal: Minimize time here through better planning

Quadrant 2: Schedule (Important + Not Urgent)

Characteristics:

Action: Schedule dedicated time

Examples:

Goal: Spend most time here for long-term success

Quadrant 3: Delegate (Urgent + Not Important)

Characteristics:

Action: Delegate if possible, otherwise minimize

Examples:

Warning: Often disguised as Quadrant 1

Quadrant 4: Eliminate (Not Urgent + Not Important)

Characteristics:

Action: Eliminate completely

Examples:

How to Apply

Daily Practice

  1. List your tasks: Write everything down
  2. Categorize: Place each in a quadrant
  3. Handle emergencies: Deal with Quadrant 1
  4. Schedule important: Block time for Quadrant 2
  5. Delegate/decline: Minimize Quadrant 3
  6. Eliminate: Remove Quadrant 4 completely

Strategic Focus

Increase Quadrant 2 time:

Reduce other quadrants:

Common Mistakes

Confusing Urgent with Important

Most people spend too much time on urgent tasks (Q1 & Q3) and neglect important but not urgent work (Q2).

Living in Quadrant 1

Constant crisis mode indicates poor planning and lack of Q2 investment.

Escaping to Quadrant 4

After Q1 stress, people often retreat to Q4 instead of Q2.

Benefits

Determining Importance

Important tasks:

Unimportant tasks:

Tools for Eisenhower Matrix

Integration with Time Tracking

Complementary Methods

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