MIT (Most Important Tasks)
Daily planning method where you identify 1-3 Most Important Tasks each day that will have the greatest impact. These MIT's get done first, before anything else, ensuring meaningful daily progress.
Last updated: 2026-03-20 03:48
Overview
The MIT (Most Important Tasks) method involves identifying 1-3 tasks each day that will have the most significant impact on your goals. These tasks take priority over everything else and are completed before you do anything less important.
How It Works
- Each evening or morning, identify your 1-3 MITs for the day
- These should be tasks that move your big goals forward
- Complete these tasks first, before email, meetings, or other work
- Don't end your day until your MITs are done
- Everything else is secondary
Choosing Your MITs
Ask yourself:
- "What tasks, if completed today, will have the biggest impact?"
- "What will move me closest to my most important goals?"
- "What am I most likely to procrastinate on but need to do?"
Guidelines
- Limit to 1-3 tasks - More than 3 dilutes focus
- Make them specific - "Draft proposal" not "work on proposal"
- Align with goals - MITs should connect to long-term objectives
- Do them first - Before email, social media, or reactive work
- Size appropriately - Should be completable in the day
Why It Works
- Ensures daily progress on important goals
- Prevents busy work from consuming time
- Provides clear daily direction
- Builds momentum through consistent wins
- Reduces end-of-day regret
- Simple enough to maintain long-term
Combining with Other Methods
MITs work well with:
- Time blocking (schedule MIT time first)
- Eat That Frog (your biggest MIT is your frog)
- Pomodoro (use pomodoros for MIT work)
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