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Two-List Method

Simple prioritization technique that separates tasks into two lists: what you'll work on today and what you'll consciously defer. This method forces ruthless prioritization by making deferral decisions explicit.

Last updated: 2026-03-19 08:36

Overview

The Two-List Method is a straightforward prioritization technique that divides all potential tasks into exactly two lists: tasks you'll commit to completing today (or this week), and tasks you're explicitly choosing not to work on right now. By forcing everything into one of two categories, this method eliminates the ambiguity of endless to-do lists and creates clarity about what matters most.

The Two Lists

List 1: Today's Priorities

List 2: Not Today

How It Works

Daily Implementation

Morning (5-10 minutes):

  1. Review all possible tasks and commitments
  2. Select 3-5 most important tasks for List 1
  3. Move everything else to List 2
  4. Commit to working only on List 1 today
  5. Close List 2—don't look at it until tomorrow

During the Day:

Evening:

Weekly Review:

Rules for Success

  1. Strict Limits: List 1 must have 3-5 items maximum, not 20
  2. Clear Criteria: List 1 contains only high-impact, goal-aligned tasks
  3. Conscious Deferral: Moving to List 2 is an active choice, not procrastination
  4. No Peeking: Don't look at List 2 during work time
  5. Honest Assessment: If everything feels urgent, your priorities need clarification

Choosing What Goes on List 1

Ask these questions:

Benefits

Clarity and Focus:

Improved Prioritization:

Reduced Stress:

Better Execution:

Common Pitfalls and Solutions

Pitfall: Putting too many items on List 1 Solution: If you consistently don't finish List 1, you're overestimating capacity. Reduce to 3 items.

Pitfall: Feeling guilty about List 2 Solution: Reframe List 2 as "Not Never, Just Not Now." These tasks aren't forgotten, just appropriately deferred.

Pitfall: Everything feels urgent Solution: Use the Eisenhower Matrix first to separate urgent from important, then build List 1.

Pitfall: Constantly checking and moving items between lists Solution: Make list decisions once in the morning, then commit. Review in evening.

Pitfall: List 2 grows infinitely Solution: Weekly review to remove tasks that no longer matter. Many List 2 items will become irrelevant.

Variations

Weekly Two-List Method

Project Two-List Method

Team Two-List Method

Integration with Other Methods

With Time Blocking:

With Pomodoro:

With GTD (Getting Things Done):

With Eisenhower Matrix:

Real-World Examples

Knowledge Worker's Lists:

List 1 (Today):

  1. Finish Q4 strategy presentation (due tomorrow)
  2. Review and approve budget proposal
  3. One-on-one with Sarah about project roadblocks

List 2 (Not Today):

Student's Lists:

List 1 (Today):

  1. Study for tomorrow's chemistry exam (2 hours)
  2. Complete math problem set due Thursday
  3. Read chapter 7 for English class discussion

List 2 (Not Today):

Success Metrics

The Two-List Method is working when:

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