The two-minute rule
If a clarified action takes under two minutes, do it now instead of tracking it.
Why it works
The overhead of capturing, organizing, and later re-engaging a tiny task can exceed the cost of just doing it. For very short actions, deferring is net-negative — it adds tracking load and a future context-switch. Doing them immediately keeps the system lean and prevents trivial items from accumulating into a demoralizing backlog.
How to do it
- During clarifying, check whether the next action takes roughly two minutes or less.
- If so, do it on the spot rather than adding it to any list.
- If it is longer, defer it to the appropriate list or delegate it.
Evidence
A practical efficiency heuristic about the overhead of task-tracking; the two-minute threshold is Allen’s rule of thumb, not a studied cutoff. The underlying point — that switching and tracking carry real costs — is consistent with task-switching research. (mechanistic)
The "two minutes" number is arbitrary and practitioner-set; the principle is to avoid tracking overhead that exceeds the task itself.
Common mistake
Letting the two-minute rule run loose during focused time so you keep doing little tasks instead of the deep work you sat down for — it belongs in the clarify step, not all day.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach flags when something you are about to defer is small enough to just finish now, keeping tiny tasks from piling into a backlog that drains you.
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