ABCDE Method
Task prioritization technique by Brian Tracy that categorizes tasks into 5 categories (A through E) based on importance and consequences. Featured in 'Eat That Frog!' as a core productivity principle.
About this tool
Overview
The ABCDE Method is a prioritization technique created by Brian Tracy that categorizes tasks into 5 different categories, making the top priority the obvious next step. It is featured prominently in his bestselling book "Eat That Frog!"
How It Works
You start with a list of everything you have to do for the coming day. Once you have a list of all of the tasks you must complete, you start the ABCDE method by assigning each task to one of five categories.
The Five Categories
A Tasks: Must Do
Definition: Something that is very important - something that you must do, a task for which there can be serious consequences if you fail to do it.
Characteristics:
- Critical to your success
- Serious negative consequences if not completed
- Cannot be delegated
- Your highest priority
Multiple A Tasks:
- If you have more than one "A" task, prioritize by writing A-1, A-2, A-3, and so on
- Your A-1 task is your biggest, ugliest frog of all
- Start with A-1 and don't stop until it's complete
B Tasks: Should Do
Definition: A task that you should do, but it only has mild consequences.
Characteristics:
- Someone may be unhappy or inconvenienced if you don't do it
- Nowhere as important as an A task
- Never do a B task when an A task is left undone
Rule: A B task is never as important as an A task, no matter how urgent it seems.
C Tasks: Nice To Do
Definition: A task that would be good to do, but it doesn't much matter whether you do it or not.
Examples:
- Having lunch with a coworker
- Phoning a friend
- Personal errands during work hours
Rule: These tasks don't affect your work or have no consequences at all.
D Tasks: Delegate
Definition: A task you can delegate to someone else.
Principle: You should delegate anything that someone else can do, so you can create time to do the tasks that only you can do.
Benefits:
- Frees time for A and B tasks
- Develops others' skills
- Maximizes your value contribution
E Tasks: Eliminate
Definition: An activity that should ideally be eliminated altogether.
Examples:
- Time-wasting activities
- Low-value busywork
- Tasks that no longer serve a purpose
- Habits that don't contribute to goals
Action: Stop doing these entirely.
Implementation Steps
- List all tasks for the day or week
- Assign a letter (A, B, C, D, or E) to each task
- Number A tasks in order of importance (A-1, A-2, etc.)
- Start immediately on your A-1 task
- Stay at it until it is complete
- Move to A-2, then A-3, and so on
- Never do a B task when an A task is undone
The Critical Rule
The key to making this ABCDE Method work is to discipline yourself to start immediately on your "A-1" task, stay at it until it is complete, and use your willpower to get going on this one job, the single most important task you could possibly be doing.
Benefits
Clarity
- Removes ambiguity about what to work on next
- Makes priorities crystal clear
- Reduces decision fatigue
Focus
- Prevents working on low-value tasks
- Ensures important work gets done
- Stops urgency trap
Results
- Accomplishes high-impact work
- Prevents procrastination on critical tasks
- Maximizes productivity
Integration with Other Methods
Eat That Frog
- Your A-1 task is your "frog"
- Eat it first thing in the morning
Eisenhower Matrix
- A tasks = Urgent & Important
- B tasks = Important, Not Urgent
- C tasks = Urgent, Not Important
- D/E tasks = Not Urgent, Not Important
Time Blocking
- Block your best time for A tasks
- Schedule B tasks for less critical times
- Eliminate C, D, E tasks from schedule
Common Mistakes
- Doing B tasks before A tasks because they're easier
- Not delegating D tasks because it seems faster to do them yourself
- Keeping E tasks on the list instead of eliminating them
- Making everything an A - this defeats the purpose
- Not numbering multiple A tasks - leads to unclear priorities
Who It's For
- Anyone with overwhelming to-do lists
- Professionals managing multiple priorities
- People prone to busy work
- Those struggling with what to work on first
- Managers needing to delegate effectively
- Anyone seeking clearer priorities
Key Insight
The ABCDE Method forces you to think through the consequences of doing or not doing each task. This consequences-based thinking ensures you focus on what truly matters rather than what's merely urgent or easy.
Pricing
The methodology itself is free to use. It is detailed in Brian Tracy's book "Eat That Frog!" which is available for purchase.
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