



David Allen's productivity rule from Getting Things Done stating that if an action will take less than two minutes, it should be done at the moment it's defined. This prevents small tasks from accumulating and reduces the overhead of tracking minor items.
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The Two-Minute Rule is a productivity technique from David Allen's "Getting Things Done" (GTD) methodology. The rule states: "If an action will take less than two minutes, it should be done at the moment it's defined."
Allen explains the efficiency principle: "It's more or less the point where it starts taking longer to store and track an item than to deal with it the first time it's in your hands." In other words, managing the task later takes more time than just doing it now.
Address small items immediately—emails, appointments, filing—rather than letting them accumulate and create mental burden. The longer tasks remain undone, the harder they feel psychologically.
Examples:
Break overwhelming work into two-minute chunks. Completing just one small segment generates momentum and overcomes initial paralysis about where to begin.
Examples:
Allen emphasizes that the two-minute rule should be applied during processing time, which is the key that many people who repeat the rule fail to mention. This means using it when reviewing tasks and deciding what to do with them, not randomly throughout the day.
The rule applies to:
Reserve two-minute tasks for natural breaks or structured processing periods. Don't interrupt focused work on important projects to handle two-minute items.
Completing many two-minute tasks may give you a sense of fulfillment but ultimately doesn't contribute much to long-term goals. Misunderstanding the two-minute rule can lead to unproductive days where it becomes a justification for avoiding important work.
The rule is most effective during designated task-review sessions (like daily or weekly planning), not as a constant interruption to focused work.
The two-minute rule is one component of the larger Getting Things Done system, which includes:
Some practitioners adjust the threshold based on their situation:
Instead of doing two-minute tasks immediately, some people batch them and process all at once during designated times.
Small tasks that collect add up to a laundry list of chores we continually put off, and we spend more time and energy thinking about how we haven't done them yet and feeling guilty about it than we would have spent just doing them in the first place. The two-minute rule prevents this accumulation.