
Action Method
Productivity system created by Behance founder Scott Belsky that organizes projects into Action Steps, Backburner Items, and References. Emphasizes bias toward action by breaking everything into concrete next steps, ensuring projects move forward rather than remaining aspirational.
About this tool
Overview
The Action Method is a productivity system developed by Scott Belsky, founder of Behance, designed to transform ideas into action by organizing all projects into three core elements: Action Steps, Backburner Items, and References.
Core Components
Action Steps
Definition: Concrete, specific tasks that move projects forward
Characteristics:
- Start with verbs (Call, Email, Draft, Research)
- Single, clear actions
- Can be completed
- Assigned to someone
- Have due dates when needed
Examples:
- "Call John about budget approval"
- "Draft outline for Q2 presentation"
- "Email Sarah the project timeline"
Not Action Steps:
- "Think about marketing strategy" (too vague)
- "Website redesign" (too broad)
- "Be more organized" (not specific)
Backburner Items
Definition: Ideas or items to address later
Purpose:
- Capture good ideas without cluttering active work
- Prevent forgetting potentially valuable thoughts
- Keep focus on current action steps
- Review periodically to promote to action steps
Examples:
- Future project ideas
- Long-term improvements
- Interesting concepts to explore
- Potential opportunities
References
Definition: Supporting materials, information, and resources
Types:
- Meeting notes
- Research documents
- Sketches and designs
- Inspiration and examples
- Contact information
- Related files
Purpose: Everything you might need but isn't an action
Key Principles
Everything is a Project
The Action Method treats all work as projects:
- Each project has Action Steps
- Each project has Backburner and References
- Even ongoing work becomes a project
- Personal and professional both qualify
Bias Toward Action
Philosophy: Ideas mean nothing without execution
Implementation:
- Every meeting must generate action steps
- Every conversation should produce next steps
- Every project needs concrete actions
- No project exists without action steps
Rule: If a project has no action steps, it's dead
Action Steps Drive Progress
- Ideas alone don't move projects forward
- Only completed action steps create progress
- Focus on what can be done, not just discussed
- Measure progress by actions taken
How to Use the Action Method
Step 1: Organize by Project
- List all active projects
- Create project "spaces" for each
- Include work and personal projects
- Keep projects manageable in size
Step 2: Break Down to Actions
For each project:
- What's the very next physical action?
- Create action step starting with verb
- Make it specific and completable
- Assign to someone (often yourself)
- Add deadline if time-sensitive
Step 3: Capture Backburner Items
- Record ideas that aren't immediate priorities
- Note potential improvements
- Capture "someday/maybe" items
- Keep separate from active actions
Step 4: Store References
- Attach relevant documents
- Link related resources
- Keep everything project-related together
- Easy access when needed
Step 5: Regular Review
Daily:
- Review action steps
- Complete what you can
- Add new actions as needed
Weekly:
- Review all projects
- Promote backburner items if appropriate
- Archive completed projects
- Ensure every active project has next actions
Meeting Protocol
During Meetings
- Capture action steps as discussed
- Assign each action to specific person
- Set deadlines collaboratively
- Don't leave without actions identified
After Meetings
- Share action steps with attendees
- Add action steps to your system
- Reference notes as needed
- Follow up on commitments
Benefits
Clarity
- Always know next step for each project
- No ambiguity about what to do
- Clear ownership of actions
- Concrete progress markers
Momentum
- Focus on what can be done now
- Small actions build progress
- Completed actions motivate
- Projects actually move forward
Reduced Overwhelm
- Big projects broken into small steps
- Focus on one action at a time
- Backburner captures future ideas
- Less mental clutter
Accountability
- Actions assigned to people
- Deadlines create urgency
- Clear expectations
- Easy to track commitments
Common Mistakes
Vague Action Steps
Problem: "Work on website" isn't actionable Solution: "Draft homepage copy for website"
Too Many Active Projects
Problem: Spread thin across dozens of projects Solution: Limit active projects, move others to backburner
Actions Without Projects
Problem: Scattered to-do list items Solution: Associate every action with a project
Neglecting Backburner Review
Problem: Good ideas forgotten Solution: Weekly backburner review
Tools for Action Method
Digital Options
- Action Method Online: Belsky's original platform (discontinued)
- Basecamp: Projects with to-dos and docs
- Asana: Projects, tasks, notes
- Notion: Databases for projects, actions, backburner
- Todoist: Projects with tasks and comments
Analog Option
- Action Method notebook (still available)
- Divide pages into three sections
- Physical satisfaction of checking off
Integration with Other Methods
With GTD
- Projects align with GTD projects
- Action steps are next actions
- Backburner like someday/maybe
- References similar to GTD reference
With Agile
- Projects like epics
- Action steps like user stories
- Backburner like product backlog
- Sprint planning pulls from backburner
Ideal For
- Creative professionals
- Project managers
- Team leaders
- Anyone with multiple ongoing projects
- People who generate lots of ideas
- Those struggling to execute on plans
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