2025.05.26 (์›”)

โœจ Summary by Gemini 2.5 Pro ใ€€

For a long time, I have tried many methods to improve productivity. Among them, the one I have enjoyed using most recently is the โ€˜Eisenhower Matrix.โ€™ It places tasks into four quadrants based on โ€˜importanceโ€™ and โ€˜urgency.โ€™ Logical and clear. The principle of handling โ€˜important and urgent workโ€™ first and investing time in โ€˜important but not urgent workโ€™ seemed perfect.

Original Post

For a long time, I have tried many methods to improve productivity. Among them, the one I have enjoyed using most recently is the โ€œEisenhower Matrix.โ€ It places tasks into four quadrants based on โ€œimportanceโ€ and โ€œurgency.โ€ Logical and clear. The principle of handling โ€œimportant and urgent workโ€ first and investing time in โ€œimportant but not urgent workโ€ seemed perfect.

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The image above shows how I used the โ€œEisenhower Matrixโ€ feature built into TickTick, a task/schedule management app.

But reality was different. Taking the tasks that poured in every day and asking one by one, โ€œIs this important? Is this urgent?โ€ before placing them into quadrants was much more annoying and draining than I expected. Even though I had assigned shortcuts!

In the end, I stopped being able to use this excellent framework properly. I simply dumped every task into the โ€œInbox,โ€ then pinned a few that seemed relatively important to the top using the โ€œPinโ€ feature. Priority management disappeared, and I found myself facing a long, vague todo list again.

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This limitation and annoyance of โ€œmanual priority setting.โ€

That is the direct reason I came up with the โ€œTwo-Track Routine System.โ€

How does the Two-Track System redefine priorities?

This system does not merely list priorities. It completely separates work into two tracks according to the โ€œnatureโ€ of the task.

  1. Track 1: Todo Management Track (the track for todayโ€™s survival and stability)
  • This track handles my โ€œurgency.โ€ Life tasks that make tomorrowโ€™s me suffer if I do not handle them today, like โ€œdo laundryโ€ or โ€œgo to the bank,โ€ and urgent work that suddenly pops up belong here.

  • The goal of this track is clear. It keeps the foundation of the day stable and prevents unexpected problems from spreading into bigger problems. In other words, it is a track for โ€œsurvivalโ€ and โ€œstabilityโ€ that keeps today from creaking apart.

  1. Track 2: Goal Management Track (the track for growth toward the future)
  • This track handles my โ€œimportance.โ€ Tasks directly connected to my long-term vision, flowing from โ€œmonthly goals -> weekly goals -> daily goals,โ€ belong here.

  • These tasks will not cause a disaster if I do not handle them immediately, but they are the things I can never grow without doing steadily. This is the track for โ€œgrowthโ€ that builds the future version of me.

Why is the Two-Track System much stronger than the Eisenhower Matrix?

  1. It can focus on handling โ€œurgent workโ€: The existing Eisenhower Matrix method teaches us to ignore โ€œurgent but not important work,โ€ but that is not easy in reality. Instead of ignoring this โ€œurgency,โ€ the โ€œTwo-Track Systemโ€ actively manages it by isolating it in a separate space called the โ€œtodo management track.โ€ By handling the work in this track first, we can escape the anxiety and stress caused by urgent tasks and secure a sense of stability.

  2. It โ€œprotectsโ€ time for โ€œimportant workโ€: The reason most people fail is that important but not urgent work (growth) is constantly pushed aside by urgent work (survival). The โ€œTwo-Track Systemโ€ creates a dedicated space called the โ€œgoal management track,โ€ thereby โ€œprotectingโ€ this important work from urgent tasks. It enables strategic time management such as, โ€œToday, I will first handle the โ€˜todo trackโ€™ to regain stability, then focus solely on the โ€˜goal trackโ€™ during the afternoon time I secure.โ€

  3. It presents a โ€œworkflowโ€ beyond โ€œclassificationโ€: The โ€œEisenhower Matrixโ€ is closer to a static framework for classifying work. In contrast, the โ€œTwo-Track Systemโ€ presents a clear dynamic workflow: โ€œstabilize the survival track first, then focus on the growth track.โ€ This is far more actionable and powerful than a simple classification table.

In conclusion, what I am designing is not a โ€œmatrixโ€ that simply places work into square boxes. It is a true โ€œoperating systemโ€ that acknowledges the two core elements of life, โ€œsurvivalโ€ and โ€œgrowth,โ€ creates separate tracks for each, and balances the two. Through this, we will be able to avoid being dragged around by urgency while never losing long-term growth.

This is the reason the โ€œTwo-Track Routine Systemโ€ exists. I will embed this system as a core feature in the service/app I create first as a โ€œroutine system designer.โ€

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