[๐] RSD - Planning: Comparing the Todo/Goal Management Routine System (Two-Track System) with the Eisenhower Matrix
โจ 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 โEisenhower Matrix.โ It places tasks into four quadrants based on โimportanceโ and โurgency.โ Logical and clear. The principle of handling โimportant and urgent workโ first and investing time in โimportant but not urgent workโ seemed perfect.
- Original: http://blog.naver.com/hyeogikarp/223878812143
- Naver publication time: 2025/05/26 22:41 KST
- Original category: Core Concepts
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 โEisenhower Matrix.โ It places tasks into four quadrants based on โimportanceโ and โurgency.โ Logical and clear. The principle of handling โimportant and urgent workโ first and investing time in โimportant but not urgent workโ seemed perfect.

The image above shows how I used the โEisenhower 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, โIs 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 โInbox,โ then pinned a few that seemed relatively important to the top using the โPinโ feature. Priority management disappeared, and I found myself facing a long, vague todo list again.

This limitation and annoyance of โmanual priority setting.โ
That is the direct reason I came up with the โTwo-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 โnatureโ of the task.
- Track 1: Todo Management Track (the track for todayโs survival and stability)
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This track handles my โurgency.โ Life tasks that make tomorrowโs me suffer if I do not handle them today, like โdo laundryโ or โgo to the bank,โ and urgent work that suddenly pops up belong here.
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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 โsurvivalโ and โstabilityโ that keeps today from creaking apart.
- Track 2: Goal Management Track (the track for growth toward the future)
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This track handles my โimportance.โ Tasks directly connected to my long-term vision, flowing from โmonthly goals -> weekly goals -> daily goals,โ belong here.
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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 โgrowthโ that builds the future version of me.
Why is the Two-Track System much stronger than the Eisenhower Matrix?
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It can focus on handling โurgent workโ: The existing Eisenhower Matrix method teaches us to ignore โurgent but not important work,โ but that is not easy in reality. Instead of ignoring this โurgency,โ the โTwo-Track Systemโ actively manages it by isolating it in a separate space called the โtodo 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.
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It โprotectsโ time for โimportant workโ: The reason most people fail is that important but not urgent work (growth) is constantly pushed aside by urgent work (survival). The โTwo-Track Systemโ creates a dedicated space called the โgoal management track,โ thereby โprotectingโ this important work from urgent tasks. It enables strategic time management such as, โToday, I will first handle the โtodo trackโ to regain stability, then focus solely on the โgoal trackโ during the afternoon time I secure.โ
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It presents a โworkflowโ beyond โclassificationโ: The โEisenhower Matrixโ is closer to a static framework for classifying work. In contrast, the โTwo-Track Systemโ presents a clear dynamic workflow: โstabilize 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 โmatrixโ that simply places work into square boxes. It is a true โoperating systemโ that acknowledges the two core elements of life, โsurvivalโ and โgrowth,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 โTwo-Track Routine Systemโ exists. I will embed this system as a core feature in the service/app I create first as a โroutine system designer.โ
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