GTD vs Eisenhower Matrix: Which Priority Framework Fits You?
If you've spent any time reading about productivity, you've run into two names: David Allen's Getting Things Done (GTD) and Dwight Eisenhower's Urgent/Important Matrix. Both have devoted followers. Both claim to solve the same problem — how do you decide what to work on next? But they take very different paths.
This article breaks down each framework, shows where each one shines, and explains how to combine their strengths without drowning in complexity.
Getting Things Done (GTD)
GTD is a workflow, not a priority ranking system. Its core insight is that your mind is for having ideas, not holding them. When tasks rattle around in your head, they sap mental energy whether you're working on them or not. The solution: get everything out of your head and into a trusted external system.
The GTD workflow has five stages:
- Capture. Collect everything that has your attention — tasks, ideas, commitments — into an inbox.
- Clarify. For each item, ask: is it actionable? If yes, what's the very next physical action?
- Organize. Put next actions into context-based lists (@calls, @errands, @computer).
- Reflect. Review your lists regularly — daily for the day's actions, weekly for the big picture.
- Engage. Choose what to do based on context, time available, and energy.
GTD's strength is its completeness. Nothing falls through the cracks. Its weakness: the system itself requires discipline to maintain, and for people with relatively simple days it's overkill.
The Eisenhower Matrix
The Eisenhower Matrix is a decision tool, not a workflow. You sort each task into one of four quadrants based on two questions: is it urgent? Is it important?
The matrix's brilliance is in Q2. Most people live in Q1 (firefighting) and Q3 (reacting to other people's urgency). The matrix reminds you that the things most likely to make your life better — strategy, learning, relationships, exercise — are almost never urgent. If you don't deliberately schedule Q2 time, it disappears.
"What is important is seldom urgent, and what is urgent is seldom important." — Dwight D. Eisenhower
When to Use Each
- Use GTD when: your job involves many competing obligations, you handle lots of incoming requests, or you feel overwhelmed by the sheer number of open loops.
- Use the Eisenhower Matrix when: you're stuck reacting, your days feel busy but not productive, or you need to make a single decision about what to work on right now.
Combining the Two
They're not mutually exclusive. A practical combination looks like this:
- Use GTD's capture step to empty your head into a single list.
- Use the Eisenhower Matrix to triage that list — mark each item as Q1, Q2, Q3, or Q4.
- Delete Q4. Delegate Q3 when possible. Schedule Q2 on your calendar before your week fills up with Q1.
- Pick three priorities for the day from Q1 and Q2. This is where Collo's Top 3 comes in.
How Collo Fits In
Collo isn't a full GTD implementation — it doesn't have contexts or a dedicated inbox. What it does have is the essential output of any priority framework: a daily focus list. The Top 3 method maps directly onto Eisenhower's Q1 and Q2 — you're choosing the three tasks that are either urgent-and-important or important-enough-to-protect-from-urgency.
For longer horizons, pair the Top 3 with daily routines (your recurring Q2 investments — exercise, reading, weekly reviews) and time blocking (to defend Q2 slots from being invaded by Q1 fires). Capture the mess, triage with the matrix, execute with Top 3 — you get the discipline of both frameworks without running a bureaucracy against yourself.