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Beginner 9 min read May 2026

The Priority Matrix: What to Do First

Not everything is equally important. Learn how to separate urgent tasks from important ones so you’re not just busy — you’re actually productive.

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Understanding the Priority Matrix

You’ve probably heard the phrase “first things first.” But what does that actually mean when you’re juggling twenty different tasks? The priority matrix — also called the Eisenhower Matrix — gives you a simple framework to figure out what truly matters.

The idea is straightforward. You plot your tasks on two axes: importance and urgency. This creates four quadrants. Some tasks are both urgent and important. Others feel urgent but don’t really matter. That’s where most people get stuck. They’re constantly reacting to whatever screams loudest, instead of working on what actually moves the needle.

The Four Quadrants

  • Urgent + Important: Do these today
  • Important + Not Urgent: Schedule these
  • Urgent + Not Important: Delegate if possible
  • Neither: Minimize or eliminate

Quadrant 1: Crisis Management

These are your true emergencies. The project deadline is tomorrow. Your client’s request just came in. The system went down. These tasks are both urgent and important, and they demand your attention right now.

Here’s the thing though — if you’re spending most of your time in Quadrant 1, something’s broken. You’re always in firefighting mode. You can’t think strategically. You’re exhausted. The goal isn’t to eliminate Quadrant 1 tasks (they’ll always exist), but to keep them from taking over your entire week.

Most people don’t realize they’ve created their own crises by ignoring Quadrant 2 work for too long. That project management system you’ve been meaning to implement? It’s now urgent because everything’s chaos. That training your team needs? It’s now crisis-level because you’re losing people.

Person managing urgent deadlines at computer, papers and notes on desk, focused intense expression, bright office lighting
Person planning future goals, writing in calendar and strategic notebook, organized desk setup, calm focused environment

Quadrant 2: Strategic Work

This is where real progress happens. These tasks aren’t screaming for attention — nobody’s chasing you about them. But they’re genuinely important. Building skills. Planning ahead. Developing relationships. Creating systems that prevent future problems.

You’ll probably never feel “like” doing Quadrant 2 work because it doesn’t have the urgency rush. But it’s the difference between someone who’s constantly stressed and someone who has breathing room. Someone who gets promoted and someone who stays stuck.

Here’s a concrete example: If you’re in sales, making calls to existing clients feels urgent when they’re upset. But spending 2 hours building relationships with potential clients? That’s Quadrant 2. And it’s the difference between scrambling for business next quarter or having a pipeline that’s actually healthy.

Successful people protect time for Quadrant 2. They block it on their calendar. They treat it like a real meeting, not something that can be bumped.

How to Actually Use This Framework

The matrix is simple in theory. The practice requires discipline.

1

List Everything

Dump your entire to-do list. Don’t filter. Just get it all out. Email responses, project work, team meetings, training, cleaning up files — everything.

2

Plot Each Task

For each item, ask: “Is this truly important to my goals?” and “Does this need to happen today or this week?” Plot it accordingly. You’ll probably discover that half your tasks aren’t actually important.

3

Be Honest About Quadrant 4

Scrolling social media. Rearranging your desk for the third time. Attending meetings that don’t require you. These aren’t evil, but they’re time you’ll never get back. Most people underestimate how much time lands here.

4

Schedule Quadrant 2

This is the move that actually changes things. Pick 3-5 important-but-not-urgent tasks. Block time for them on your calendar. Treat that time like a client meeting. Don’t skip it.

The Real Benefit

The priority matrix isn’t magic. You’re not going to use it once and suddenly have perfect time management. But it gives you a decision-making framework when you’re overwhelmed.

When someone drops an “urgent” request on your desk, you can actually evaluate it. Is it truly urgent? Is it truly important to your goals? If it’s not both, you can handle it differently — delegate, schedule it, or decline it altogether.

The real shift happens when you start protecting time for Quadrant 2 work. That’s when you stop being reactive. That’s when you build the skills, systems, and relationships that actually matter. Not eventually. Starting this week.

David Wong, Director of Training Programs

David Wong

Director of Training Programs

MBA-qualified training director with 16 years of experience coaching professionals across Hong Kong and Asia-Pacific on advanced time management and goal-setting strategies.

Disclaimer

This article provides general information about priority management and time management principles. It’s intended for educational purposes to help you understand different frameworks and approaches. Your specific situation may be different, and what works for one person might need adjustment for another. The priority matrix is one tool among many — it’s not a one-size-fits-all solution. Consider your unique circumstances, work style, and goals when implementing any time management system.