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How To Plan Your Week

📖 Bu rehber ToolPazar ekibi tarafından hazırlanmıştır. Tüm araçlarımız ücretsiz ve reklamsızdır.

1. Plan on Sunday or Friday — not Monday morning

A planned week beats a willful one. If you have a Monday with a clear picture of what matters, the 47 micro-decisions that would have drained your attention are already made. If you don’t, every morning starts with the hardest task — deciding what to do — when your brain is least equipped for it.

2. Start with review, not planning

Weekly planning takes 20–30 minutes and pays back about 10x. Here’s a practical template that works for most knowledge workers, adapted from what high-output people actually do (as opposed to what gets sold in planner apps).

3. Choose 3 big outcomes for the week

Do it before the week starts. Monday-morning planning makes Monday-morning panic. Pick a consistent time: Sunday evening or Friday afternoon works for most people. 30 minutes, same spot, same ritual.

4. Break each outcome into 2–4 concrete tasks

Before deciding what to do next week, look at last week. What got done? What didn’t? What do I not need to do again? A 5-minute review catches patterns (always overloaded on Thursdays, never touched X for three weeks in a row) that shape the new plan.

5. Time-block the calendar, not just the to-do list

Not 10 tasks — 3 outcomes. “Ship the Q2 plan,” “Close the Acme deal,” “Launch the feature.” These are results, not activities. At the end of the week, these are the things that will make the week feel successful.

6. Protect one deep-work block per weekday

“Ship the Q2 plan” becomes “draft outline Mon, review with team Wed, finalize Fri.” Each task is assigned to a day. This is the core translation: outcomes → tasks → calendar slots.

7. Leave 20% buffer

To-do lists fail because they don’t compete with meetings. Put the task on the calendar as a 60-90 minute block. If the day has no room, either the task or the meetings have to move — better to find that out Sunday than Thursday.

8. Batch the admin

Don’t plan the week at 100% capacity. Something will come up — an urgent request, a sick day, a meeting that runs long. If you planned for 40 hours of work, you’ll finish 32. Plan for 32 and you’ll actually finish 32.

9. Write the Monday “first thing”

Email, expense reports, HR forms, follow-ups — these expand to fill any time given. Pick two 30-minute windows per week and batch them all. Keeps the admin from leaking into your focus blocks.

10. Keep it simple — paper, doc, or one app

Before you close the plan, decide the very first thing you’ll do Monday morning. A single concrete task with a specific entry point. Removes the morning decision fatigue that kills the first hour of the week.

11. Do a 5-minute daily reset

The tool doesn’t matter as much as the ritual. A paper notebook works. A single Google Doc works. One app (Notion, Todoist, Things) works. What doesn’t work: three systems, because you’ll spend time reconciling them instead of doing the work.

12. Pair the plan with a pomodoro rhythm

End of each workday: look at the plan, check what moved, update the first thing for tomorrow. 5 minutes. This keeps the weekly plan alive all week rather than being a single-use document you wrote Sunday and never checked again.

Your first weekly plan