Weekly Review Checklist 20–30 min
I run my weekly review at 4:15pm on Friday afternoons, with a coffee and the door closed. It takes twenty-two to twenty-eight minutes, and it's the single highest-leverage habit I've added to my work in the last five years. The first time I tried it I was certain it would feel like another meeting; instead it gave me back roughly four hours of Monday mornings every week — the time I used to spend reorienting myself instead of starting.
The checklist below is what I actually run. It's not a twelve-step productivity ritual; it's five concrete prompts plus one writing exercise, all of which fit in under half an hour. The hardest part is committing to a fixed time. Friday afternoon works for me because energy's already low and I'm done with anything serious; Sunday evening works for many people I've recommended it to. Pick a slot, defend it for four weeks, and decide afterward. It pairs naturally with Today's Tasks, which keeps your list simple enough that the review actually fits in the slot.
Why a Weekly Review Matters
A weekly review helps you evaluate what worked, capture loose ends, and set priorities for the week ahead. Without reflection, tasks pile up and attention fragments.
Step 1: Clear Completed Tasks
Archive items you’ve finished. A clean slate keeps your list relevant and prevents old tasks from stealing attention.
Step 2: Re-evaluate Priorities
Scan High, Due Today, and General. Promote anything urgent, demote anything that can wait. Less is more.
Step 3: Capture Loose Ends
Scan emails, messages, notebooks, and your head. Convert anything unfinished into clear, single-step tasks. If it takes under two minutes, just do it.
Step 4: Plan Top Three Goals
Define three outcomes that would make next week a win. Block time for them now. Protect these blocks like meetings with yourself.
Step 5: Reflect and Improve
Ask: What slowed me down? What moved the needle? Write one small change for next week—constraints and tiny habits beat willpower.
Bring It All Together
Use Today’s Tasks as your weekly anchor. The three-lane layout helps you re-prioritize in seconds and start each week with clarity and focus.
Weekly Review FAQ
How long should it take?
Plan for 20–30 minutes. If it regularly exceeds that, shorten the checklist or time-box each step.
Which day is best?
Friday afternoon (close the loop) or Sunday evening (prime the week). Consistency is the key.
Do I need extra tools?
No. The review works inside Today’s Tasks. A calendar helps for time blocking.