Getting Things Done (GTD) is a productivity methodology created by David Allen, first outlined in his book Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity.

At its core, GTD is both a workflow system and a mindset. Its purpose is to help you manage everything you need to do in life—big or small, personal or professional, urgent or minor—in a way that reduces stress and improves focus.

The GTD Workflow

We all naturally go through a process to handle our work: we notice things, decide what they mean, and act on them. GTD makes this process explicit and repeatable. It gives you a trusted five-stage workflow to manage everything that shows up in your world:

1️⃣​ Capture: Collect everything that feels incomplete into a trusted system, instead of holding it in your head.

2️⃣​ Clarify: Define what each item is and decide what you’re going to do with it.

3️⃣​ Organize: Put things where they belong, according to their nature.

4️⃣​ Reflect: Review your system regularly to keep it current and aligned with your goals.

5️⃣​ Engage: Use your system to confidently choose the right action at the right time.

Why GTD Matters

GTD’s effectiveness has been validated by millions of practitioners around the world, thanks to its key benefits:

  • Reduces stress – By moving tasks out of your head and into a reliable system, you stop worrying about forgetting things.

  • Provides meaning – It’s not just about doing tasks; it’s about choosing the ones that support your responsibilities, goals, and life vision.

  • Boosts focus – You may have hundreds of things to do, but in any given moment you can only do a few. GTD helps you pick the ones that matter most.

  • Manages uncertainty – By downplaying rigid priorities and deadlines, GTD keeps you flexible, ready to adapt, and open to new opportunities.

  • Improves productivity – As a natural outcome, you get more done in less time—while also gaining clarity on what not to do.

In short: GTD matters because it transforms mental chaos into a clear, actionable system. It shifts you from being reactive and stressed to being proactive and focused on what really counts. It also helps you respond to everything in a balanced way—neither overreacting nor dismissing what matters—because every item is clarified, organized, and viewed in the right context.