How to Conduct an Effective Weekly Review
David Allen, creator of Getting Things Done, calls it "the master key to productivity." The weekly review is a dedicated time to step back, get clear, and get current. Without it, even the best productivity system slowly unravels.
What is a Weekly Review?
A weekly review is a recurring appointment with yourself—typically 30-60 minutes—to process the past week and plan the next. It's not just about task management; it's about maintaining perspective on your life and work.
The Weekly Review Process
Phase 1: Get Clear (10-15 minutes)
Collect and process all your "stuff":
- Gather loose papers and notes
- Process your email inbox to zero
- Review voice memos and photos
- Check calendar for last week (capture any follow-ups)
- Review previous week's to-do list
Phase 2: Get Current (15-20 minutes)
Review your system and update as needed:
- Review your project list—are they all current?
- Review your waiting-for list—any follow-ups needed?
- Review your someday/maybe list—anything to activate?
- Clean up your task lists—reorganize, re-prioritize
Phase 3: Get Creative (10-15 minutes)
Step back and think bigger:
- Review your goals and vision
- What went well this week? Celebrate wins.
- What could improve? Identify lessons.
- Is your work aligned with your values and goals?
Phase 4: Plan the Week (10-15 minutes)
Look ahead and schedule what matters:
- Review next week's calendar—any preparation needed?
- Identify your 3 most important outcomes for the week
- Schedule time blocks for deep work
- Add any deadlines or commitments to your system
When to Do Your Weekly Review
Friday afternoon works well—you capture the week while it's fresh and free your mind for the weekend. Sunday evening is another popular choice—you start Monday with clarity.
The key is consistency. Same time, same place, every week. Treat it as a non-negotiable appointment with yourself.
Tools for Weekly Reviews
- Task managers: Todoist, Things 3, OmniFocus
- Note-taking: Notion, Obsidian, Roam Research
- Journaling: Day One, Journey
- Review templates: Create a checklist so you don't forget steps
Common Challenges
- "I don't have time": You can't afford not to. An hour of review saves hours of confusion and missed commitments.
- Perfectionism: Don't try to solve everything. Capture, don't complete.
- Skipping weeks: This is how systems break. If you miss one, do it as soon as possible.
Make It Your Own
The exact process matters less than doing it consistently. Experiment. Add steps that serve you, remove ones that don't. Your weekly review should fit your life, not the other way around.
Schedule your first review now. Put it on the calendar. Your future self will thank you.