Hey friends,
It’s been a minute.
I took a pause over the holidays, stepped back, reset a few systems - and now Systems Driven Weekly is back. And I’m starting with a problem I see constantly (and still trip over myself):
Using email as a to-do list.
Recently, a client told me something that perfectly captured the issue.
His assistant was doing everything right - triaging email, labeling things as “Action Needed.”
But instead of clarity, he ended up with a giant folder full of stress.
Why?
Because “action needed” doesn’t tell you what the work actually is.
Email is a communication medium.
Tasks are work.
When those two get mixed, everything slows down.
If you’re familiar with Getting Things Done, David Allen talks about the 4 Ds:
Email works great for the decision.
It works terribly for the execution.
Most emails don’t need to be done immediately - but they can be responded to immediately.
And once you’ve responded, the email should be dead.
The real question becomes:
Where does the actual work go?
Let’s say you get an email requesting a report.
The report itself is going to take you two days to get to. You obviously don’t want to drop everything and do that work right now - but you can respond immediately.
So you reply to the email with something like:
“Got it - this makes sense. I’ll have this report over to you by Friday.”
Now the communication is done. The inbox is clear.
But the work still needs to happen.
So instead of leaving that email sitting in an “action needed” folder, you file a task in your task management system called “Generate client report.” Right next to that task, you save a link back to the original email conversation - so when you come back to do the work, all the context is there.
Email handled.
Work scheduled.
Nothing lingering in your head.
Here’s the workflow I’ve landed on - and it’s been a game changer:
Inbox = clean
Tasks = trusted
Context = preserved
No copying. No switching tools. No mental overhead.
I recorded a short Loom showing exactly how this works, including:
If email has been quietly hijacking your task system, this one’s worth watching.
Email should answer one question:
“Can I respond to this right now?”
Your task system answers a different one:
“When and how will the real work get done?”
When you separate those two, inbox zero stops being a productivity flex—and starts being a side effect of good systems.
More soon. We’re officially back.