Overview
The Action Method is a productivity system developed by Scott Belsky, founder of Behance, designed to transform ideas into action by organizing all projects into three core elements: Action Steps, Backburner Items, and References.
Core Components
Action Steps
Definition: Concrete, specific tasks that move projects forward
Characteristics:
- Start with verbs (Call, Email, Draft, Research)
- Single, clear actions
- Can be completed
- Assigned to someone
- Have due dates when needed
Examples:
- "Call John about budget approval"
- "Draft outline for Q2 presentation"
- "Email Sarah the project timeline"
Not Action Steps:
- "Think about marketing strategy" (too vague)
- "Website redesign" (too broad)
- "Be more organized" (not specific)
Backburner Items
Definition: Ideas or items to address later
Purpose:
- Capture good ideas without cluttering active work
- Prevent forgetting potentially valuable thoughts
- Keep focus on current action steps
- Review periodically to promote to action steps
Examples:
- Future project ideas
- Long-term improvements
- Interesting concepts to explore
- Potential opportunities
References
Definition: Supporting materials, information, and resources
Types:
- Meeting notes
- Research documents
- Sketches and designs
- Inspiration and examples
- Contact information
- Related files
Purpose: Everything you might need but isn't an action
Key Principles
Everything is a Project
The Action Method treats all work as projects:
- Each project has Action Steps
- Each project has Backburner and References
- Even ongoing work becomes a project
- Personal and professional both qualify
Bias Toward Action
Philosophy: Ideas mean nothing without execution
Implementation:
- Every meeting must generate action steps
- Every conversation should produce next steps
- Every project needs concrete actions
- No project exists without action steps
Rule: If a project has no action steps, it's dead
Action Steps Drive Progress
- Ideas alone don't move projects forward
- Only completed action steps create progress
- Focus on what can be done, not just discussed
- Measure progress by actions taken
How to Use the Action Method
Step 1: Organize by Project
- List all active projects
- Create project "spaces" for each
- Include work and personal projects
- Keep projects manageable in size
Step 2: Break Down to Actions
For each project:
- What's the very next physical action?
- Create action step starting with verb
- Make it specific and completable
- Assign to someone (often yourself)
- Add deadline if time-sensitive
Step 3: Capture Backburner Items
- Record ideas that aren't immediate priorities
- Note potential improvements
- Capture "someday/maybe" items
- Keep separate from active actions
Step 4: Store References
- Attach relevant documents
- Link related resources
- Keep everything project-related together
- Easy access when needed
Step 5: Regular Review
Daily:
- Review action steps
- Complete what you can
- Add new actions as needed
Weekly:
- Review all projects
- Promote backburner items if appropriate
- Archive completed projects
- Ensure every active project has next actions
Meeting Protocol
During Meetings
- Capture action steps as discussed
- Assign each action to specific person
- Set deadlines collaboratively
- Don't leave without actions identified
After Meetings
- Share action steps with attendees
- Add action steps to your system
- Reference notes as needed
- Follow up on commitments
Benefits
Clarity
- Always know next step for each project
- No ambiguity about what to do
- Clear ownership of actions
- Concrete progress markers
Momentum
- Focus on what can be done now
- Small actions build progress
- Completed actions motivate
- Projects actually move forward
Reduced Overwhelm
- Big projects broken into small steps
- Focus on one action at a time
- Backburner captures future ideas
- Less mental clutter
Accountability
- Actions assigned to people
- Deadlines create urgency
- Clear expectations
- Easy to track commitments
Common Mistakes
Vague Action Steps
Problem: "Work on website" isn't actionable
Solution: "Draft homepage copy for website"
Too Many Active Projects
Problem: Spread thin across dozens of projects
Solution: Limit active projects, move others to backburner
Actions Without Projects
Problem: Scattered to-do list items
Solution: Associate every action with a project
Neglecting Backburner Review
Problem: Good ideas forgotten
Solution: Weekly backburner review
Tools for Action Method
Digital Options
- Action Method Online: Belsky's original platform (discontinued)
- Basecamp: Projects with to-dos and docs
- Asana: Projects, tasks, notes
- Notion: Databases for projects, actions, backburner
- Todoist: Projects with tasks and comments
Analog Option
- Action Method notebook (still available)
- Divide pages into three sections
- Physical satisfaction of checking off
Integration with Other Methods
With GTD
- Projects align with GTD projects
- Action steps are next actions
- Backburner like someday/maybe
- References similar to GTD reference
With Agile
- Projects like epics
- Action steps like user stories
- Backburner like product backlog
- Sprint planning pulls from backburner
Ideal For
- Creative professionals
- Project managers
- Team leaders
- Anyone with multiple ongoing projects
- People who generate lots of ideas
- Those struggling to execute on plans