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NM Freemason · Skills & Drills · Chapter 56

First Things First: the planned and the unplanned

Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.

Vocabulary (12)

First Things First (Habit 3)
Covey's third habit. After you've named your values (Habit 2) and decided to be proactive (Habit 1), the daily problem is choosing what to do next from a much longer list of options. "First Things First" is the discipline of doing the highest-priority work first, even when lower-priority work feels more urgent. The chapter on Goals provides the inputs; this chapter provides the triage.
Planned vs. Unplanned
The honest substitute for "important" vs. "unimportant." A task is planned if it directly contributes to a written SMART goal you've already set. A task is unplanned if it doesn't. The substitution matters because "important" is subjective and easily rationalized; "planned" has an objective check (look at your goal list). Under pressure, this distinction stays sharp where the original blurs.
Urgent vs. Not Urgent
The second axis of the matrix. Urgent means it demands attention now; not urgent means it doesn't. Urgency is usually externally imposed (a deadline, a phone call, a fire) and is mostly objective: either the bell is ringing or it isn't. Urgent is not the same as important or planned; the whole point of the matrix is to keep the two axes separate so the man can see them clearly.
Quadrant I: Urgent and Planned
Tasks that are both due now and on your goal list. This is where most crises live: the chapter pass-off that's overdue, the meeting agenda that has to be done by Wednesday, the medical issue you've been managing. Quadrant I work is unavoidable; the trouble starts when it's all you ever do. A man whose week is wall-to-wall Quadrant I is reacting, not planning.
Quadrant II: Not Urgent but Planned
Tasks that are on your goal list but not yet due. Covey's most important quadrant. Drafting next quarter's tactical plan now, studying for the next chapter you'll be examined on, building the relationship with the brother before you need him as a mentor. Quadrant II is where leverage lives because the work is not yet stressed. Men who spend most of their week here shrink Quadrant I dramatically; men who don't spend enough time here live in Quadrant I forever.
Quadrant III: Urgent but Unplanned
Tasks that demand attention now but don't move any of your goals. The classic trap of busy men. Someone else's fire that they brought to your door. A meeting you're invited to that doesn't need you. The phone call you take because it's ringing. Quadrant III is the deception the original Eisenhower matrix mislabels as "urgent but not important": the urgency comes from someone else's plan, not yours. The discipline is to decline, delegate, or defer.
Quadrant IV: Not Urgent and Unplanned
Tasks that don't matter and don't have to happen now. Scrolling. Channel-flipping. Tinkering with things you're not committed to fixing. Quadrant IV is waste. The published advice is direct: eliminate. Some Quadrant IV time is rest (and rest belongs in Quadrant II as planned renewal, see Sharpen the Saw); most Quadrant IV time is leakage.
Pareto principle (80/20)
Vilfredo Pareto's 1896 observation that roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes. In task management: 80% of your useful output comes from 20% of the things on your list. The principle gives the matrix its bite: the Quadrant II 20% is where the leverage lives, and the Quadrant III/IV 80% is what consumes the week without moving the needle.
An interruption is someone else's emergency
The working slogan of Quadrant III triage. When someone walks in with a fire, the first honest question is whose fire it is. If it's yours (it advances your plan), it's Quadrant I and you handle it. If it's theirs (it doesn't), it's Quadrant III and you decide whether to help, delegate, or defer. The slogan keeps the man from auto-accepting other people's plans as his own.
Law of Priorities (Maxwell)
John Maxwell's seventeenth Irrefutable Law: "Leaders understand that activity is not necessarily accomplishment." The Planned/Unplanned matrix is what makes this law actionable. A man whose week is busy isn't necessarily a man whose week is productive; busy can be all Quadrant III. The test is whether the activity laddered to a written goal you'd already decided mattered. If not, the activity was motion, not progress.
Law of Timing (Maxwell)
Maxwell's nineteenth Irrefutable Law: "When to lead is as important as what to do and where to go." Timing is the second axis of the matrix in disguise. A planned action taken too early lands in Quadrant II (good, schedule it); the same action taken at the wrong moment lands in Quadrant III or worse. Right thing wrong time is still wrong. The matrix forces explicit thinking about timing every time a task is placed.
Essentialism (McKeown)
Greg McKeown's published frame from Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less (2014). The discipline is to do the right things, not more things. McKeown's rule: "If it isn't a clear yes, it's a clear no." Applied to the matrix, every Quadrant III item gets a clear-yes / clear-no test against your written goals; anything that doesn't pass the test gets declined or deferred without guilt. The published technique is Quadrant II focus expressed as a personal-policy rule.

Sequences (3)

Triaging a task list with the Planned/Unplanned matrix

Take your current task list, your goal list in hand, and walk every task through this sequence. The first time will take an hour; subsequent passes take minutes.
  1. Look at the task. Open your written SMART goal list. Is the task on the list? If yes, mark it Planned. If no, mark it Unplanned.
  2. Check urgency. Is the task due now or soon? Mark Urgent. Otherwise, mark Not Urgent.
  3. Place the task in its quadrant. I (Urgent + Planned), II (Not Urgent + Planned), III (Urgent + Unplanned), IV (Not Urgent + Unplanned).
  4. Apply the discipline for each quadrant: Quadrant I do now; Quadrant II schedule into the week deliberately; Quadrant III decline, delegate, or defer; Quadrant IV eliminate.

Spending your week deliberately, Covey's recommendation

Don't audit task-by-task forever; build the matrix into the way you plan a week.
  1. Sunday or Monday: list every Quadrant II item you've been neglecting. These are the planned, not-urgent things that move the goals.
  2. Block calendar time for each one before any meetings or interruptions get scheduled. Quadrant II loses every fight with Quadrant III if you don't reserve the time first.
  3. When a Quadrant III interruption arrives mid-week, ask out loud or silently: "Is this on my goal list?" If not, choose decline/delegate/defer.
  4. Friday: count the Quadrant II hours you protected. If it was zero, the week didn't move your goals. Adjust next week.

Diagnosing a Quadrant III addiction

Some men are addicted to Quadrant III work because it feels productive and is socially rewarded. The diagnosis matters because the cure is different from the cure for Quadrant IV waste.
  1. Notice the pattern: you end most days exhausted but can't name a goal that moved. The hours went to other people's plans.
  2. Trace the path. The previous week's calendar has the data: how many meetings did you attend that didn't serve your goals? How many fires did you fight that weren't yours?
  3. Identify the social reward. Quadrant III often gets thanked: you helped, you were dependable, you saved the day. The thanks reinforces the addiction.
  4. Substitute: schedule a Quadrant II block for the same time slot a Quadrant III meeting usually occupies, and protect it. The substitute breaks the loop.

Multiple-choice (11)

1. Why does this chapter substitute "planned vs. unplanned" for the classic "important vs. unimportant"?
  1. The two terms mean the same thing
  2. Because "important" is subjective and easily rationalized under pressure, while "planned" has an objective check: is the task on your written SMART goal list? ✓
  3. Because Covey suggested it
  4. Because "planned" sounds more professional
2. Which quadrant is Covey's most important, and what does it contain?
  1. Quadrant I (Urgent + Planned): crises and overdue work
  2. Quadrant II (Not Urgent + Planned): planned work that's not yet due, where leverage lives ✓
  3. Quadrant III (Urgent + Unplanned): other people's emergencies
  4. Quadrant IV (Not Urgent + Unplanned): waste
3. What does Quadrant III contain, and what's the correct discipline for it?
  1. Crises; handle them first
  2. Tasks that are urgent but unplanned (someone else's emergency brought to your door); decline, delegate, or defer ✓
  3. Long-term planning; schedule weekly
  4. Restful breaks; protect them
4. What's the Pareto principle, and how does it apply to task management?
  1. 80% of work should be done by 20% of people
  2. Roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes; 80% of useful output comes from 20% of the things on your list, so identifying that 20% is the leverage point ✓
  3. Tasks should be split 80/20 between urgent and important
  4. Work 80% of the day; rest 20%
5. What does the slogan "an interruption is someone else's emergency" actually counsel?
  1. Always help when interrupted; that's the duty
  2. When someone brings you a fire, the first honest question is whose fire it is, and if it doesn't advance your plan, decide whether to help, delegate, or defer ✓
  3. Never accept any interruption
  4. Schedule a daily interruption window
6. Where does rest belong on the matrix, and why?
  1. Quadrant IV always; rest is waste
  2. Rest belongs in Quadrant II (Not Urgent + Planned) when it's planned renewal that serves your goals; ad-hoc collapsed-on-the-couch time is Quadrant IV waste ✓
  3. Outside the matrix entirely
  4. Quadrant I; rest is always urgent
7. What's the warning sign that you're stuck in Quadrant I?
  1. You feel productive
  2. Your week is wall-to-wall crises and overdue work: you're reacting, not planning, and you haven't fed Quadrant II in a long time ✓
  3. You have a long task list
  4. You haven't taken a vacation in a month
8. Where did the urgent/important axis come from originally?
  1. Covey invented it in 1989
  2. President Eisenhower (1954): "I have two kinds of problems, the urgent and the important. The urgent are not important, and the important are never urgent." Covey adapted it for the 7 Habits. ✓
  3. Drucker invented it in 1954
  4. Pareto in 1896
9. How does Maxwell's Law of Priorities apply the Planned/Unplanned matrix as a diagnostic?
  1. It says all tasks deserve equal priority
  2. "Activity is not necessarily accomplishment." Busy can be all Quadrant III; the test is whether the work laddered to a written goal you'd already decided mattered ✓
  3. Priorities are subjective; the matrix doesn't help
  4. It contradicts the matrix
10. What does Maxwell's Law of Timing add to the matrix beyond the urgent / not-urgent axis?
  1. Nothing; it's the same idea
  2. Timing is the second axis in disguise: right thing wrong time is still wrong; the matrix forces explicit thinking about timing every time a task is placed ✓
  3. Timing matters only in sports
  4. Maxwell rejected the matrix
11. What's McKeown's working rule from Essentialism, and how does it apply to the matrix?
  1. Do everything you say yes to
  2. "If it isn't a clear yes, it's a clear no." Applied to Quadrant III items: anything that doesn't pass the clear-yes test against your written goals gets declined or deferred without guilt ✓
  3. Less is always more
  4. Saying no is rude